| bio | website | stoicfury.com |
|---|---|---|
| location | Silicon Valley | |
| age | 27 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year, 8 months |
| seen | Jan 14 at 5:43 | |
| stats | profile views | 3 |
Your friendly neighborhood Philosophy Mod. :)
Research Psychologist and HF Engineer at NASA.
Background in Psychology, Philosophy, and Computer Science.
Interests / areas of study:
artificial intelligence, linguistics, natural language processing, evolutionary psychology, persuasion, perception, developmental psychology, cognitive neuroscience, philosophy of mind, philosophy of religion, perception/phenomenology, Kant, Hume, Buddha.
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Jul 4 |
comment |
Negative and positive energy and Hawking Philosophy mod here - this question is speculative armchair philosophy at best (we typically frown on those); it is not grounded in any historical philosophy discussion that I'm aware of, and seems to command an understanding of physics that would be outside the realm of most philosophers ("negative energy"? I've never even heard of that). For these reasons we would close it just the same if it remains as currently formulated. |
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Feb 23 |
comment |
Superluminal neutrinos update: results due to loose cables |
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Feb 23 |
awarded | Editor |
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Feb 23 |
revised |
Do the particles that were found to break the speed of light really break Einstein's theory of relativity? update to the study |
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Nov 18 |
comment |
What would be the effects on theoretical physics if neutrinos go faster than light? second test replicates findings |
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Nov 18 |
comment |
Do the particles that were found to break the speed of light really break Einstein's theory of relativity? @Ron Maimon: Second test confirms findings |
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Nov 8 |
awarded | Supporter |
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Sep 24 |
awarded | Student |
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Sep 24 |
asked | Do the particles that were found to break the speed of light really break Einstein's theory of relativity? |
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Sep 24 |
awarded | Autobiographer |