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Physics, Technology and Math

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Everything that happens around us is according to “natural laws” that can be used to describe everything around us.

These refer to the physical limits such as the speed of light, which represents the maximum speed at which information can move. Or the absolute zero point. Nothing can get colder than -273.15° Celsius (-459.67° Fahrenheit).

For example, the law of conservation of energy is an immutable law of nature which states that the sum of all types of energy remains the same everywhere and at all times. Another part of the energy theorem states that all processes in nature are subject to losses. However, this energy is not lost but converted into heat. For example, every engine gets warm.

The laws of nature are interlinked and interwoven into a system. Physics has systematized them in such a way that things can be calculated and thus evaluated.6 Humans know many of these laws of nature, but not all. Laws of nature that are still being discovered may not contradict those that are valid today. All laws of nature are the same across the entire universe.

Since the laws of nature can’t be violated, as is possible with legal laws, they act as the “spoilsports” of visionaries, of whom two variations exist:

 The first tries to violate the laws of nature directly, for example, by ignoring the law of conversation of energy.

 The second ignores physically predefined efficiencies, which are usually significantly smaller than 100%. I take up this subject in detail on the following page.

First, I use general examples to illustrate the complexity of technical problems. Some of these have little to do with the contents of this book. If I were to discuss the efficiency of hydrogen cars right off the bat, the brains of a hydrogen proponent would then kick into “strike” mode. The “backfire effect” sends its regards (see Backfire Effect).

Germany's Freefall

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