drbond24
Senior Member
- Location
- Barboursville, West Virginia
zog said:What a great quote, thats how to end that arguement quickly, even before it started and got this thread closed.
Give it a chance. He hasn't even responded yet.
zog said:What a great quote, thats how to end that arguement quickly, even before it started and got this thread closed.
I think that's it in a nutshell.chris500 said:As far as being a waste of time, almost everything we have today that separates us from cavemen is attributable to physics. What the LHC is designed to do is go deeper and help form a deeper understanding of the particles that form everything. By figuring this stuff out new ideas form, new products form, etc. At least that's the idea.
No doubt it is a huge amount of money, but could you put a monetary figure on something like the fundamental ideas behind electricity and magnetism, or something equally important?
In round figures, it is probably about comparable if you take into account the total of domestic, commercial, and industrial consumption.augie47 said:Not bring that good at "cypherin' ", in very round figures, how does that compare to say the power requirements of a City of say 100,000 residents.
augie47 said:Not bring that good at "cypherin' ", in very round figures, how does that compare to say the power requirements of a City of say 100,000 residents.
nothing to argue about. It can't be proven that the universe was created by god or by intelligent design. I just was saying that to me it seems that alot of the people that tend to be against science and progress and things of this nature such as NASA for example tend to be "religious" and maybe it's because they fear what could be discovered for fear of turning their "world" and everything they were raised to beleive upside down. That's all.drbond24 said:Give it a chance. He hasn't even responded yet.![]()
Sure it can! All you have to do is die*. If you see nothing, you've either reached nirvana, there is no afterlife, or it's your version of hell. If you're talking to God, you've reached heaven, and you can ask if He created it. :smile:steelersman said:It can't be proven that the universe was created by god or by intelligent design.
I've noticed that as well, but it tends to be fundamentalists that have this problem. I have a couple of friends who are very religious, and fairly open minded as well. It's led to some interesting discussions, because they don't dismiss much without trying to understand it first.steelersman said:I just was saying that to me it seems that alot of the people that tend to be against science and progress and things of this nature such as NASA for example tend to be "religious" and maybe it's because they fear what could be discovered for fear of turning their "world" and everything they were raised to beleive upside down. That's all.
That's peak demand, of course.mayanees said:Augie,
The City of Dover, DE Electric Deparmtent serves about 50,000 residents, and has a peak demand on the order of 175 MW. So in rough figures, I'd say that a consumption of 125 MW is about the demand of a population of ~35,000 people.