On Wed, Jun 4, 2025 at 2:40 AM Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote

>* Why should I be troubled by inertia? It's easily understood.*


On Wednesday, June 4, 2025 at 12:17:40 AM UTC-6 Brent Meeker wrote:

*> Then perhaps you can explain why a muon has about 200x the inertia of an
>> electron?  And why inertia and gravity are always proportional? Brent*
>
>

> *> It's caused by its larger mass, about 200x, compared to the electron.*


*But WHY is the muon identical with the electron except that it's 207 times
as massive and has a half-life of 2.2*10-6 seconds, which is very very long
by particle physics standards.  *

*> The statement of Inertia, what it is, is easy to grasp.*


*The only reason you don't find inertia to be mysterious is because you're
accustomed to it, you have experienced it every moment of your waking life
since you were born, so it has become humdrum, hardly worth talking about.
But if you had never encountered it before you would find it deeply weird.
It's easy to grasp what inertia does, but if you can really grasp why
inertia must be the way it is and not some other way then you should stop
blabbing on the Everything List and start writing your Nobel prize
acceptance speech.  *

*Read my post about what Richard Feynman's father told his eight-year-old
son about inertia, the man wasn't a scientist but he demonstrated deep
wisdom. And it's ridiculously easy to come up with unanswered propositions
in science, all you need to do is start asking an iterated sequence of why
or how questions and very soon you'll hit one. *

*John K Clark    See what's on my new list at  Extropolis
<https://groups.google.com/g/extropolis>*
df3

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