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   Message 141,478 of 143,102   
   john larkin to All   
   Re: Action reaction princcipe violation    
   02 Dec 25 11:44:35   
   
   From: jl@glen--canyon.com   
      
   On Tue, 2 Dec 2025 14:14:13 +1100, Bill Sloman    
   wrote:   
      
   >On 2/12/2025 7:09 am, john larkin wrote:   
   >> On Mon, 1 Dec 2025 19:44:36 +0100, Jeroen Belleman   
   >>  wrote:   
   >>   
   >>> On 12/1/25 19:14, john larkin wrote:   
   >>>> On Mon, 1 Dec 2025 09:56:25 +0000, liz@poppyrecords.invalid.invalid   
   >>>> (Liz Tuddenham) wrote:   
   >>>>   
   >>>>> Bill Sloman  wrote:   
   >>>>>   
   >>>>>   
   >>>>>> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eric_Laithwaite   
   >>>>>>   
   >>>>>> espoused much the same idea too,   
   >>>>>   
   >>>>> That's all you need to tell you it won't work.   
   >>>>>   
   >>>>> We used to laugh at Laithwait's ideas and wonder how anyone could take   
   >>>>> them seriously.  Unfortunately a lot of gullible (or ignorant) idiots   
   >>>>> did ...so a lot of money was wasted trying to pervert the laws of   
   >>>>> physics.   
   >>>>   
   >>>> The "laws of physcs" aren't fully settled. It's conceivable that some   
   >>>> accepted conservation principles may not be absolutely true.   
   >>>>   
   >>>>   
   >>>> John Larkin   
   >>>> Highland Tech Glen Canyon Design Center   
   >>>> Lunatic Fringe Electronics   
   >>>   
   >>> If a discrepancy in Newton's action=reaction is found, it will be   
   >>> something tiny, or we would have noticed it long ago. To propel   
   >>> vehicles we need something *big*.   
   >>   
   >> Yes, slow and tiny, cosmology-level stuff.   
   >   
   >This is clearly intended to be ironical, but John Larkin can't do irony.   
      
   No irony. The physical constants of the universe could certainly be   
   changing as it expands, or contracts, whatever it is doing.   
      
   The practical effects seem to be small, especially as regards   
   electronic design.   
      
   >   
   >> Obviously energy is not conserved, because we came from somewhere.   
   >   
   >The big bang is that somewhere. We can't know where it came from, so it   
   >doesn't necessarily violate the conservation of mass-energy. It's   
   >perfectly compatible with a bouncing universe.   
      
   John Larkin   
   Highland Tech Glen Canyon Design Center   
   Lunatic Fringe Electronics   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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