What is it about electronics that you don't understand? |
It's not just one thing. I lack the reasoning skills to follow circuits. It's probably similar to how normal people see code.
Maybe if I really wanted, I could understand it, but I don't really care. I already have my thing.
Besides, programming has one thing electronics doesn't:
The programmer, like the poet, works only slightly removed from pure thought-stuff. He
builds castles in the air, from air, creating by exertion of the imagination. Few media of creation are so flexible, so easy to polish and rework, so readily capable of realizing grand conceptual structures. |
I'll tell you what really doesn't make sense: contact. Think about it. Atoms are really, really, really empty spaces. You can't have two atoms touching. And yet, macroscopic objects still don't go through each other. What the hell?
I think my physics teacher said something about Hydrogen colliding making Helium atoms --> every other atom. If he's right then there are no elements except hydrogen, everything else is just more hydrogen. |
Durr. All atoms are made of the same things. It's how much of said things there are in the atom that determines the element. It's what nuclear fusion and fission are all about: releasing energy by combining and splitting atoms. If I remember this one graph from my physics book, you can always release more energy by moving towards iron. Moving away from iron
requires energy. Also, starting with lighter elements (fusion) releases more energy than starting with heavier elements (fission).
Thinking about it, the big bang makes no sense. |
Interestingly enough, everyone who doesn't understand it says this.
As I understand it, the theory explains the origin of the universe as the violent decompression of space. It doesn't attempt to explain why space was compressed, how long it was in this state (that question, by the way, doesn't make sense. Time is thought to start at the BB), or where the matter that was compressing it came from. I don't think it even explains why it happened, since that would also involve something happening before the event, which is absurd.
"Nothing came from nowhere and created everything." |
How does that not make sense? Sure, it's a rather lazy theory, but it's not irrational.
Here's another: The universe is a simulation running on a hypercomputer. At one point, some race born in this universe will build an equivalent hypercomputer and run a universal simulation identical to this one. The simulation will of course finish in finite time. This universe will exist forever.
That's not more nor less rational, but it does take longer to type.
And it's also mind-blowingly awesome when you think about it.