Ted_C
Active member
This is sort of off-topic - but then again it's sort of right on topic.
I put the science channel on last night and the dramatization of the study behind the challenger disaster in '86 was on. Afterwords (from 10 PM -11 PM) there was a little documentary on Richard Feynman - one of the scientists on the panel.
Feynman died before my time. I was 18 when he passed. I was 16 when the challenger disaster occured. Neither high school science or college science classes I took ever made reference to him (and I took a lot of science classes across multiple universities - started off as a chemical engineering major @ Penn State and moved on to secondary education - chemistry @ Edinboro). Classes like Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, Biochemistry, Physical Chemistry filled my days.
A few things clicked last night after 30 years of wondering as I watched these programs. I always had trouble with the equations in Physical Chemistry reffering to quantum mechanics. I never really got it because I was thinking in absolute terms - like - in an atom - the electron is here or there at any point in time. The big kicker I got last night that put it all together for me was that the equations were nothing more than imprecise predictions or probablilties of what's happening at a quantum level. That electron in my example is actually everywhere.
The big relevation I got yesterday was how our scientific methods we apply to problems in our tanks have been corrupted. You all know how I feel about the discussions we have with Chloramines. There was another post yesterday (from the miami club) about this. I refrained from jumping in.
From Wikiquotes http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Richard_Feynman:
Taking this back to the chloramines example: We make a guess that chloramines have wiped out the SPS in our tanks. We dont measure it, we dont experiment on it - we just stop right there and make the assumption that's our problem. An example of an experiment in this respect is: If chloramines are present in our water supply - why are others unaffected? Are they running the more expensive chloramine blocks? Are they performing maintenance on their RODI systems more often than others?
I never realized this before - but my whole life has been lived under feynman's premise. I might not have argued my point of view correctly (more on this later), but my thought process is there. It applies to so much in our world too.
Take the debate with global warming as an example. We have all these environmental scientists telling us we need to go back to the dark ages and quit burning fuels that produce CO2 - because it will warm the atmosphere, melt the polar ice caps and flood the costal regions . I have yet to see any experimental data or observations that the sea level has risen. Back in the 90's - I remember reading about some tiny little populated polynesian island that would have been threatened by rising sea waters. Where's the observation after 30 years that this island has been consumed by the sea due to global warming? Yet there is a large percentage of the population of the world which beleives we are in a crisis due to the export of CO2 in the atmosphere.
If you'd like to hear more - Youtube does have all 7 lectures of Richard Feynman: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j3mhkYbznBk
I put the science channel on last night and the dramatization of the study behind the challenger disaster in '86 was on. Afterwords (from 10 PM -11 PM) there was a little documentary on Richard Feynman - one of the scientists on the panel.
Feynman died before my time. I was 18 when he passed. I was 16 when the challenger disaster occured. Neither high school science or college science classes I took ever made reference to him (and I took a lot of science classes across multiple universities - started off as a chemical engineering major @ Penn State and moved on to secondary education - chemistry @ Edinboro). Classes like Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, Biochemistry, Physical Chemistry filled my days.
A few things clicked last night after 30 years of wondering as I watched these programs. I always had trouble with the equations in Physical Chemistry reffering to quantum mechanics. I never really got it because I was thinking in absolute terms - like - in an atom - the electron is here or there at any point in time. The big kicker I got last night that put it all together for me was that the equations were nothing more than imprecise predictions or probablilties of what's happening at a quantum level. That electron in my example is actually everywhere.
The big relevation I got yesterday was how our scientific methods we apply to problems in our tanks have been corrupted. You all know how I feel about the discussions we have with Chloramines. There was another post yesterday (from the miami club) about this. I refrained from jumping in.
From Wikiquotes http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Richard_Feynman:
First we guess it. Then we compute the consequences of the guess to see what would be implied if this law that we guessed is right. Then we compare the result of the computation to nature, with experiment or experience, compare it directly with observation, to see if it works. If it disagrees with experiment it is wrong. In that simple statement is the key to science. It does not make any difference how beautiful your guess is. It does not make any difference how smart you are, who made the guess, or what his name is "“ if it disagrees with experiment it is wrong. That is all there is to it.
Taking this back to the chloramines example: We make a guess that chloramines have wiped out the SPS in our tanks. We dont measure it, we dont experiment on it - we just stop right there and make the assumption that's our problem. An example of an experiment in this respect is: If chloramines are present in our water supply - why are others unaffected? Are they running the more expensive chloramine blocks? Are they performing maintenance on their RODI systems more often than others?
I never realized this before - but my whole life has been lived under feynman's premise. I might not have argued my point of view correctly (more on this later), but my thought process is there. It applies to so much in our world too.
Take the debate with global warming as an example. We have all these environmental scientists telling us we need to go back to the dark ages and quit burning fuels that produce CO2 - because it will warm the atmosphere, melt the polar ice caps and flood the costal regions . I have yet to see any experimental data or observations that the sea level has risen. Back in the 90's - I remember reading about some tiny little populated polynesian island that would have been threatened by rising sea waters. Where's the observation after 30 years that this island has been consumed by the sea due to global warming? Yet there is a large percentage of the population of the world which beleives we are in a crisis due to the export of CO2 in the atmosphere.
If you'd like to hear more - Youtube does have all 7 lectures of Richard Feynman: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j3mhkYbznBk