Leonardo Fibonacci wrote:It seems you have not read the thread because that is not the answer I have given to the same question you have asked. That question was "So does it violate CoE, or does it not violate CoE?"
And that quote clearly indicates your answer, you dishonest waste of flesh! Now you are trying my patience. Do you deny what you wrote? DO YOU? You are over the top in every sense of the word. You said it violates CoE. That is MORONIC.
Read the thread. Your question was: "[...] if it does violate CoE, how come it doesn't wipe out the known universe everywhere but at ground zero?"
I DID READ THE THREAD, I WAS QUOTING WHAT YOUR ANSWER WAS, DUMBFUCK. Can't you read?
Read the thread.
Good fucking grief. You just completely missed the point. I DID read the thread, and that was what you had to say, you illiterate thumbsucker!
Maybe because it is difficult to control.
Possibly, but you would think we would have heard of
someone trying it and failing.
Subspace weapons were banned under the second Khitomer Accords due to their unpredictable nature.
And as of ST: Insurrection, we know the bad guys don't exactly give a shit. We're talking about a weapon of
astronomical destruction here, the kind that renders planets uninhabitable from light years away. You don't think
someone somewhere has
ever thought about using this to take over the Star Trek universe? Really?
Read that thread. What are my both alternative explanations?
1) A stupid idea based on a stupid interpretation of a stupid episode of TNG that completely disregards CoE.
2) An idea that only works if either the moon Praxis was farther away from Qo'noS than the Excelsior, or else violates the inverse square law. And the former is obviously non-canon (thank you Hav.).
You have done nothing. Read the thread. There is no reason to expect mayhem .
According to your theory we should. Again, I
have read the thread, pretty parrot. I think I have proven that enough by now.
Yes that was not challenged.
That was also not challenged. How else could it destroy Lemma II?
Good, you're learning already.
No. It tells us only that is is still not fast enough. It is still accelerating as was said by me. It should be obviously that the wave could only "vanish" one way or another after it would have arrived at Lemma II.
... aaaaannnnnnnd you just lost your streak. It doesn't matter if it accelerates, as long as it is pumping energy into the known universe as light, its going to continue to fuck shit up no matter what speed its going at! How much simpler do I have to make this for you? What, do you think its going to just stop radiating once it reaches a magic speed? How many undefined variables were you planning to include into this theory?
Yes, it is simple if you simply ignore what was already said, to attack what you do not understand and to not give an own valid explanation.
Maybe I'm not providing my own explanations because the burden of proof is on you, not me? You parrot this "you have not read the thread" bullshit when your own words are right there in front of you. You have not deviated from them since post number one. My theory is Wong's theory, the one most favored by parsimony.
Agreed - although your example with water waves and light waves is stupid.
But the fact remains that both waves are travelling in the same medium: subspace. That's the unifying and deciding factor. Because nothing without a warp drive or other faster than light speed drive could reach faster than light speeds. These waves can because they are interacting with subspace. That's what I have tried to explain with my example. It does not matter what you are throwing in a river. The current will affect it.
So subspace is its own particle now? I guess this means the waves are traveling
through subspace, are made
of subspace, and pick up energy
from subspace as they travel? Are you
high one of Star Treks writers or something? Because that was the most surreal thing I have ever heard.
By medium, I don't mean what you think I mean. And I admit, I may have the wrong word (someone help me here if I do). But the idea I am trying to get across is that waves are made of particles whose cumulative motion is wave like. They interact with matter differently depending on what type of particle they are. A wave of protons will not have the same effect on matter that it comes across than a wave of electrons. In a similar fashion, subspace particle A may not interact with subspace the same way subspace particle B does, and may not have this bizarre CoE raping effect you seem to think subspace particle B has. Does that make sense yet?
Wrong. Back to the start: If we assume that the Excelsior was further away from Praxis than Qo'noS - an assumption made by Darth Wong that finds not one single evidence in Star Trek canon - and that the wave has affected the Excelsior more than Qo'noS - again an assumption made by Darth Wong that finds not one single evidence in Star Trek canon - there are (at least) two possible explanations:
- The Excelsior is more prone to be affected by the subspace shock wave than Qo'noS - that's Darth Wongs explanation for which he has nothing to support it - or
- that the subspace shock wave was affected by the same subspace phenomenon that was already observed and were stronger at the Excelsior than at Qo'noS.
See, this is the importance of watching the film you are analyzing. Qo'noS and Praxis are in the same system. That invalidates your entire argument right there.
The aforementioned problems with raping CoE are to be accepted due to the suspension of disbelief formula because it has happened in the TNG episode "New Ground".
Which was a stupid episode, and your interpretation of it is clearly wrong as well. Read the thread recently yourself? Solitons don't work the way you think they do. That was pointed out by DW in the post right after your first, and all you did was repeat your inane assertion that it does. Way to not prove your point, imbecile.