March 12, 2006

Ear Glasses and other science errata

Yesterday - i needed the quiet to get rid of a migrane headache. i was oversensitive to all audio - pitches and volume. i need to invent ear glasses - something like eye glasses designed to fit the persons hearing correction. i need a filter to remove certaint pitch: the very high pitch that my telephone puts out as interference, the real low barrelling base on some of the heavy metal rock of the 70s and 80s, and the newt voice pitch of certain ladies like my aunt gladys, who i haven't seen in years.

Wavelength is a mystery phenomena that the physicists have hoarded into the military-industrial secrecy complex. Both light and sound are wavelength based - the frequencies are vastly different. Nikolai Tesla was working in the area about the same time as Thomas Edison. The fables talk of the thousands of concurrent experiments that edison had going on in his laboratory - imagine ol Tom playing with a visit from his local OSHA inspector about laboratory safety.

When we lose the capacity to generate bulk energy via carbon conbustion, we will have to look toward inorganic means for generating energy as well as carrying it. Although fiber optic provide a channel for light, they don't generate the light that they carry. However, putting two metals of different dielectric capacitance together generates energy - thermostats use this technology for temperature based switching. There is a reason why wire is always metal.

You cannot get something for nothing in physics - every action has an equal and opposite reaction. But when you change the scale of the playing field, you find that there is an inherent inconsistency between newtonian physics, which explains our scale, and quantum/astro physics which explain both the very minute and the very large. energy doesn't work the way they teach us to believe in school.

Speaking of school - this article was found by Michael Van Winkle at the new From the Heartland blog.

Dr. Lenny has been journalizing my commentary for quite a while, and will start a series explaining chemistry to people in terms that they can understand and apply. i have written some pieces on mercury and fluorine in the past, but I don’t wish to just single out the baddies – there are an awful lot of good chemicals that get short shrift. I will be looking for an outlet – or a gross of outlets. Perhaps I can trade articles for advertising, crosslinking or some other mutually profitable barter. You know how to reach me - just respond to this blog.

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