Guest guest Posted January 21, 2004 Report Share Posted January 21, 2004 Is there less than Nothing? Not in the 'physical world.' There is less than nothing in math- zero is more than -1. In financial matters to have nothing is better than to owe much. Wheather-wise zero occurs twice. There is Zero degree temperature and minus ten degrees, etc. Then there is absolute zero, which is -450 degrees Celsius. At that temperature atoms freeze and stop moving. We could speculate what would happen at a lower temperature. Would light freeze? But, of course, there is no lower temperature than absolute zero. Absolute zero doesn't even occur naturally. Outer space is only about three hundred some degrees below zero, if I remember correctly. So how about a vacuum, is there such a thing as a perfect vacuum? Not the vacuum of outer space. Not the vacuum of the laboratories. Perfect nothingness might not be of this world. Just another axiom, we feel we can visualize. Less than nothing, that's a hard one to view. Unless you are an accountant. Pete Hotjobs: Enter the " Signing Bonus " Sweepstakes Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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