Josh Clark
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Appearances Over Time
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that over at ITER, they have a low beta ratio, which is the amount of electromagnetism that you need compared to the amount of plasma you can put into the chamber.
All living things are made of cells.
And they both basically rejected these ideas.
And apparently here, at that 10 to the negative 36 power seconds, that was where inflation happened.
And then it was extrapolated elsewhere, right?
Aristotle sort of accepted it.
Yeah, like 20 years later, Rudolf Virchow said, you know what, not only is everything made of living cells, but they all come from pre-existing cells, which was a huge deal at the time because people believed in spontaneous generation at the time.
But he said, well, also, there are those four core elements, but they can be transformed into one another.
That's amazing.
That's where the expansion began.
Yeah, and that's why it was such a big deal that the Japanese invaded the Pacific because the Pacific Theater featured those countries that were the rubber-producing capital of the world that had been under British control.
So there's like 5% plasma to 95% electromagnetism just to keep this plasma thing from just blowing up, because that can happen.
Right, and that's where we actually could begin to observe some kind of matter.
And everyone was like, oh, God, here he goes again.
Yeah, and they think that what happened was a tremendous amount of matter and antimatter were created.
Like now we have to start thinking that because Aristotle said it.
Right, because stable atoms are neutral, right?
Like if you left some wheat seed in a sweaty shirt, it would spawn mice, I think, was one of them.