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  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,785

    Its true. Put them on 'the list' both claims are entirely accurate.

    Recessions happen it is a fact of life. It is Brown's hubris that led him to fail to prepare for the next recession. The fact that a recession happened on his watch is not the problem - the problem is what he did BEFORE the recession hit.
    Both statements are objectively absurd - both qualitatively and quantitatively.

    I sense the core problem - apart from a touch of Brownaphobia - is that you conceive of the economic cycle as something predictable in shape and timing.

    And of course it is - looking back.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,339

    Yeah, but you're in dead trouble if the laws of the universe change.
    There was a niche bit of the A Level physics course where that happened a few years back (to do with the expansion of the Universe, which appears to be accelerating, which is nuts). Nothing was said officially, but I think the examiners had the sense not to ask any questions about it.
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303
    @Barnesian
    You are quoting the current budget deficit, not the total one (the Public Sector Borrowing Requirement or PSBR). By Brown’s own Golden rule this should have been zero averaged over the economic cycle.

    This might be of interest: it suggests that things were perhaps somewhere between the picture painted by you and @Philip_Thompson.

    http://www.econ.cam.ac.uk/MMPM/s-papers/Paul-Johnson-fiscal-pre-crisis-slides.pdf
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,007
    edited July 2020

    The Donlad's best poll for a long time. If it were more representative and from a less questionable source it might have moved the betting but he remains a 15/8 chance.

    Edit: That was a genuine typo but I kind of like it.
    Trafalgar group's state polls in 2016 were more accurate than most so yes a good poll for Trump on that basis, though holding Georgia only means he avoids a landslide defeat, he needs Florida or Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Michigan to win
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    Scott_xP said:
    So we know that Putin sees 45% of Scots who bothered to vote as Useful Idiots, but thanks to our Useful Idiot government we don't know for certain whether he sees 52% of the voting British electorate in the same way.

    Does anyone really think that Putin did not try to influence the 2016 referendum? He hates the EU, he hates the UK and would like to see the demise of both, and we know that he attempted to influence the 2019 GE and the Scottish ref. Motive, means and previous . The only question is really whether enough of the electorate were stupid enough to be influenced. I suspect Mr Putin thinks so.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,246

    You haven't been done until you have receive the full blast of SeanT's original and carefully worded invective. Sadly he is no longer with us.

    Perhaps his bastard offspring LadyG could assist.
    The last name change has definitely calmed the aggression.

    When we had our Spaniel castrated, he too became less aggressive.
  • I have to say, whilst I don't think Russia caused Leave, I do find it odd that the Government would want to have questions about Russian meddling be out there. Not investigating at all looks very easy to attack.

    Of course Labour must be smart, as they will look like they are trying to overturn the result if they go after them.
  • The last name change has definitely calmed the aggression.

    When we had our Spaniel castrated, he too became less aggressive.
    Hey there Pete, how's it going today
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,663
    A potential opportunity for competitive advantage from Brexit ?

    EU leaders slash science spending in €1.8 trillion deal
    https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2020/07/eu-leaders-slash-science-spending-18-trillion-deal
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303
    @Peter_the_Punter If the laws of the universe change even a bit we are all in trouble...

    More seriously I’ve had to change only two bits of Physics teaching Since I started (other than not being able to say that the next eclipse visible from the UK is going to be in 1999).
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,636
    HYUFD said:

    I think the point to remember is that while most posters of course are right or left leaning to some degree, there are few genuine neutrals here, this is not a political campaign blog but a political analysis and betting blog yes.

    So while you can present the case for your side and point of view you also have to do at least some reflection on what will happen electorally in a reasonably objective fashion from time to time.

    I would highlight Nick Palmer and indeed yourself as two examples of people who are always unfailingly polite and able to give shrewd analysis without getting personal and overly aggressive, despite Nick's political views being well to the left of mine I find him one of the easiest to converse with on here
    You are very kind, Hyufd, although I do recall being rude to you once. I regretted it and mention it only to affirm that none of us is without sin.

    There are many reasons why this has remained for many years the best political forum around. Some you mention. I would add OGH's light touch. The betting element too helps in that it discourages some of the wilder assertions.

