At least one invention from Back to the Future 2 is coming out:
http://www.crunchgear.com/2010/08/25/nike-patenting-the-power-laces-from-back-to-the-future-ii/
Link to video.

3D-printers. It doesn't need to be as capable as the ones in Star Trek kind. I think there's great potential in simply picking existing technical solutions that can be safely used at home, combine them and bring down the size.
Lab-produced body parts. This "donation" system where body parts are taken from one human and put into another really have to go.
[URL="http://www.dailytech.com/Researchers+Print+Blood+Vessels+from+Ink+Jet+Printer/article8653.htm"]Daily Tech: Researchers Print Blood Vessels from Ink Jet Printer[/URL] said:The technology they are developing allows them to print new blood vessels and capillaries from an ink jet printer. The ink used in the technology is made from artificial cells and medical gel in a solution of calcium chloride. This ink solidifies into a tube with a lining of endothelial cells and an outer case of smooth muscle cells.
The technology isnt mature enough yet to replace the veins from a patients own body with researchers only being able to create a prototype vessel with an inner diameter of 1 mm and a length of 1 cm. The prototype isnt strong enough to support blood flow yet either. Tech.co.uk says that once the technology is more mature and robust there is no reason why scientists cant build up artificial organs from layered, printed sheets using the technology.
The parable of the broken window is just that: a parable. It's not a genuine fallacy outside of the fact that there is an unstated assumption in ignoring hidden costs. It's not some sort of grand set of the logical fallacies, it's just an invalid argument used by libertarians to show why analogous arguments are invalid; it is not in any sense a formal fallacy.
As for the slippery slope argument, no it's not always fallacious. The flaw in the argument occurs because of the multiplicative effect of probability in A -> B -> C -> D -> ... Z; If A occurs 95% of the time, B occurs 90% of the time, etc. the total effect would be such that Z occurs a small part of the time. So you just have to have independent justifications for B --> ... Z, that is, justify that B --> Z are true. A slippery slope argument certainly can be non-fallacious as long as you justify the other premises.
Besides, you're missing the more critical point in that knowing logical fallacies has nothing to do with convincing people that they are wrong.
Don't overlook "some education is junk".
Honestly, I don't understand your example. Is a discussion of the Federal Reserve's purposes and methods supposed to help students learn to think? A student figuring those things out is probably learning some things about thinking, but "teaching this stuff" is bypassing the thinking part, it's just feeding information.
A cloaking device might be cool, but just think of the consequences of everyone wandering around hidden. Cuts back on a lot of interaction, and ruins what is our greatest hobby; people watching.
So how are time travel and faster than light travel theoretically possible? Because out current theories tell us they aren't.
I have to say that it is not theoretically possible to go far than the speed of light, since you basically need infinite energy for it to be possible.
3D-printers. It doesn't need to be as capable as the ones in Star Trek kind. I think there's great potential in simply picking existing technical solutions that can be safely used at home, combine them and bring down the size.
And you're sure of this because?I'm pretty sure that cloaking devices could only be applied to vehicles and buildings. You wouldn't be able to wear one.
Wormholes are based on general relativity, chief.G-Max said:Stephen Hawking has already proposed a wormhole-based method of time-travel, and FTL is only impossible if you accept the Theory of Relativity, which itself was based on two completely unproven assumptions.
And you're sure of this because?
Er, no you don't. You only proven my point in your links on the parable of the broken window, and did not make a counterargument at all on the part of the slippery slope.
Wormholes are based on general relativity, chief.
It seems ridiculous to rule out the possibility that the theory of relativity is false and FTL still impossible.FTL is only impossible if you accept the Theory of Relativity
Sorry, I'm not letting you get away with dismissing it because it would be "hard".The device would need to interact with the hull/body of the vehicle in some way, and it's pretty hard to do that with human skin/clothing.
The links that I posted regarding the Broken Window Fallacy both referred to it as a "fallacy".
The Slippery Slope links both linked to lists of logical fallacies.
Er, spacetime isn't an aether as it's not a substance, spacetime is a concept which comes from relativity, and general relativity is a generalization of special relativity in the limit of finite gravitational fields?How so? I was under the impression that wormholes were based on the idea that spacetime itself is something that can be warped and manipulated, whereas Relativity explicitly rejected the idea of an Aether.
Relativity is been pretty much shown to be true, so why would you say otherwise?
Sorry, I'm not letting you get away with dismissing it because it would be "hard".
Yeah, uh, internet websites merely calling something a fallacy do not invalidate my points; namely that the parable of the broken window isn't a formal fallacy, but simply an invalid argument relevant to economics and not to arguments in general, and that the slippery slope argument is not always fallacious for the reasons that I mentioned.
Er, spacetime isn't an aether as it's not a substance
Oh I see. A website that specializes cannot be wrong.These are websites that specialize in logical fallacies.
General and Special Relativity have been validated repeatedly on multiple metrics. For instance, GPS devices need to take relativistic effects into account to achieve the high level of accuracy they haveSome of its effects have been shown to be true within a barely acceptable margin of error. Not quite the same thing.
Oh I see. A website that specializes cannot be wrong.
Actually they can and often are.Oh I see. Sarcastic arguments cannot be wrong.
You didn't actually link to any Academic website. Those have .eduAnyway, I was just pointing out that any academic website specializing in logical fallacies
Learn to internet.is extremely unlikely to count, as a logical fallacy, something that isn't actually a logical fallacy.
Yes. They are dumb websites because they are not correct for the reasons that I mentioned, in addition to the fact that they serve to be useless as it will not prevent people from using those fallacies, and will not convince other people that they are wrong by saying that they have committed fallacies.These are websites that specialize in logical fallacies.
You are correct, however, in that the broken window fallacy basically only applies to economics.
Er, yes it was. It was a substance with very unusual properties, but it was very much considered a substance; the entire point was that every other wave needs a material to propagate through, and thus light needed a material to propagate through as well. Most significantly, you can speak in terms of motion relative to the aether; you cannot do the same with spacetime.Nor was the Aether...
You didn't actually link to any Academic website. Those have .edu
Learn to internet.
Yes. They are dumb websites because they are not correct
Most significantly, you can speak in terms of motion relative to the aether; you cannot do the same with spacetime.
A ⇒ ~BYou just used a logical fallacy. "I am right. These websites disagree with me, therefore they are wrong and I am right"