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The Higgs Field as the New Ether (2012)

8 pointsby ironchiefabout 10 years ago

2 comments

transfireabout 10 years ago
The molasses analogy doesn&#x27;t quite make sense. When an object moves through empty space it is not impeded by any field, otherwise it would slow down and eventually stop, which would in turn imply a special (absolute) frame of reference. So how can a &quot;molasses&quot; only affect <i>accelerating</i> objects? That is quite a peculiar condition for a field.
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Trombone12about 10 years ago
I think what happened is that the word &quot;field&quot; won over the word &quot;ether&quot;, probably because there was a not very successful &quot;aether theory&quot; on the days of old.<p>Certainly if you read this[1] 1999 article by Wilczeck it is clear that he just points out that we got an awful lot of field theories around, and that fields are basically a sort of ether. Which, you know, sure, but why not keep calling them fields?<p>Since then he has proposed that you can have a current spike travel endlessly around in a super conductive loop and named it a &quot;time crystal&quot;, so I guess he likes fanciful language.<p>1: <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;ctpweb.lns.mit.edu&#x2F;physics_today&#x2F;phystoday&#x2F;Ether.pdf" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;ctpweb.lns.mit.edu&#x2F;physics_today&#x2F;phystoday&#x2F;Ether.pdf</a>