    I agree very much about the range of opinions. If I reflect on the posters who I always read they cover the full spectrum.

    Now will you kindly p*ss off before the mellow mood evaporates. ;)
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405

    ONS: 1.2% for FY18/19 and again what matters most for measuring soundness is the direction of travel, it was consistently going down for a decade before the recession hit.
    https://www.ons.gov.uk/economy/governmentpublicsectorandtaxes/publicspending/bulletins/ukgovernmentdebtanddeficitforeurostatmaast/march2019

    For Labour since they had a balanced budget in 2002 then loosening to keep it as a balanced budget would have been fine. Loosely using all the proceeds of growth for expenditure instead of getting a bigger surplus. Instead they used all the proceeds of growth and then some more to splash out and increase the deficit pre-crash. It was a catastrophic failure of judgement that had never been done before.

    If my attacks on Brown don't stand up then please show ANY prior government INCREASING the deficit to 2-3% after a period of growth and in the years before a recession. Or please acknowledge what I am saying that what Brown did was unprecedented.
    The 1.2% number you link to is the EU standard deficit definition, the General Government deficit, but the UK standard is the Public Sector Net Deficit so that is the one I am using - and indeed is the number people are referring to when they refer to "the deficit" in this country.
    If you are going to criticise Brown for increasing the deficit after 2000 I think it is only fair that you acknowledge that he was simply unwinding what had been an unprecedented fiscal tightening. Referring to one without the other is simply absurd. Can you please show ANY government that ran a fiscal surplus for three years in a row?
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,621

    It will be zero soon
    Not according to PHE it won't!
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    I note PB Tories will be silent about their hero BJ being bought and paid for with a certain tennis match

    It must be very satisfying for Vlad to know that directly through his meddling in he US election, the US managed to have the ridiculous and incompetent Trump, and that through his meddling in the 2016 referendum he indirectly managed to assist with the elevation of the ridiculous and incompetent Johnson.

    Possibly it might have been even better for him had he influenced things to get Corbyn in, but, hey, even the best disinformation campaign has its limitations!
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,822
    Meanwhile, hardly anyone notices that the government is continuing its relentlessly thorough policy of wrecking British industry:

    https://twitter.com/pmdfoster/status/1285496946145267714
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,138
    Nigelb said:

    A potential opportunity for competitive advantage from Brexit ?

    EU leaders slash science spending in €1.8 trillion deal
    https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2020/07/eu-leaders-slash-science-spending-18-trillion-deal

    PB used to have an awfully prescient contributor called @SeanT who regularly warned of China's massively increased research budgets at a time when we were misguidedly reducing ours.
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    fascinating from Carl Heneghan on testing in the Spectator.

    if he is right then any positive test total you see overstates the true number, possibly by as much as much as 50%.

  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,339

    @Peter_the_Punter If the laws of the universe change even a bit we are all in trouble...

    More seriously I’ve had to change only two bits of Physics teaching Since I started (other than not being able to say that the next eclipse visible from the UK is going to be in 1999).

    You've got me intrigued now. What were they?
  • TheWhiteRabbitTheWhiteRabbit Posts: 12,454

    The Donlad's best poll for a long time. If it were more representative and from a less questionable source it might have moved the betting but he remains a 15/8 chance.

    Edit: That was a genuine typo but I kind of like it.
    No previous poll to compare against from this pollster.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,560

    @Peter_the_Punter If the laws of the universe change even a bit we are all in trouble...

    More seriously I’ve had to change only two bits of Physics teaching Since I started (other than not being able to say that the next eclipse visible from the UK is going to be in 1999).

    That which my 17 yr old grandson talks about appears significantly different from what I did in in 1956/7
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303
    kinabalu said:

    Both statements are objectively absurd - both qualitatively and quantitatively.

    I sense the core problem - apart from a touch of Brownaphobia - is that you conceive of the economic cycle as something predictable in shape and timing.

