- #36
Vosh
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dst said:But we're not talking about something already established, defined and merely being extended which is the case in those tutorials. Here, it's an attempt to introduce eveyone to his new 'theory', which is a far cry from that. And you would expect it to be very clear, concise and so, not least from "the smartest man in America". Compare the first paragraphs of a translated version of Einstein's seminal paper and his:
As compared to his abstract (and that, it most surely is ):
Arguably one person of those produced more results. Now who drops the $11 words? Now if you read that article I linked to, it attacks exactly that sort of writing - ludicrously dense, abstract, and unnecessarily so. Sure, it's a "theory of everything" but you would expect it to say precisely what he's getting at. GR can be summed up in a sentence - "space and time curve under the influence of gravity" - let's see you do that with his. Here's the difference - in his paper, Einstein uses raw, simple action words - here we have to deal with "information is the currency of perception".
I wonder what this guy could come up with, paired with the Bogdanovs.
Where were you when Newton wrote his Principia?
Einstein might seem less abstruse to you because you're trained (I presume) in physics. You took a class and someone told you how it sums up. The vocabulary Langan uses is common philosophical jargon (like, teleology). Words like that will scare you to death if you don't know that. For me, both selections are equally impenetrable.
I still don't see wherein lay the need for the hollering and the 'tude.