I'd have him arrested for making threats on my life. :P
2007-08-17 02:16:17
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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I know a few physics professors and physics majors. They all say that they have been called psychics at some point in their careers. Its funny.
2007-08-17 09:17:46
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answer #2
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answered by hypno_toad1 7
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the difference between psychics and physics is that the latter wouldn't bullshit you about things like that. Unless they had very good evidence that at that particular date the sun would explode. The psychic, on the other hand, would charge you money for nonsense.
2007-08-17 09:18:54
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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There is something which makes us to live. It's a spiritual thing, I'm sure. For example, when you feel ill and suddenly something joyful happens, you are not sick any longer. But if you're depressed and tired with yourself, for any disease you can become an easy victim. So it's not a question of physics to decide how long to live, though sometimes they might give a good forecast, but it's yours to resist it and live longer.
2007-08-17 10:44:55
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answer #4
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answered by Ekaterina E 2
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Are you discusing physics or psychics? I would not accept such a prediction as true from either, so it matters little. Psychics is science, and psychics are frauds.
2007-08-17 09:27:51
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answer #5
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answered by miyuki & kyojin 7
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Unless that physics professor had irrefutable evidence, no. I don't believe that baseball players are the best source of information about cars, either.
2007-08-17 09:18:24
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Only if the death was going to be caused by something related to his field -- say, the Sun exploding.
I'd be much more inclined to believe the word of a doctor than a physicist.
2007-08-17 09:19:23
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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I don't think a real physics professor would pretend they could know such a thing. Too many unknown variables and unpredictable events involved.
2007-08-17 09:17:47
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answer #8
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answered by Zen Pirate 6
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The physics professor might tell me the average lifespan for someone like me, but if he started telling me exactly when, I'd doubt his credibility. Unless he developed some future viewing device.
2007-08-17 09:16:22
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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I'd believe every one of them, even if the ages they predicted were different; that's a tall order regarding belief, but this is R&S, anything is believable, especially self contradictions.
2007-08-17 09:26:28
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answer #10
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answered by hog b 6
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not really. Neither would I believe in what a psychic predicted either.
2007-08-17 09:17:17
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answer #11
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answered by whatotherway 7
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