    And of course it is - looking back.
    Then why did he base a major policy (the Golden Rule) on being able to predict it?
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    Meanwhile, hardly anyone notices that the government is continuing its relentlessly thorough policy of wrecking British industry:

    https://twitter.com/pmdfoster/status/1285496946145267714

    Unfortunately for the government, the bodies that assist with the evaluation and presentation of standards (known as notified bodies) are already overworked and many have relocated to continental Europe thanks to a lunatic policy called Brexit
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303

    There was a niche bit of the A Level physics course where that happened a few years back (to do with the expansion of the Universe, which appears to be accelerating, which is nuts). Nothing was said officially, but I think the examiners had the sense not to ask any questions about it.
    Dark energy. Astrophysicists are in the embarrassing position of having lost track of 94% of the Universe...
  • Would like honest opinions, how good/bad do you think Brexit will be
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,138

    I have to say, whilst I don't think Russia caused Leave, I do find it odd that the Government would want to have questions about Russian meddling be out there. Not investigating at all looks very easy to attack.

    Of course Labour must be smart, as they will look like they are trying to overturn the result if they go after them.

    Labour should press for the mechanisms of Russian influence to be probed with an eye to easier detection. Britain should not need to wait for Facebook to notice something is up, and of course our own dear, much-missed @Plato, may she rest in peace, managed to get herself banned by Twitter when it cracked down on Russian trolls.

    Boris will resist once Cummings reminds him that CCHQ uses some of the same techniques! Similar considerations might mean SKS soft-balls it.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    PB used to have an awfully prescient contributor called @SeanT who regularly warned of China's massively increased research budgets at a time when we were misguidedly reducing ours.
    Yes, though he was also an early advocate of the lunacy known as Brexit, though credit to him he did more latterly admit it was most likely folly.
  • FeersumEnjineeyaFeersumEnjineeya Posts: 4,758
    edited July 2020

    @Peter_the_Punter If the laws of the universe change even a bit we are all in trouble...

    More seriously I’ve had to change only two bits of Physics teaching Since I started (other than not being able to say that the next eclipse visible from the UK is going to be in 1999).

    Dark matter and dark energy nearly caught me out - both discovered since I did my physics degree.

    Oh, and I still cringe inside when I remember the ridiculous explanation of a solar eclipse give by physics teacher whom I was shadowing. OK, so it was off-curriculum during an ongoing partial eclipse by a teacher who lacked a physics degree, but still!
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303

    You've got me intrigued now. What were they?
    You’ve already mentioned one.

    The other was the number of planets...
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,636

    @Peter_the_Punter If the laws of the universe change even a bit we are all in trouble...

    More seriously I’ve had to change only two bits of Physics teaching Since I started (other than not being able to say that the next eclipse visible from the UK is going to be in 1999).

    You can help me perhaps, Fys, by giving me your opinion of Stephen Hawkin. I've read a couple of his books and enjoyed them though obviously from a humanist viewpoint since I'm no scientist. I've just ordered his final book because I'm particularly interested in the cosmic views of such a great scientist. It occurs to me however that the really great physicists were not necessarily very nice people and didn't have much to teach us about the way we live our lives.

    Newton, I believe, was a bit of a shit and ended his career actively persecuting Catholics. Einstein was nicer, but had a very messy personal life and highly questionable theological views.

    I'd hope Hawkin's views on life, the universe and everything might be worth savouring, but perhaps Dougkas Adams would be better value in this repsect.
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,636

    Dark matter and dark energy nearly caught me out - both discovered since I did my physics degree.
    On the dark web, presumably?
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,822


    Unfortunately for the government, the bodies that assist with the evaluation and presentation of standards (known as notified bodies) are already overworked and many have relocated to continental Europe thanks to a lunatic policy called Brexit

    Very sensible of them, given that there is roughly zero chance of the UK not eventually realising it has no choice but to recognise the CE mark (which will of course have to be recognised in NI in any case), and a similar chance of the EU recognising some local standard we might come up with. The only question is how much chaos we need to go through in the interim before the penny drops. Still, we could hardly expect a government as lunatic as this to realise that manufacturers need more than 5 months warning of changes to standards and testing regimes.
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303

    That which my 17 yr old grandson talks about appears significantly different from what I did in in 1956/7
    Probably a lot more radioactivity than then.
    There is very little I teach other than that that was not known before the First World War. Possibly some electronics.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,138
    edited July 2020

