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Posted: Tue, 3rd Oct 2006 00:43 Post subject: A Brain Cell is the Same as the Universe |
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Posted: Tue, 3rd Oct 2006 00:54 Post subject: |
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No islamic bullshit here... Where's the catch?
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ChinUp
Posts: 5503
Location: 51.7° N ' 1.1° W
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Posted: Tue, 3rd Oct 2006 01:05 Post subject: |
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Just like the frozen snow on a lake in the winter looks like the surface of an ocean .. flames move the same as the smoke they produce .. the bridge between matter & space .. is a constant ..
mathematicians have yet to isolate, the mechanics of space .. but its got consistency enough to be feasibly isolated .. its the way life develops into new formations that really interesting .. with the same building blocks as everything else .. an infinite variety of forms occur .
"Most of the change we think we see in life is due to truths being in & out of favor." ~ Frost
Last edited by ChinUp on Tue, 3rd Oct 2006 01:50; edited 1 time in total
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ChinUp
Posts: 5503
Location: 51.7° N ' 1.1° W
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Posted: Tue, 3rd Oct 2006 01:52 Post subject: |
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pistolshrimp wrote: | @compu
Sorry dude, I mean no bad but I couldn't resist the joke. I have no self control you know. It is a real problem and I am getting help for it  |
No hard feelings 
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WaldoJ
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Posted: Tue, 3rd Oct 2006 01:57 Post subject: |
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this sadly reminds me of this simpsons intro which is from that other thing where everything is like part of something. Like it shows a vast galaxy then it zooms in. it goes to our solar system, then to earth, then to homer simspons eye ball than his brain or his hair or something and it shows another vast galaxy and it zooms in
this thing just makes me feel that there are worlds living within me It's scary the things I do to myself I'm such a vile human being
insignificant. it makes me feel insignificant 
Sin317 wrote: | I win, you lose. Or Go fuck yourself. |
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Posted: Tue, 3rd Oct 2006 03:34 Post subject: |
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Aishas tear looks like an ocean.
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Posted: Tue, 3rd Oct 2006 05:51 Post subject: |
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@chinUp
You forgot how the clouds form the same pattern on the sand when the tide goes out.
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SycoShaman
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Location: Toronto, Canada
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Posted: Tue, 3rd Oct 2006 06:36 Post subject: |
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pistolshrimp wrote: | @chinUp
You forgot how the clouds form the same pattern on the sand when the tide goes out. |
Really? Ive never noticed that before when ive been at the beach.
or are you joking? 
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SycoShaman
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Location: Toronto, Canada
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Posted: Tue, 3rd Oct 2006 06:58 Post subject: |
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pistolshrimp wrote: | @syco
No I am not joking LOL. There is a type of pattern when things under pressure flow.
You see the ripple effects and sometimes ripple effects with a washed over look, and sometimes swirls.
You what I think is cool. You know those stain glass windows in old churches. That glass flows as well over a very long period of time. That is why if you were to measure the top of the window to the bottom of the window you will find the bottom thicker. I would guess it be in each pain of glass. (Lead casing right)
so I have been told. Watch Animalmother prove me wrong. (or Nouse) hehehe  |
Interesting.
Im gunna look for that next summer when i go to the beach.
I didnt know glass flows. Why does it do that?
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SycoShaman
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Location: Toronto, Canada
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Posted: Tue, 3rd Oct 2006 07:34 Post subject: |
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pistolshrimp wrote: | SycoShaman wrote: | pistolshrimp wrote: | @syco
No I am not joking LOL. There is a type of pattern when things under pressure flow.
You see the ripple effects and sometimes ripple effects with a washed over look, and sometimes swirls.
You what I think is cool. You know those stain glass windows in old churches. That glass flows as well over a very long period of time. That is why if you were to measure the top of the window to the bottom of the window you will find the bottom thicker. I would guess it be in each pain of glass. (Lead casing right)
so I have been told. Watch Animalmother prove me wrong. (or Nouse) hehehe  |
Interesting.
