Ben Wiens said:
While my education was in engineering, I've studied the basics of Richard Feyman's work on QED already.
Does that mean that you've read the pop-science book that I recommended? Or does it mean that you can do QED calculations?
If the former then I would not agree that you've studied the basics of QED. If the latter than I would.
I think one of the issues with this forum is that it is supposed to be a status quo forum. We are supposed to be talking about the one right and true answer in Physics.
Yes to the first sentece, no to the second.
We stick to peer-reviewed, mainstream physics in the main sections of PF for a very good reason: it
works. But no one here would say that there is one right and true answer in any science. Anyone who works in the field knows that science is essentially an
a posteriori discipline.
Non of this speculative stuff is allowed here.
Material that has not been peer reviewed is permitted in the Independent Research Forum. That is written in our Guidelines, which you agreed to before posting here. I do hope you intend to honor that agreement.
If there was one right and true answer in Physics, there would not be the current dilema about Relativity and Quantum Mechanics not giving the same answer to certain questions.
Since no one is working from the "one right and true answer" premise, this point is moot.
I personally don't agree with Richard Feyman's basic description of what light is and how it operates. He himself says it is strange.
He calls it strange because it is counterintuitive, not because it is wrong. QED is the most accurate scientific theory ever devised.
I could shoot holes in some of it based on engineering laws.
No, you couldn't. I earned a BS degree in engineering, and when I went to grad school for physics I taught physics to engineers. Today I teach engineering courses. The typical engineering curriculum simply does not contain enough physics to be able to critique a theory such as QED. And if your curriculum was so atypical as to prepare you to discuss QED intelligently, you wouldn't have to ask us about it.
Do all of you believe his theories?
QED has been verified to over 10 decimal places. What's not to believe?
So just taking another advanced university course isn't going to necessarily help me because I want a wider range of explanations than are offered there.
It is not possible to assess how a course will benefit you except from hindsight. You are being told by people who have that hindsight that you do need to study QED. Do with that advice what you will.
Presently status quo education does not provide a coherent set of ideas on this topic.
And because you have not and will not study QED properly, your opinion on this matter has no merit whatsoever.
There are lot's of competing models all bundled together.
No, as far as the photon goes there is a single, unified model: QED.