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I don't know how to explain the issues at hand in a way that nonphysicists are certain to understand. Can anyone point me to some resource (book, video, it doesn't really matter) that will help me?

Dilaton
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  • I saw that, but I don't know how I can show it to people with no physics background whatsoever and have them understand it. I tend toward technical explanations I speak. – cartomancer Aug 13 '13 at 17:36
  • Hi cartomancer. Welcome to Phys.SE. Your question (v1) is off topic in the sense that we only allow a limited number of book recommendation posts. I close it as a duplicate, not because it necessarily is, but to guide viewers in the right direction. – Qmechanic Aug 13 '13 at 17:43
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    @Qmechanic it confuses me that such questions are still getting closed. Do we not have a change in the book policy according to this meta post? The OP clearly specifies that he is interested in resources that can be understood without prerequisites, namely by non-physicists. – Dilaton Aug 13 '13 at 21:11

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