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I'm reading _Me Talk Pretty One Day_ by David Sedaris. He talks about his new enjoyment of books on tape. He asks: If loving books makes you a bookworm . . . does loving books on tape make you a tapeworm? Thought that might be a fun idea to play with. ******* "Happiness is not something ready made. It comes from your own actions. ~Dalai Lama | ||
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Etymology.com talks about book lice. Yuk! I wasn't clear though from their discussion of bookworm, were there actual bookworms? | |||
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Then it follows that if I like dirty books (or perhaps gardening), I'm an earthworm! | |||
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<Asa Lovejoy> |
Hi, Sunflower (KISS!) If you're given to reading stuff off the internet, are you a monitor lizard? | ||
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The sunflower, State Flower of Kansas, was once declared a noxious weed by the Iowa State Legislature. When Kansans got wind of that abomination, they declared the Eastern Goldfinch (Iowa State Bird) a noxious bird. Welcome aboard, SUNFLOWER !! | |||
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Welcome to the board, Sunflower! I like Asa's monitor lizard idea. . . . but maybe the computer addiction would make you a terminal disease? ******* "Happiness is not something ready made. It comes from your own actions. ~Dalai Lama | |||
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<Asa Lovejoy> |
quote: I'll have you know, Ms Caterwauler, I have NEVER suffered from a diseased terminal! ![]() | ||
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So then (Asa, I'm ignoring you) . . .what would the new meaning of the term "wormhole" be? ******* "Happiness is not something ready made. It comes from your own actions. ~Dalai Lama | |||
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Oooohhh...welcome Sunflower! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() CW, are you referring to the science fiction definition? | |||
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I think she was referring to the anal aperture of worms. She said she was ignoring Asa, so I guess she wasn't talking about him. Tinman | |||
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quote: Science fiction definition? Where does fiction come into this? | |||
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Science fiction definition? Where does fiction come into this? Graham, consider it my stupidity. The question was asked about the new meaning of 'wormhole' so I went to the Slang Dictionary and found this. I saw Captain Kirk and the part about it being "potentially plausible"...and I assumed the "new" meaning to be science fiction. So sorry! Can you enlighten me? Thanks! | |||
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Kalleh, The existence of wormholes is a serious scientific theory that hasn't been either proved or disproved. See the Wikipedia entry. The theory was seized upon by writers of SF as a useful way to obtain faster-than-light travel. See the Wikipedia article for more on that. Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life. | |||
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Okay, arnie. I usually think of a "theory" as something that has been tested, accepted, and used to make predictions about natural phenomena.This message has been edited. Last edited by: Kalleh, | |||
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Well . . . since bookworm and tapeworm were the topic . . . and the closest relative in sound to those words was wormhole . . . so I thought it was funny. ******* "Happiness is not something ready made. It comes from your own actions. ~Dalai Lama | |||
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Oh...it is funny CW! ![]() When you mentioned it, I had thought there was some reference to wormhole that I hadn't been aware of. Therefore, I went to that Slang Dictionary and found that reference to Star Trek. Sorry to cause so much confusion! | |||
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quote: That's interesting. I think of a theory is a system of thought that aspires to be consistent and predictive; it may or may not be tested and accepted. I think there are a lot of subtly different personal definitions of theory --I don't know where mine falls with respect to the dictionary definitions or the range of common definitions -- but I think it leads to a lot of misunderstandings. | |||
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I would agree with neveu: a theory in science is a consistent set of principles that generates explanations for a group of phenomena. Rival theories can coexist; a theory can be untested; and a falsified theory still counts as a theory, as long as it's been undone by observation rather than internal inconsistency. | |||
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I do think we have discussed "theory" here before. I agree that a theory can be untested and that rival theories can coexist. I also agree that a theory doesn't have to be tested. Yet, I tend to think of a theory as having been tested and used to make predictions. I do have a little support on this. Indeed, some people use "theory" very casually, as in "I have a theory that whenever I wash my car, it rains!" BTW, this thread about "wormholes" has obviously gone to my head! Last night I dreamt about Einstein's Theory of Relativity, saw Einstein himself, and he told me all about "wormholes!" Sheesh! | |||
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quote: The Wikipedia article begins, "A wormhole, also known as an Einstein-Rosen bridge, is a hypothetical [emphasis mine] topological feature of spacetime ..." . It's an hypothesis, not a theory, in scientific terms. An hypothesis is essentially an educated guess, what the scientist expects to happen. The hypothesis is tested through experimentation and/or observation. If the hypothesis is tested and proven true and generally accepted by the vast majority of scientists, it may become a scientific theory. It may eventually attain the staus of scientific law, such as the law of gravity and the laws of thermodynamics. The term theory in the lay sense is usually an hypothesis in the scientific sense. Maybe this article will explain it better. TinmanThis message has been edited. Last edited by: tinman, | |||
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<wordnerd> |
quote:Apparently so. They feed on the paste in the bindings. As you say, yuck. | ||
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The article tinman references says this about scientific laws: quote: There are a lot of very different things that are called laws. A lot of things that are called laws are not accepted as true and universal, rather they are simple equations that are accurate under certain conditions. Hooke's law is a perfect example. Hooke's law is f = kd, or force is proportional to length of stretch. If a pound stretches a rubber band 2 inches, 2 pounds will stretch it four inches. But as we all know eventually the rubber band reaches a limit and doesn't stretch anymore. There is a region where Hooke's law approximately holds, but for any object in the real world it is not true for most values of d. Same goes for Ohm's law. Probably the best definition of a scientific law is a simple linear equation that either accurately describes the universe, or is a handy engineering assumption some German guy thought up and stuck his name on.This message has been edited. Last edited by: neveu, | |||
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