http://eskesthai.blogspot.com
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The paper here:
http://www.haloscan.com/comments...20828253899805/
last entry, has relevance to Quantum Harmonics, it is by Gerard T Hoof't.
I tried to use trackback to keep the relevant links ongoing, but there seems to be a problem?
Is there a facility on your site for data to be catagorized by Monthly postings? although the first page has a search facility, it seems to dig up random postings rather than one asked for, sorry for moan but as you know your postings and questioning process needs to be maintained and inquiries investigated!
Paul Valletta |
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04.03.06 - 7:52 pm | #
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Hi Paul,
Click on homepage.
I'll have to thnk about what you are asking on threads.
I'll need some time to go over this.
THE MATHEMATICAL BASIS FOR
DETERMINISTIC QUANTUM MECHANICS by Gerard t Hooft
One now may turn this observation around. A closed system that can only be in a finite number of different states, making transitions at discrete time intervals, would necessarily evolve back into itself after a certain amount of time, thus exhibiting what is called a PoincarŽe cycle. If there were no information loss, these PoincarŽe cycles would
tend to become very long, with a periodicity that would increase exponentially with the size of the system. If there is information loss, for instance in the form of some dissipation effect, a system may eventually end up in PoincarŽe cycles with much shorter periodicities. Indeed, time does not have to be discrete in that case, and the physical variables may form a continuum; there could be a finite set of stable orbits such that, regardless the initial configuration, any orbit is attracted towards one of these stable orbits; they are the limit cycles.
Interesting.
Plato |
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04.03.06 - 9:20 pm | #
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I should say so! 
We can relate this recent inquiry all the way back to our conversations in superstringtheory.com..then P-Forums..and thus to Einstein?
Why my question regarding Einsteins Quantum Wave?..I posed this question almost 10 yrs ago..why did Einstein formulate a simple short paragraph, detailing the most amazing premise of Gravitational Waves?
If you recall from our conversations, I stipulated that Einstein was precise in naming the title of his book:Out of my later years?..for good reasons, it is this book that contains Einsteins most forwarding thinking theorum, a work of pure genius.
From the paragraph of Hoof't that you quoted above, I will be following up with some "emergent" concepts that T Padmanabhan has been professing for a number of years, and of course the R B Laughlin papers.
The consequence for understanding is far reaching.
Paul Valletta |
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04.04.06 - 9:35 pm | #
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for good reasons, it is this book that contains Einsteins most forwarding thinking theorum, a work of pure genius.
Yes I remember you saying this Paul.
Plato |
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04.05.06 - 7:15 pm | #
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Commenting by HaloScan
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