by StarstruckKid » Tue Aug 17, 2010 2:14 am
My point was not about
c versus the speed of light, or whether information can propagate faster than
c; solid theory also says sound cannot travel faster that mach 1 in air, not to be too rigorous or to make that an analogy to
c. It was, rather, to suggest, as a "thought experiment", that there may be some other mechanism that we are not aware of because neither we nor our existing instruments can detect it, and which is not addressed by the mathematics of relativity, that can 'bypass' or 'move through' space as we know it and is not bound by
c, just as
c is not bound by the speed of sound in air.
Our forebears were unaware of most of the electromagnetic spectrum, and many well-educated people would have vehemently denied the possibility of its existence, because neither they nor the instruments available to them could detect it.
We have some anecdotal evidence of the phenomenon of telepathy, but we cannot reliably sense it, nor do we have instruments which can detect it, so it remains in the the realm of conjecture, and many smart and well-educated people will vehemently deny its possible existence. I don't claim to know myself. But I
do know that when I was old enough to be learning about such things, what we now know as 'plate tectonics' was called 'continental drift' and was derided and scorned by, again, some very smart and well-educated people.
One thing we know for sure: we don't know what we don't know!
My point was not about [i]c[/i] versus the speed of light, or whether information can propagate faster than [i]c[/i]; solid theory also says sound cannot travel faster that mach 1 in air, not to be too rigorous or to make that an analogy to [i]c[/i]. It was, rather, to suggest, as a "thought experiment", that there may be some other mechanism that we are not aware of because neither we nor our existing instruments can detect it, and which is not addressed by the mathematics of relativity, that can 'bypass' or 'move through' space as we know it and is not bound by [i]c[/i], just as [i]c[/i] is not bound by the speed of sound in air.
Our forebears were unaware of most of the electromagnetic spectrum, and many well-educated people would have vehemently denied the possibility of its existence, because neither they nor the instruments available to them could detect it.
We have some anecdotal evidence of the phenomenon of telepathy, but we cannot reliably sense it, nor do we have instruments which can detect it, so it remains in the the realm of conjecture, and many smart and well-educated people will vehemently deny its possible existence. I don't claim to know myself. But I [i]do[/i] know that when I was old enough to be learning about such things, what we now know as 'plate tectonics' was called 'continental drift' and was derided and scorned by, again, some very smart and well-educated people.
One thing we know for sure: we don't know what we don't know! :)