(Okay, okay. It’s not a complete invisibility cloak, but still. . . .)
Real Life Invisibility Cloak?
Esau, it's also been made into a western by Veggie Tales, don't forget!
You've got to be kidding! WoW!
Esau, it's also been made into a western by Veggie Tales, don't forget! A musical western at that. A 'must-see' as I'm sure SDG will agree.
J.R. Stoodley:
Also Esau's mention of the Lorien cloaks might not be far off.
Thanks for the info! I didn't quite know what they were actually called!
Fr. Stephanos:
Joseph and his Amazing Real Life Invisibility Cloak?
But, since it involves an advanced scientific gadget, not only can this biblical story be made into a musical, but (I guess) a sci-fi story as well!
If the patriarch Joseph had been wearing one of these instead of what his father gave him, history would have turned out some other way.
"I'm sure all this light bending won't make the person truely invisible, "
It might be like the movie 'Predator'. If Predator remained still, you couldn't see him. However, whenever he moved, one could barely make out his shape.
This is definitely more sci-fi than fantasy, so I don't fully approve of the Harry Potter comparison.
Also Esau's mention of the Lorien cloaks might not be far off. While its more that the cloaks appeared different colors based on where they are still the end result is probably more like what these cloaks would do. I'm sure all this light bending won't make the person truely invisible, it will just be camouflage that changes to better match whatever is behind you
I wonder though if the specific mention of airplanes is because such a material could make distant planes virtually invisible against a uniform white or blue sky (because of the simplicity of the background)
And yes I doubt you could wrap it entirely around you and still see. I'm not sure if you would see blackness or something similar to what's behind you.
No.
I am sorry but that video is stupid. We do not see in microwaves and thus do not directly engage our intellects to detect things using them.
It is one thing to be invisible to microwaves it is another to be invisible to natural light while standing in front of the Mona Lisa. The whole idea of an invisibility cloak is that you are trying to fool the average human brain and not a microwave detector. Completely different. Duke fails again.
As far as the cloak that started this post is concerned, right now it only works on one wavelength. Call me when it works in full color.
But before that happens, I have to hurry up and send a blank sheet of paper into the Patent Office and claim this invention as my own.
After reading that story I poked around Google and found this video:
http://www.dukenews.duke.edu/2006/10/cloakdemo.htm...
The Creed says:
Credo in unum Deum; Patrem omnipotentem, factorem coeli et terrae, visibilium omnium et invisibilium.
Invisibilium is usually translated as unseen.
I seem to recall a blog comment where Father Peter Stravinskas explained the difference to Cardinal Arinze. "let me give you an example. If I hid under the table I'm unseen, but I'm not invisible.He [Arinze] howled with laughter. He has said since then that every time he says Mass in English he finds himself smirking at that point in the Mass."
Great. Nudists and impurists will have a field day.Now we can sneak into womens or mens dressing rooms and have adulterous fun anytime we want.
St. Maria Goretti pray for us.
Doesn't anyone remember when that Klingon ship landed in San Francisco?
Totally unrealistic. Everyone knows that if you try to cloak something on the surface of a planet, especially using 23rd century tech, visual distortion effects would give it away.
Parish Secretary:
"The clown is back but this time he says he's invisible."
Priest:
"Tell him I can't see him right now."
Doesn't anyone remember when that Klingon ship landed in San Francisco? You know, with the whales? And the transparent aluminum? And the nuclear wessels?
When they first announced the stealth bomber as invisible, I surmised they hadn't got anything of the sort but were just kidding that they had one.
Esperanto Christopher,
I *think* that you might be wrong. The reflecting lining, as far as I can tell, would only be on one side. But then there's the problem of ensuring that one never reveals the wrong side.
Invisibility cloak is worthless:
You can't see if you are in it, because all the light goes around you and not to your eye.
~ Esperanto Christopher
Now THERE'S a thought!
Invisibility cloak is worthless:
You can't see if you are in it, because all the light goes around you and not to your eye.
Er ... uh, I was talking about Wonder Woman's invisible jet ... not saying that Wonder Woman is as big as an airplane. Unless they discovered the mathematical equations necessary for small, man-sized jets back in 2005 or something. Which is possible, but it won't hit the news 'til someone claims it's like Harry Potter's broomstick.
...
Oh, just forget I said anything.
Why they chose a Harry Potter lede is beyond me. Why not Predator? Or, heck, they're talking about objects "as big as an airplane," so why not mention Wonder Woman?
And then, there's this:
Physicists figured out the complex mathematical equations for making objects invisible by bending light around them last year.
Of course, the implication being (or perhaps just the inference I'm drawing) that, as brilliant as that initial work was LAST YEAR, we in the mainstream media didn't cover it because, well, we don't read those nerdy scientific journals and we can't see a use for it 'til someone compares it to Harry Potter.
Well, you know the number of unsolved crimes will go up if this ever gets into the mainstream, right?
"I didn't see anyone kill him - a gun levitated in the air and shot him."
"I didn't see anyone steal it. It just disappeared."
:)
I wonder if I could get an indult to have a chasuble made from that material for the Solemnity of the Ascension. First Jesus, now the priest.
-
I will now demonstrate my invisibility cloak (I've had one for years, but no one saw it.) Ready? Here goes, 1, 2,
.
.
.
.
.
.
Pretty cool, eh?
But elvish cloaks only blend in with things. They don't make things disappear.
As I said, my ignorance for all things mythical.
"...didn't that Lord of the Rings character from the Movie "Return of the King" also have a similar cloak?"
But elvish cloaks only blend in with things. They don't make things disappear.
CHICAGO (AFP) - Harry Potter fans take note: scientists have finally come up with a workable design for an invisibility cloak.
Harry Potter?
If you will forgive my ignorance for all things mythical, but didn't that Lord of the Rings character from the Movie "Return of the King" also have a similar cloak?
I think that I'll add this one-frequency invisibility cloak to my wishlist, right along side that real-life ion gun, and that actual plasma rifle I've always dreamed of having.
I thought I had seen some videos of this before (thought I got it from this blog actually). Maybe there are some out on YouTube.
Happy Easter!
Just to spoil the fun, I point to Plato and the Ring of Gyges. :)
So, if you are a bad boy, do not get this cloak.
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