    Dark energy. Astrophysicists are in the embarrassing position of having lost track of 94% of the Universe...
    Most of physics is still pre-20th Century, with half an hour on 1905 and the photoelectric effect. A-level physics is Newtonian mechanics, Newtonian optics and Faraday's messing around with electromagnets and iron filings. At least the biologists are now up to the 1950s and DNA. :wink:
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    The 1.2% number you link to is the EU standard deficit definition, the General Government deficit, but the UK standard is the Public Sector Net Deficit so that is the one I am using - and indeed is the number people are referring to when they refer to "the deficit" in this country.
    If you are going to criticise Brown for increasing the deficit after 2000 I think it is only fair that you acknowledge that he was simply unwinding what had been an unprecedented fiscal tightening. Referring to one without the other is simply absurd. Can you please show ANY government that ran a fiscal surplus for three years in a row?
    If you want to go by Current Budget Deficit which is what you seem to be doing then easy. 1948 to 1974

    The budget deficit was kept below 2% of GDP from 1948 to 1991.

    The UK was back in surplus by 1989 and the only period in postwar history that the budget deficit increased to above 2% was 1992 to 1994 following a recession that the country had a surplus going into.

    The deficit from 2003 to 2008 was absolutely unprecedented for growth times.so when the inevitable recession finally came we were screwed.
  • Most of physics is still pre-20th Century, with half an hour on 1905 and the photoelectric effect. A-level physics is Newtonian mechanics, Newtonian optics and Faraday's messing around with electromagnets and iron filings. At least the biologists are now up to the 1950s and DNA. :wink:
    Actually, both relativity and quantum theory are introduced at A-Level. As is an inordinate amount of particle physics, at least in the AQA specification from a year or two ago.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited July 2020

    Probably a lot more radioactivity than then.
    There is very little I teach other than that that was not known before the First World War. Possibly some electronics.
    Do you teach materials science (sensu lato), as a matter of interest? It was one of my favourite modules of the 10 or so in Nuffield A Level physics in the 1970s - Gordon's book The New Science of Strong Materials was one of the key reading texts. Edit: of course much of this was not known before 1900 - e.g. the composite materials such as GRP and the reasons for their strength.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    kinabalu said:

    Both statements are objectively absurd - both qualitatively and quantitatively.

    I sense the core problem - apart from a touch of Brownaphobia - is that you conceive of the economic cycle as something predictable in shape and timing.

    And of course it is - looking back.
    The economic cycle is something that is predictable in the sense of being real. Its shape and timing is unknown but that doesn't matter. Recessions happen it is a fact of life so sound finance requires in the words of the Boy Scouts (or Scar from the Lion King) that you Be Prepared.

    In 2002-2007 we didn't know when the next recession would come but nor does that matter. What we did know is that it was over a decade since the last one and the public finances were not appropriate for pre-recession levels.

    Even if the GFC had not happened, something would inevitably trigger a recession - that my friend is an unavoidable fact of life. It was Brown's hubris to believe he had abolished boom and bust.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,138

    Then why did he base a major policy (the Golden Rule) on being able to predict it?
    Brown's economic cycle was an elastic construct, which is partly why some say he overspent in the latter stages, which is what @Philip_Thompson is complaining about. Trouble is, even if true, it was small scale by international or historical comparison and had absolutely damn all to do with the global financial crisis and our ability to recover from it. @Philip_Thompson might have a case that if the GFC had not happened then something bad might have happened a few years later but in truth no-one (else) believes even that any more. Now is not a good time to be an austerian deficit hawk.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405

    If you want to go by Current Budget Deficit which is what you seem to be doing then easy. 1948 to 1974

    The budget deficit was kept below 2% of GDP from 1948 to 1991.

    The UK was back in surplus by 1989 and the only period in postwar history that the budget deficit increased to above 2% was 1992 to 1994 following a recession that the country had a surplus going into.

