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Re: About the skin effect in humans
Original poster: "mercurus2000" <mercurus2000-at-cox-dot-net>
You're remarks are well founded, but you could do without the sarcasm.:)
Adam
----- Original Message -----
From: "Tesla list" <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
To: <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
Sent: Wednesday, May 26, 2004 4:44 PM
Subject: Re: About the skin effect in humans
> Original poster: Mddeming-at-aol-dot-com
>
> In a message dated 5/26/04 2:37:11 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
> tesla-at-pupman-dot-com writes:
> > I'll check it out when I get more money,
>
> Good, THEN we'll have something to spend time talking about. Most
> researchers are inclined to devote their limited resources to
investigating
> things that are at least theoretically possible than they are to
disproving
> things which are theoretically not possible.
> I'm afraid tho a theoretical
> > analysis and equations to back it up, can't disprove what tesla saw and
> > measured.
>
> Unrepeatable phenomena cannot be disproven. They can be shown to be show
to
> be so unlikely as to convince most reasonable people that it's not worth
> the effort to worry about, But it can never change the claims of what they
> think Tesla claimed he saw to a True Tesla Believer, Hallelujah, Amen!
>
> It's like finding a equation that says the sky is red when you
> can
> > verify with your own eyes in reality that it's blue.
>
> At this time, You are claiming Tesla's sky was red, when the equations
> (and most of us) say it's blue. Fair or not, the burden of proof is always
> on those who claim that the rest of the world is wrong. To extend your
> metaphor, when several people independently see it with their own eyes,
> then you can begin to suspect he wasn't color blind.
>
> Hoping for a more productive thread soon,
>
> Matt D.
>
>