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  #1 (permalink)  
Vieux 01/09/2008, 01h28
Jon G.
 
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Par défaut Bases for an Origin

Any origin is never an infinitesimal point, but a sphere of small radius
that forms a basis for measurement. When the radius is small, the sphere
approximates an infinitesimal point, and measurements from either the inner
or outer surface of the sphere are the same. For a sphere of large radius,
events are measured from either the inner or outer surface of the sphere, as
well. Consequently, inverted space is the same reality as noninverted
space, as I demonstrate with the mathematics at my web page,

http://mypeoplepc.com/members/jon8338/math/id18.html



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  #2 (permalink)  
Vieux 01/09/2008, 02h47
fishfry
 
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Par défaut Re: Bases for an Origin

In article <i4ydnXskRO_upCbVnZ2dnUVZ_hWdnZ2d***earthlink.com> ,
"Jon G." <jon8338***peoplepc.com> wrote:

> Any origin is never an infinitesimal point, but a sphere of small radius
> that forms a basis for measurement. When the radius is small, the sphere
> approximates an infinitesimal point, and measurements from either the inner
> or outer surface of the sphere are the same.


Stop right there and explain, please. What do you mean by the outer and
inner surface? The surface of a sphere has no thickness.

If you're thinking of a sphere made, say, out of physical material, so
that it has some thickness, then the outer and inner surface area are
ALWAYS a little different, regardless of how small the radius gets.

You have to explain what you mean.
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  #3 (permalink)  
Vieux 03/09/2008, 07h24
Ron Ford
 
Messages: n/a
Par défaut Re: Bases for an Origin

On Sun, 31 Aug 2008 18:47:57 -0700, fishfry posted:

> In article <i4ydnXskRO_upCbVnZ2dnUVZ_hWdnZ2d***earthlink.com> ,
> "Jon G." <jon8338***peoplepc.com> wrote:
>
>> Any origin is never an infinitesimal point, but a sphere of small radius
>> that forms a basis for measurement. When the radius is small, the sphere
>> approximates an infinitesimal point, and measurements from either the inner
>> or outer surface of the sphere are the same.

>
> Stop right there and explain, please. What do you mean by the outer and
> inner surface? The surface of a sphere has no thickness.
>
> If you're thinking of a sphere made, say, out of physical material, so
> that it has some thickness, then the outer and inner surface area are
> ALWAYS a little different, regardless of how small the radius gets.
>
> You have to explain what you mean.


Es is alles quatsch, was er anglisiert.

Mit den Texanern haben die Amis ausreichend Doffheit fuer eine Sprache.

You're the george bush of de.sci.math.
--
We must respect the other fellow's religion, but only in the sense and to
the extent that we respect his theory that his wife is beautiful and his
children smart. 5
H. L. Mencken
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