    The deficit from 2003 to 2008 was absolutely unprecedented for growth times.so when the inevitable recession finally came we were screwed.
    Not current budget, Public Sector Net Borrowing (PSNB). This is the standard measure used to define the fiscal deficit (e.g. the £35bn number for June published this morning). It would help the discussion if you would use the same numbers as everyone else and not cherry-pick for your own convenience.
  • OllyTOllyT Posts: 5,035

    @PBModerator @MikeSmithson @TheScreamingEagles can you please clarify whether swearing at users is appropriate behaviour on this site?

    Have you read SeanT's comments over the last couple of years (in whatever guise is the guise de jour) ?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,785

    Then why did he base a major policy (the Golden Rule) on being able to predict it?
    That "rule" says you borrow only to invest and cover current spending from revenue. It does not involve predicting when the world's banking system is going to crash, or similar cataclysmic events such as pandemics. Although that would be nice obviously.

    A load of bollox in any case imo. PR really. It can be fiddled big time by finessing the classifications of current vs capital and going off balance sheet - e.g. PFI.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    Would like honest opinions, how good/bad do you think Brexit will be

    It's going to be great ! A great big balls up! In generations to come people will see it as pointless and self damaging as the Charge of the Light Brigade. Poets will write poems about "into the valley of death rode the 66 million"

    Seriously though, I hope the government sees sense and mitigates it as much as possible, though when we have someone as incompetent as Johnson in charge I fear for the worst.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited July 2020

    Brown's economic cycle was an elastic construct, which is partly why some say he overspent in the latter stages, which is what @Philip_Thompson is complaining about. Trouble is, even if true, it was small scale by international or historical comparison and had absolutely damn all to do with the global financial crisis and our ability to recover from it. @Philip_Thompson might have a case that if the GFC had not happened then something bad might have happened a few years later but in truth no-one (else) believes even that any more. Now is not a good time to be an austerian deficit hawk.
    No-one (else) believes recession happen!? We're living in one right now!

    His pre-recession deficit was unprecedentedly massive by historical standards in terms of pre-recession times.

    https://tinyurl.com/yxr45fbz

    Recessions happen. On average once a decade but they absolutely do happen and after a decade's growth we should be prepared for the next one.
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303
    edited July 2020

    You can help me perhaps, Fys, by giving me your opinion of Stephen Hawkin. I've read a couple of his books and enjoyed them though obviously from a humanist viewpoint since I'm no scientist. I've just ordered his final book because I'm particularly interested in the cosmic views of such a great scientist. It occurs to me however that the really great physicists were not necessarily very nice people and didn't have much to teach us about the way we live our lives.

    Newton, I believe, was a bit of a shit and ended his career actively persecuting Catholics. Einstein was nicer, but had a very messy personal life and highly questionable theological views.

    I'd hope Hawkin's views on life, the universe and everything might be worth savouring, but perhaps Dougkas Adams would be better value in this repsect.
    As a Physicist he was way beyond anything I could ever approach. His field was Cosmology and those are the people who think in five dimensions and regard galaxies as far too small to worry about.
    I’ve tried to understand General Relatively, as in the tensor equations, and had to give up (I didn’t do it at University, opting for Astrophysics instead, so I was trying to teach myself). I have great respect for anyone who can take those equations and use them to get new insights.

    As a person, all I know about him is from watching “The Theory of Everything”.

    Edit: if you want a hero in Physics, Kepler might be the one to go for, though Feynman has many fans, particularly anyone who used his Lectures in Physics To get through their degrees.
  • MikeSmithsonMikeSmithson Posts: 7,382
    New thread
  • OllyT said:

    Have you read SeanT's comments over the last couple of years (in whatever guise is the guise de jour) ?
    The users in questions are acting like every post of mine is a sweary rant. I will use bad language when it's effective and when it calls out obvious trolling or baiting.

