It was about 3am and I was on my sofa watching T.V. After a couple of minutes I seen my lamp move out of the corner of my eye. I sat there for a couple of minutes stiff as a board thinking what could of caused the lamp to shake. Does anyone have any explications of what could of made it shake? (The lamp is big, it's about the size of a person)
If Sheilds fights like he fought in Strikeforce I think he has a chance at winning. He didn't look good at 170 vs Kampmann because he ran out of gas early. So if Sheilds worked on this and he doesn't run out of gas vs GSP, I think he has a chance at winning. I hope Sheilds can pull out a win, but if I had to bet I'd go with GSP.
It seems like a rather silly thing to say, to be perfectly honest. Newton's laws work which is why millions of school and university students across the world verify them in physics labs every year! They don't work in all situations but they work in most. Einstein's also work. In fact, when we apply Relativity to objects moving at everyday speeds, or to planets orbiting reasonable distances from stars, we get the same laws as Newton had. We also know Einstein's ideas don't work in all situations - we haven't been able to get general relativity to square with quantum mechanics. No single theory describes our universe. This is the ultimate quest of physics and one we're still a long way from completeing. Both Newton and Einstein contributed greatly to our understanding but, from a purely scientific point of view, I don't know how you 'quantify' the degree of 'dethroning'. Which is why I think it is a silly thing for a scientist to say.
Sure, Skipper, give it to me. Will you hold my hand? Thank you. )