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hector from physics

A student in physics that tells 20 minute recaps of his weekend and how he cheats on his girlfriend during said time. Hector from Physics is not to be confused with Harold from Chemistry or the guy who sharted in Ms.J’s seat.
Alright, its time for our weekend share”

“Oh no, Hector from Physics is going to tell us about his weekend again”
by GordonsLover January 19, 2023
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National slap a physicist day

Day (everyday) when you can slap a physicist. Especially those who study at PMF, Zagreb
Filip is a physicist. Slap him on national slap a physicist day.
by Micamaca September 1, 2023
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I'm a Physician

Famous last words from a knight trying to defend his queen. Similar to "trust me bro", it is now used as a way to counter an argument especially for a woman whom you'll never get.
"My understanding is a psychological body language, whenever that happens, people usually actually huddle up more to protect their mid-body, because that's where your organs are."

"I...I'm...I'm a physic..I'm a physician."
by imaphysician March 8, 2024
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Hard Problem of Physics

Why is the universe so perfectly, unexpectedly intelligible to the human mind? Physics reveals a cosmos governed by elegant, mathematical laws that our relatively small, evolved brains can comprehend. The hard problem is explaining this "unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics." We evolved to throw spears and avoid predators, not to intuit non-Euclidean geometry or quantum spin. So why does our internally-generated logic (math) map so perfectly onto the deep structure of external reality? This points to either a miraculous coincidence or a deep connection between consciousness and cosmos that physics, as currently constituted, cannot explain.
Example: A physicist, using symbols on a chalkboard (general relativity), predicts that light will bend around the sun by a specific angle. Astronomers observe it during an eclipse, and the prediction is confirmed exactly. The hard problem: How did a pattern in that ape-descended brain's thoughts correspond to a curvature in the fabric of spacetime billions of years old and light-years away? The universe is under no obligation to conform to human logic, yet it does, with spooky precision. This success is the field’s greatest triumph and its most profound mystery. Hard Problem of Physics.
by Enkigal January 24, 2026
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Exotic Quantum Physics

The "hold my beer" frontier of science where the normal rules are suggestions and everything is weird. This goes beyond standard quantum mechanics to include theories and hypothetical states like quantum entanglement for communication, quantum superposition of macroscopic objects, quantum tunneling on a usable scale, and manipulating quantum spin fields. It's the toolbox for technologies that look like magic: teleportation, cloaking devices, perception filters, and computers that calculate in alternate realities. It's where physics meets philosophy and engineers have nervous breakdowns.
Example: "Our 'cloaking device' doesn't bend light; it uses exotic quantum physics—shunting photons through a higher-dimensional manifold so they reappear on the other side of the object without ever interacting with it. Don't ask me to draw a diagram."
by Dumuabzu January 29, 2026
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Laws of Physics Harnessing

The ultimate power move: treating the fundamental rules of reality—gravity, electromagnetism, the strong & weak nuclear forces—not as constraints, but as tools in your workshop. This is engineering on a cosmic scale, using gravity as a tractor beam, the strong force for unbreakable bonds in materials, or the weak force for catalyzed nuclear processes. It's about moving from simply using physics (like a lever) to actively orchestrating it, directing fundamental interactions to achieve effects that look like magic to anyone who doesn't have the universal cheat codes.
Example: "Their defense grid doesn't shoot missiles; it uses laws of physics harnessing. It projects a localized increase in the strong nuclear force, making the air in front of incoming projectiles as dense as a neutron star, stopping them dead without a sound or explosion."
by Dumuabzu January 29, 2026
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Hard Problem of Physicalism

A more nuanced version of materialism's problem. Physicalism claims everything is physical or supervenes on the physical. The hard problem is defining "the physical" without circularity. Physics describes the behavior of matter, but doesn't define its essence. Furthermore, if physics is just our best current model, then physicalism becomes the claim "everything is whatever our current physics says it is," which is both provisional and strangely empty. It's materialism with a philosophy degree, but still struggling.
*Example: "She's a physicalist but admits physics doesn't have a clue about consciousness. The hard problem of physicalism: she believes consciousness is 100% physical, but 'the physical' is an ever-changing list of quarks, fields, and maybe strings. She's betting on a mystery being solved by a moving target."*
by Abzugal January 30, 2026
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