    I would like to think the majority of my posts are respected, even if disagreed with. I simply have no time for bullshit.
  • It's going to be great ! A great big balls up! In generations to come people will see it as pointless and self damaging as the Charge of the Light Brigade. Poets will write poems about "into the valley of death rode the 66 million"

    Seriously though, I hope the government sees sense and mitigates it as much as possible, though when we have someone as incompetent as Johnson in charge I fear for the worst.
    Do you think we're going to be looking at empty shelves in the supermarkets at the end of the year / start of next year?
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303

    Most of physics is still pre-20th Century, with half an hour on 1905 and the photoelectric effect. A-level physics is Newtonian mechanics, Newtonian optics and Faraday's messing around with electromagnets and iron filings. At least the biologists are now up to the 1950s and DNA. :wink:
    I would add Nuclear Physics and basic Cosmology to that mix for GCSE and Particle Physics and the Standard Model for A-level. But for the rest, yes.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,339
    Carnyx said:

    Do you teach materials science (sensu lato), as a matter of interest? It was one of my favourite modules of the 10 or so in Nuffield A Level physics in the 1970s - Gordon's book The New Science of Strong Materials was one of the key reading texts. Edit: of course much of this was not known before 1900 - e.g. the composite materials such as GRP and the reasons for their strength.
    There's some in the AS courses I've taught. And both of Gordon's books (Strong Materials and Structures) are fantastic examples of how to do popular science well.

    Suspect that's what triggered my intuition that this government (bringing it back to politics) is going to turn out to be brittle, like glass. Lots of things will hit it, most won't seem to do any damage, people will chortle at the lack of damage, then something small and surprising will hit the right place and the whole thing will shatter.
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 9,011
      

    New thread

    Gott sei dank.

  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,083
    Pulpstar said:

    Yes, the "just leave animals where you find them" advice faces difficulties when you've found a bird or rodent in your front room.
    Get your gun out in that event or a big stick.
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303
    Carnyx said:

    Do you teach materials science (sensu lato), as a matter of interest? It was one of my favourite modules of the 10 or so in Nuffield A Level physics in the 1970s - Gordon's book The New Science of Strong Materials was one of the key reading texts. Edit: of course much of this was not known before 1900 - e.g. the composite materials such as GRP and the reasons for their strength.
    I still recommend that book to my A-level students.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,083

    ‘... But, really, the Russia report is not about Brexit. Instead it paints a picture of a country which has become the plaything of Russian oligarchs and elites, who have twisted and manipulated Britain’s systems, processes and institutions to their will with impunity...’

    https://www.thelondoneconomic.com/opinion/the-russia-report-is-not-about-brexit/21/07/?amp&__twitter_impression=true

    Tories will do anything for money.
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,636

    As a Physicist he was way beyond anything I could ever approach. His field was Cosmology and those are the people who think in five dimensions and regard galaxies as far too small to worry about.
    I’ve tried to understand General Relatively, as in the tensor equations, and had to give up (I didn’t do it at University, opting for Astrophysics instead, so I was trying to teach myself). I have great respect for anyone who can take those equations and use them to get new insights.

    As a person, all I know about him is from watching “The Theory of Everything”.

    Edit: if you want a hero in Physics, Kepler might be the one to go for, though Feynman has many fans, particularly anyone who used his Lectures in Physics To get through their degrees.
    Noted with thanks.

    Paul Dirac seems my kind of bloke but he was more of a mathemetician, no?
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 9,011

    Noted with thanks.

    Paul Dirac seems my kind of bloke but he was more of a mathemetician, no?
    You've read "The Strangest Man"?

  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,246

    Hey there Pete, how's it going today
    Working hard mate!

    Been in Bristol today, little time for PB now the "holiday" is over. Catching up with PB at Magor services. Those over a certain age will understand!
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,083

    So we know that Putin sees 45% of Scots who bothered to vote as Useful Idiots, but thanks to our Useful Idiot government we don't know for certain whether he sees 52% of the voting British electorate in the same way.

    Does anyone really think that Putin did not try to influence the 2016 referendum? He hates the EU, he hates the UK and would like to see the demise of both, and we know that he attempted to influence the 2019 GE and the Scottish ref. Motive, means and previous . The only question is really whether enough of the electorate were stupid enough to be influenced. I suspect Mr Putin thinks so.
    You thick plonker, Putin intervened after Cameron begged him and sent emissaries from the state propaganda unit over to get him to say so live to the moronic BBC listeners. It was the 55% who were the useful idiots , if only you could reach such a high level as to be just a gibbering idiot.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,138

    You’ve already mentioned one.

