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Post by nott1 on Feb 13, 2017 11:38:59 GMT
Doesn't everyone have a Rolex?
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Post by spiderpuss on Feb 13, 2017 12:31:49 GMT
You could use that modern invention a "smartphone", not only do these devices have a watch, they also can connect to the Internet. On the "Internet" you can check the score, if your brain resembles a goldfish.
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Post by lagwafis on Feb 13, 2017 12:46:39 GMT
Shame we can't put the old one up. Miss it. I think that old clock in boothen end corner stopped a long time ago, I wonder where it went? Didn't the cardboard / plywood clock fall down during our last 18 months at the Vic? I don't know how we coped...
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Post by Mr_DaftBurger on Feb 13, 2017 12:46:53 GMT
The Unreality of Time Philosophy and physics may seem like polar opposites, but they regularly address quite similar questions. Recently, physicists have revisited a topic with modern philosophical origins dating over a century ago: the unreality of time. What if the passage of time were merely an illusion? Can a world without time make sense? While a world without the familiar passage of time may seem far-fetched, big names in physics, such as string theory pioneer Ed Witten and theorist Brian Greene, have recently embraced such an idea. A timeless reality may help reconcile differences between quantum mechanics and relativity, but how can we make sense of such a world? If physics does indeed suggest that the flow of time is illusory, then philosophy may be able to shed light on such a strange notion. Read more here >>> www.physicscentral.com/explore/plus/timeless.cfm
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Post by PotterLog on Feb 13, 2017 14:28:16 GMT
Well it certainly took away some of the intense nervousness I usually feel when we're winning by a single goal or drawing against the best sides. Proper old school stuff. OS. Whistles going up from the crowd when the ball goes out for a goal kick on 83 minutes
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Post by ohbottom on Feb 13, 2017 19:01:35 GMT
The Unreality of Time Philosophy and physics may seem like polar opposites, but they regularly address quite similar questions. Recently, physicists have revisited a topic with modern philosophical origins dating over a century ago: the unreality of time. What if the passage of time were merely an illusion? Can a world without time make sense? While a world without the familiar passage of time may seem far-fetched, big names in physics, such as string theory pioneer Ed Witten and theorist Brian Greene, have recently embraced such an idea. A timeless reality may help reconcile differences between quantum mechanics and relativity, but how can we make sense of such a world? If physics does indeed suggest that the flow of time is illusory, then philosophy may be able to shed light on such a strange notion. Read more here >>> www.physicscentral.com/explore/plus/timeless.cfmIt's an interesting concept isn't it? It's the central theme of Vonnegut's classic "Slaughter-house 5", in which the alien Tralfamadorians (I had to look that up ) see all points in time simultaneously. I fucking love stuff like this, me.
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Post by wizzardofdribble on Feb 13, 2017 20:20:49 GMT
The Unreality of Time Philosophy and physics may seem like polar opposites, but they regularly address quite similar questions. Recently, physicists have revisited a topic with modern philosophical origins dating over a century ago: the unreality of time. What if the passage of time were merely an illusion? Can a world without time make sense? While a world without the familiar passage of time may seem far-fetched, big names in physics, such as string theory pioneer Ed Witten and theorist Brian Greene, have recently embraced such an idea. A timeless reality may help reconcile differences between quantum mechanics and relativity, but how can we make sense of such a world? If physics does indeed suggest that the flow of time is illusory, then philosophy may be able to shed light on such a strange notion. Read more here >>> www.physicscentral.com/explore/plus/timeless.cfmWould Greene & Witten have Sohbi in their starting eleven? And what would they make of this 'false number 9' concept?
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Post by Mr_DaftBurger on Feb 13, 2017 23:28:29 GMT
The Unreality of Time Philosophy and physics may seem like polar opposites, but they regularly address quite similar questions. Recently, physicists have revisited a topic with modern philosophical origins dating over a century ago: the unreality of time. What if the passage of time were merely an illusion? Can a world without time make sense? While a world without the familiar passage of time may seem far-fetched, big names in physics, such as string theory pioneer Ed Witten and theorist Brian Greene, have recently embraced such an idea. A timeless reality may help reconcile differences between quantum mechanics and relativity, but how can we make sense of such a world? If physics does indeed suggest that the flow of time is illusory, then philosophy may be able to shed light on such a strange notion. Read more here >>> www.physicscentral.com/explore/plus/timeless.cfmWould Greene & Witten have Sohbi in their starting eleven? And what would they make of this 'false number 9' concept? There's no definitve answer, from science, that the 'false 9' actually exists, they've come close to finding an answer but's it elusively keeps being unproven so far and for now they don't have the ingredients to test it again! I'm sure they would play SJW as he's more 'safe' from a proven scientific point of view!
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