• Science

    In Defense of the LHC

    By Posted on 3.18.2009 23 Comments

    Today’s most ambitious scientific instruments are modern-day cathedrals in their size and complexity, if not in their purpose—these are, after all, structures built to shatter worldviews, not to reinforce them. And the grandest of all, pictured on these pages and fired into action today, will take us on a journey to one of the least-accessible places imaginable: the realm of quantum particles, less than a billionth the size of a single atom.

    10.11.2008 at 05:40pm - Comment by thevirus01

    ymi2b, for one thing, fermilab had to create a network to share data with other scientists, which has now evolved to the internet. Simply this alone, among hundreds of other things, has been a result of massive researches performed by scientists that most retarded people like you consider to be useless. Radar, infrared, and other things have all been achieved through science and not the military. without science, the military would still be using 18th century weapons.

  • Science

    In Defense of the LHC

    By Posted on 3.18.2009 23 Comments

    Today’s most ambitious scientific instruments are modern-day cathedrals in their size and complexity, if not in their purpose—these are, after all, structures built to shatter worldviews, not to reinforce them. And the grandest of all, pictured on these pages and fired into action today, will take us on a journey to one of the least-accessible places imaginable: the realm of quantum particles, less than a billionth the size of a single atom.

    10.11.2008 at 05:39pm - Comment by thevirus01

    ymi2b, for one thing, fermilab had to create a network to share data with other scientists, which has now evolved to the internet. Simply this alone, among hundreds of other things, has been a result of massive researches performed by scientists that most retarded people like you consider to be useless. Radar, infrared, and other things have all been achieved through science and military. without science, the military would still be using 18th century weapons.



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