    The other was the number of planets...
    Ironically, the boffin who got Pluto chucked out thinks there is a different ninth planet out there waiting to be discovered.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,083
    OllyT said:

    Have you read SeanT's comments over the last couple of years (in whatever guise is the guise de jour) ?
    What a big girl's blouse
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703

    Meanwhile, hardly anyone notices that the government is continuing its relentlessly thorough policy of wrecking British industry:

    https://twitter.com/pmdfoster/status/1285496946145267714

    You are missing the point Richard.

    To have a duplicate, meaningless, and onerous set of regulations was always the Brexiters' aim.

    So that we can say we have our own standards.

    That bonkers.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295
    edited July 2020

    Most of physics is still pre-20th Century, with half an hour on 1905 and the photoelectric effect. A-level physics is Newtonian mechanics, Newtonian optics and Faraday's messing around with electromagnets and iron filings. At least the biologists are now up to the 1950s and DNA. :wink:
    I have this strange view from time to time that we are past the peak rate of technological advance. That is to say, science and technology will continue to advance but at a slower rate than it did in the 250 or so years following the Enlightenment.

    Consider the number of inventions, discoveries and new technologies which came about during the 100 years from, say 1850 to 1950, and compare with those that have emerged in the 70 years since 1950.

    In the former period I could list hundreds but: powered flight, cars, commercial electricity, electronics, telephones, radio, radar, cinema, TV, nuclear energy, computing, antibiotics, evolution, plate tectonics, production lines, plastics, bessemer process, refrigeration and reinforced concrete make a sample top twenty.

    Since 1950? Well, space travel, genetics, the internet and mobile computing I guess. And I am not sure we're going to make up the gap much in the remaining 30 years to 2050.

    Happy to be persuaded otherwise.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,785

    The economic cycle is something that is predictable in the sense of being real. Its shape and timing is unknown but that doesn't matter. Recessions happen it is a fact of life so sound finance requires in the words of the Boy Scouts (or Scar from the Lion King) that you Be Prepared.

    In 2002-2007 we didn't know when the next recession would come but nor does that matter. What we did know is that it was over a decade since the last one and the public finances were not appropriate for pre-recession levels.

    Even if the GFC had not happened, something would inevitably trigger a recession - that my friend is an unavoidable fact of life. It was Brown's hubris to believe he had abolished boom and bust.
    The Boy Scouts. Mmm. I see.

    I bring you back to what I have already supplied as the only conclusion that an objective analysis of this topic will bear -

    If we had gone into the catastrophe of the GFC with a smaller deficit it would have been a bit easier to cope with the aftermath.

    It's boring, I know, but there we are.
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303

    Noted with thanks.

    Paul Dirac seems my kind of bloke but he was more of a mathemetician, no?
    At that level there is very little to distinguish them. Newton was the Lucian Professor of Maths at Cambridge and Hawking had his old job.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,138

    Noted with thanks.

    Paul Dirac seems my kind of bloke but he was more of a mathemetician, no?
    There's a video on this q I need to dig out and post on the new thread.
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,559
    SO who is winning the Depp v Heard war? IMHO she is ahead on points.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 9,078

    @Barnesian
    You are quoting the current budget deficit, not the total one (the Public Sector Borrowing Requirement or PSBR). By Brown’s own Golden rule this should have been zero averaged over the economic cycle.

    This might be of interest: it suggests that things were perhaps somewhere between the picture painted by you and @Philip_Thompson.

    http://www.econ.cam.ac.uk/MMPM/s-papers/Paul-Johnson-fiscal-pre-crisis-slides.pdf

    Thanks for the clarification. It looks to be an interesting paper.

    I think the PSBR is a dodgy metric as I think it includes LAs etc who should be able to borrow in their own right and excludes PFI and other dodges.

    The BIG metric used to the the Balance of Payments which is much more important. It shows whether we are paying our way as a country. It used to be quoted all the time and we all waited for the latest estimate. Will the IMF have to step in? The PSBR was hardly mentioned.

    The Balance of Payments was demoted by the Tories because of the embarrassment of continually having to sell the family silver to make ends meet, which is still going on. PSBR suited them and particularly the Treasury as it was an instrument of Control. Brown liked it for that reason too. It was also a stick with which to beat Labour (as we have seen here today).
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 9,078

    I have this strange view from time to time that we are past the peak rate of technological advance. That is to say, science and technology will continue to advance but at a slower rate than it did in the 250 or so years following the Enlightenment.

