I've lost track of the point you're trying to make. Are you still trying to convince everyone that quantum mechanics and thermodynamics are part of the field of classical mechanics?
Sorry, with all due respect, I'm not "throwing out" thermodynamics. It's just not relevant to the discovery referenced in the article, which is only concerned with classical mechanics. Thermodynamics is not part of the…
The title itself is not the problem, although even that is sensationalized. I was referring to the contents of the article, which have statements like this: "Is there a way for you to spin the top again so it ends up in…
Not talking about thermodynamics here. The discovery referenced in this article also does not solve for thermodynamics or entropy. And yes, you're right, the article does mention this later. I'm still bothered by the…
This article is written in a very annoying and misleading way. The discovery is not that rotation can be "reset". That is obvious and not surprising at all. Physical systems governed by classical mechanics are…
I usually just call these red herrings: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_herring
I've lost track of the point you're trying to make. Are you still trying to convince everyone that quantum mechanics and thermodynamics are part of the field of classical mechanics?
Sorry, with all due respect, I'm not "throwing out" thermodynamics. It's just not relevant to the discovery referenced in the article, which is only concerned with classical mechanics. Thermodynamics is not part of the…
The title itself is not the problem, although even that is sensationalized. I was referring to the contents of the article, which have statements like this: "Is there a way for you to spin the top again so it ends up in…
Not talking about thermodynamics here. The discovery referenced in this article also does not solve for thermodynamics or entropy. And yes, you're right, the article does mention this later. I'm still bothered by the…
This article is written in a very annoying and misleading way. The discovery is not that rotation can be "reset". That is obvious and not surprising at all. Physical systems governed by classical mechanics are…
I usually just call these red herrings: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_herring