Well, basically you seem to be repeating the same old questions that people have already been answering for you, in other threads. I could give you my two cents worth, on all the points you raised. But then I already have, in other threads.
So maybe let me help you look at it in a different, and hopefully more practical, way.
1. Either LOA works, or LOA does not work.
2. If LOA works, then it works - whether or not people on this forum can give you answers that you find completely satisfactory.
3. If LOA does not work, then it does not work - even if people on this forum can give you answers that you find completely satisfactory.
To use a simple analogy, I have a handphone. It works (the last time I checked). However, I am not an engineer and I do not actually know how handphones are made or how they work or what those funny circuits inside it are supposed to do.
Engineers could try to explain this to me, and they may or may not be good at explaining it to me, and regardless of whether they are good or not good at explaining, I may or may not find their explanations satisfactory.
But I know my handphone works. Because I press certain buttons on it, and hey presto, I can talk to my friend over the phone, and he can talk to me.
Why don't you go press some buttons yourself, and see if it works? LOA, I mean.
It's a bit like gravitational force, yes? F= GMm/r(squared). Whether you knew that or not; whether I can explain it to you well or not; whether you understand the explanation or not, the law of gravity works. Some things about the law of gravity the scientists still don't fully understand - like, why isn't gravity slowing down the expansion of the universe?. But just because we don't have a satisfactory answer to that, doesn't mean that the law of gravity will stop working.
Last edited by Acting Like Godot; 12-01-2006 at 08:53 AM.
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