    Consider the number of inventions, discoveries and new technologies which came about during the 100 years from, say 1850 to 1950, and compare with those that have emerged in the 70 years since 1950.

    In the former period I could list hundreds but: powered flight, cars, commercial electricity, electronics, telephones, radio, radar, cinema, TV, nuclear energy, computing, antibiotics, evolution, plate tectonics, production lines, plastics, bessemer process, refrigeration and reinforced concrete make a sample top twenty.

    Since 1950? Well, space travel, genetics, the internet and mobile computing I guess. And I am not sure we're going to make up the gap much in the remaining 30 years to 2050.

    Happy to be persuaded otherwise.
    Pervasive AI, virtual reality big time, and personalised genetics will be transformative. Not to mention nano, and energy innovations.
  • sladeslade Posts: 2,161
    Teaching science is a doddle. If you want something really difficult try local government finance. I had to rewrite my lectures virtually every year - particularly when it came to central government grants to local government.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,621

    Would like honest opinions, how good/bad do you think Brexit will be

    In the short term (next few years) tough, with businesses needing to adjust. In the longer term, will work out ok, because people want to trade, to buy stuff and will get on with it.
    We can't run the counter-factual to see if it will be better or worse sadly.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,621

    I have this strange view from time to time that we are past the peak rate of technological advance. That is to say, science and technology will continue to advance but at a slower rate than it did in the 250 or so years following the Enlightenment.

    Consider the number of inventions, discoveries and new technologies which came about during the 100 years from, say 1850 to 1950, and compare with those that have emerged in the 70 years since 1950.

    In the former period I could list hundreds but: powered flight, cars, commercial electricity, electronics, telephones, radio, radar, cinema, TV, nuclear energy, computing, antibiotics, evolution, plate tectonics, production lines, plastics, bessemer process, refrigeration and reinforced concrete make a sample top twenty.

    Since 1950? Well, space travel, genetics, the internet and mobile computing I guess. And I am not sure we're going to make up the gap much in the remaining 30 years to 2050.

    Happy to be persuaded otherwise.
    I work everyday with quantum mechanics, but the users I help just press go (basically) and the results are divorced from the scientific understanding, as with all modern technology.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,663

    I have this strange view from time to time that we are past the peak rate of technological advance. That is to say, science and technology will continue to advance but at a slower rate than it did in the 250 or so years following the Enlightenment.

    Consider the number of inventions, discoveries and new technologies which came about during the 100 years from, say 1850 to 1950, and compare with those that have emerged in the 70 years since 1950.

    In the former period I could list hundreds but: powered flight, cars, commercial electricity, electronics, telephones, radio, radar, cinema, TV, nuclear energy, computing, antibiotics, evolution, plate tectonics, production lines, plastics, bessemer process, refrigeration and reinforced concrete make a sample top twenty.

    Since 1950? Well, space travel, genetics, the internet and mobile computing I guess. And I am not sure we're going to make up the gap much in the remaining 30 years to 2050.

    Happy to be persuaded otherwise.
    Reusable rockets; satellites; commercial internet; solid state electronics; spintronics; telepresence; quantum cryptography & computation; ultrasound; biotechnology; phage display; cloning; Antisense technology; CRISR; nanotechnology; digital photography; optical fibre; virtual reality; gravitational waves; the monolithic integrated circuit; photolithography; electron beam lithography; adaptive optics; meta-materials; hypersonics...

    ... that's barely scratching the surface.
  • not_on_firenot_on_fire Posts: 4,449
    Nate SIlver and friends have a whole one-hour podcast demolishing the "shy trump" supporters myth

    https://fivethirtyeight.com/videos/secret-trump-voters-didnt-decide-2016-and-probably-wont-swing-2020/
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    SO who is winning the Depp v Heard war? IMHO she is ahead on points.

    You have to go back to Wilde v Queensberry for a more ill-advised defamation trial. If he "wins" he'll get 1p damages and no costs.
This discussion has been closed.