On 2008-02-11, Steve Holden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Well the history of physics for at least two hundred years has > been a migration away from the intuitive.
Starting at least as far back as Newtonian mechanics. I once read a very interesting article about some experiments that showed that even simple newtonian physics is counter-intuitive. Two of the experiments I remember vividly. One of them showed that the human brain expects objects constrained to travel in a curved path will continue to travel in a curved path when released. The other showed that the human brain expects that when an object is dropped it will land on a spot immediately below the drop point -- regardless of whether or not the ojbect was in motion horizontally when released. After repeated attempts at the tasks set for them in the experiments, the subjects would learn strategies that would work in a Newtonian world, but the initial intuitive reactions were very non-Newtonian (regardless of how educated they were in physics). > In strict linguistic terms the word "subatomic" is a fine > oxymoron. I suspect it's really "turtles all the way down". -- Grant Edwards grante Yow! Yes, but will I at see the EASTER BUNNY in visi.com skintight leather at an IRON MAIDEN concert? -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list