Im gunna look for that next summer when i go to the beach.
I didnt know glass flows. Why does it do that? |
Because it is under pressure of our atmosphere. All things under pressure flow.
It is why we have techtonic plates moving, and earthquakes. Same principle. |
I understand now.
Still, its interesting 
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Cohen
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Location: Rapture
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nouseforaname
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Posted: Tue, 3rd Oct 2006 16:23 Post subject: |
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pistolshrimp wrote: | so I have been told. Watch Animalmother prove me wrong. (or Nouse) hehehe  |
lol ... you asked for it
Quote: | However, the notion that glass flows to an appreciable extent over extended periods of time is not supported by empirical evidence or theoretical analysis. |
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass#Glass_as_a_liquid
hhehe this one is a indepth examination of that myth
Quote: | No, It Doesn't Flow
Early one spring morning in 1946, Clarence Hoke was holding forth in his chemistry class at West Side High School in Newark, New Jersey.
"Glass is actually a liquid." the North Carolina native told us in his soft Southern tones. "You can tell that from the stained glass windows in old cathedrals in Europe. The glass is thicker on the bottom than it is on the top."
Now, more than half a century later, that is the only thing I can actually remember being taught in high school chemistry. I didn't really believe it then, and I don't believe it now.
In the years that followed, I came across the same story every now and then. Most often it popped up in college textbooks on general chemistry. And now, thanks to the Internet, our Museum has received dozens of inquiries about whether or not this is true. Most people seem to want to believe it.
It is easy to understand why the myth persists. It does have a certain appeal. Glass and the glassy state are often described by noting their similarities with liquids. So good teachers, such as Mr. Hoke was, like to quote the story about the windows. As is the case with liquids, the atoms making up a glass are not arranged in any regular order-and that is where the analogy arises. Liquids flow because there are no strong forces holding their molecules together. Their molecules can move freely past one another, so that liquids can be poured, splashed around, and spilled. But, unlike the molecules in conventional liquids, the atoms in glasses are all held together tightly by strong chemical bonds. It is as if the glass were one giant molecule. This makes glasses rigid so they cannot flow at room temperatures. Thus, the analogy fails in the case of fluidity and flow.
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http://glassnotes.com/WindowPanes.html
heheh I like this one
Quote: | Edgar Dutra Zanotto of the Federal University of Sao Carlos in Brazil calculated the time needed for viscous flow to change the thickness of different types of glass by a noticeable amount. Cathedral glass would require a period "well beyond the age of the universe," he says. |
asus z170-A || core i5-6600K || geforce gtx 970 4gb || 16gb ddr4 ram || win10 || 1080p led samsung 27"
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ChinUp
Posts: 5503
Location: 51.7° N ' 1.1° W
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Rinze
Site Admin
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Posted: Tue, 3rd Oct 2006 19:41 Post subject: |
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ChinUp wrote: | wouldnt that wipe the mem ? | No. Magnets only wipe magnetically stored memory, like floppy disks o harddisks where the protective case has been taken away. The flash memory used in your phone is safe from that.
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Posted: Tue, 3rd Oct 2006 21:17 Post subject: |
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AnimalMother wrote: | pistolshrimp wrote: |
It is why we have techtonic plates moving, and earthquakes. Same principle. |
Actually the tectonic plates move because of convectional currents in asthenosphere magma; earthquakes are the results of frictional stress between these moving plates.
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Yes, perhaps that is a more scientific explanation but what I am saying is true too. All things under pressure flow, they move, they create currents. Magma under pressure acts almost the same way as underwater currents. So it is an Ocean of magma, and the tectonic plates will react accordingly to those currents because they are floating on top. Air, Ocean, Magma, land all flows in a very similar pattern. So really, what you see when you look at the clouds, you see what is happening under your feet.
P.S. No I am not stoned.
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