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Einstein's Mistake

April 26 2009 at 9:31 PM
Anonymous 

 


apparently Einstein made a mistake see at:http://www.scribd.com/doc/14575537/Einstein-Mistake#document_metadata


And here was us thinking he was perfect, NOT.



 
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AuthorReply

Re: Einstein's Mistake

April 27 2009, 12:02 AM 






Anon:


It is not a question of how many mistakes Einstein made.

It is a question of many things he got, in his physics career, right!

[linked image]

 
 

Re: Einstein's Mistake

April 27 2009, 12:17 AM 



Dear Anon:


It is not a question of how many times Einstein was wrong.

It is a question of how many times he was, during his very long physics career, right!

happy.gif

 
 
Anonymous

Re: Einstein's Mistake

April 27 2009, 5:25 AM 

On that case - When he thought he was right he was wrong, when he thought he was wrong he was right.

 
 

Re: Einstein's Mistake

April 27 2009, 2:29 PM 



Anon:

As far as I know, he was right only about "God doesn't play dice"!







 
 
Anonymous

Re: Einstein's Mistake

April 27 2009, 6:19 PM 

plays some other game I suppose like cards soltaire

 
 

Re: Einstein's Mistake

April 27 2009, 7:09 PM 






Only if HE has no JUNO to play with HIM!

[linked image]

http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Who_was_Jupiter's_wife

 
 
Anonymous

Re: Einstein's Mistake

April 27 2009, 7:43 PM 

So you think God is Jupiter not Saturn; when classically there was big war between Jupiter and Saturn

 
 

Re: Einstein's Mistake

April 27 2009, 10:28 PM 





Neither...

You don't believe what the 'wiki nuts' have done!

Their answer about Jupiter's wife was similar to this:
http://gwydir.demon.co.uk/jo/roman/juno.htm

But as soon as I posted the link to it, they replace it with the silly answer above.





 
 

Re: Einstein's Mistake

April 28 2009, 12:38 AM 


Hi Anon:



Here's the WIKI first answer as cached by the Googlebot on March 23:

"Jupiter is the supreme god of the Roman pantheon, called dies pater, "shining father". He is a god of light and sky, and protector of the state and its laws. He is a son of Saturn and brother of Neptune and Juno (who is also his wife)."

http://209.85.173.132/search?q=cache:3rraEiRQ8SEJ:wiki.answers.com/Q/Who_is_greek_god_Jupiter+upiter+is+the+supreme+god+of+the+Roman+pantheon,+called+dies+pater,+"shining+father".+He+is+a+god+of+light+and+sky,+and+protector+of+the+state+and+its+laws.+He+is+a+son+of+Saturn+and+brother+of+Neptune+and+Juno+(who+is+also+his+wife)."&cd=5&hl=en&ct=clnk

 
 
Jose Rodriguez

# Einstein's Mistake

April 28 2009, 8:24 AM 

Maybe the Earth orbited Saturn before they both were captured by the Sun

 
 
Anonymous

Re: Einstein's Mistake

April 28 2009, 2:58 PM 

shades of Velikovsky

 
 

Re: Einstein's Mistake

April 28 2009, 4:15 PM 






Jose:

It could be!

But for the Romans, the earth was always standing still at the center of their universe:
http://www.livius.org/ea-eh/edges/edges.html








 
 
Jose Rodriguez

Re: Einstein's Mistake

April 29 2009, 11:54 AM 

Early mythology hints at Saturn being the sun.


The Greeks and Ancient Egyptians may not have held so. The Egyptians thought the "Universe" hatched from an egg. If one thinks of each galaxy as a universe, it fits with Halton Arp's observations.

 
 

Re: Einstein's Mistake

April 29 2009, 4:28 PM 





That was probably true in the case of ancient Egyptians.

Nonetheless, the Greeks of Aristotle and Plato, certainly, believed that the earth
was motionless at the Center of the Cosmos.






 
 
Anonymous

Re: Einstein's Mistake

April 29 2009, 7:42 PM 

Aristotle points out that the Pythagoreans believed the earth moved.


And Pythagoras was the only Greek philosopher initiated into the secret Ancient Egyptian mysteries.

 
 

Re: Einstein's Mistake

April 30 2009, 12:04 AM 






Yes, but the Pythagoreans believed that Earth moved in small circles near the center of the universe;
but it does so mainly through­ the transformation of the earth to counter-earth and vice versa,
which takes very long time and can't be observed:
http://www.pbs.org/standarddeviantstv/transcript_astronomy.html

[linked image]













 
 
Jose Rodriguez

Mythology confirmed by physics

April 30 2009, 1:44 AM 


 
 
Jose Rodriguez

Ancient observations

April 30 2009, 12:34 PM 

Giant plasma tornadoes in space seen in ancient times:
http://www.thunderbolts.info/tpod/00current.htm

 
 

Re: Einstein's Mistake

April 30 2009, 7:48 PM 




Jose:

This was not mythology.
This was science at the cutting edge:

[linked image]






 
 
Jose Rodriguez

Mythology confirmed by physics

May 1 2009, 7:42 AM 

What do you think of the tornadoes? (cutting edge observations)

 
 

Re: Einstein's Mistake

May 2 2009, 10:38 PM 





Do you mean the Midwest tornadoes?

[linked image]



Or do you mean the RAF tornadoes?

[linked image]




 
 
Jose Rodriguez

Re: Einstein's Mistake

May 3 2009, 2:35 AM 

I mean the tornadoes in space: Doesn't the link below work?

Giant plasma tornadoes in space seen in ancient times:


http://www.thunderbolts.info/tpod/00current.htm



 
 
Jose Rodriguez

Oops! Try this one:

May 3 2009, 2:37 AM 


 
 

Re: Einstein's Mistake

May 4 2009, 4:31 PM 




Very interesting report...

However, this new phenomenon appears to be closer to thunderbolts than to tornadoes.

Furthermore, I've not been convinced yet that the Universe is electric.

And in spite of the stunning picture below, I would say that the Universe is electrically neutral at the large scale.
[linked image]

So, Jose, do you have any more things to say against the Neutral Universe and in favor of the Electric Universe?

[linked image]










 
 
Jose Rodriguez

Re: Einstein's Mistake

May 5 2009, 10:19 AM 

I have mucho. Only if you are really interested in finding real evidence. Borrow the two books by Halton Arp: "Redshift, QUASARS, and Controversy;" and "Seeing Red." After the read, you may want to buy them for your own library. Then, study the interesting things electric plasma does in the laboratory. If this doesn't fire you up, you are just not really interested. There are quite a few sites on the internet devoted to the subject. Join the new paradigm.

 
 
Anonymous

Re: Einstein's Mistake

May 6 2009, 2:11 AM 

Giant tomatoes:

radiator-charlies-mortgage-lifter-tomato.jpg

 
 

Re: Einstein's Mistake

May 7 2009, 7:33 PM 




And this is the Giant Pumpkin:

[linked image]

 
 
Jose Rodriguez

Re: Einstein's Mistake

May 8 2009, 7:18 AM 


 
 
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