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stalhandske 11-May-20, 22:58 |
![]() "Composition. The universe is composed almost completely of dark energy, dark matter, and ordinary matter. Other contents are electromagnetic radiation (estimated to constitute from 0.005% to close to 0.01% of the total mass-energy of the universe) and antimatter." The truly worrisome part of this current world view is that we have no idea about the nature of either dark energy or dark matter! They are not part of real physics but postulated entities in order to make current knowledge fit the current theory! And THAT is worrying in my humble opinion. |
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![]() A fascinating show... youtu.be |
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stalhandske 11-May-20, 23:25 |
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stalhandske 12-May-20, 04:16 |
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![]() However I think man's take away or lesson from that story is all wrong. The general human consensus is that God did that so they could not coordinate with one another and to separate people's from people's. I dissagree with that interpretation. But to answer your question, I don't know if it is real but I do know what I have learned from that story. Which is this. God stopped man from doing something that was impossible to do. Because the condition of the heart was simply pure ambition. They did not have the right mindset or the right heart to reach God. So not only is it physically impossible to reach God with a power. It is also spiritually impossible to reach God with a tower. IMHO God redirected man from a disastrous course. That would probably have far-reaching consequences that we could not predict or foresee to our species and the way we think and the way we act. So speaking other languages actually slows mankind down and makes us strive to try to understand one another better. The take away is this. If mankind work's together in the right way, with the right condition of heart and the right motivation and ambition. Then there is nothing we can not achieve. |
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![]() About more Ron's. |
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stalhandske 12-May-20, 20:04 |
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![]() Unintentional |
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stalhandske 12-May-20, 21:53 |
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stalhandske 12-May-20, 22:02 |
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stalhandske 12-May-20, 22:11 |
![]() I tried hard to sound like mo-one, whom I both admire and respect, but who hasn't much participated, yet, in III. |
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![]() There is another possibility, though, that occurs to me. Dark matter is matter, that just happens not to exist in this universe - or at least, not in this plane (volume). Perhaps, outside this plane, it exists close enough to influence this plane in the manner that it does. If our universe is (say) a 3D 'hyper-surface' upon a 4D 'hyper-volume' such an hypothesis seems to me plausible. Dark energy might have the same quality: influential within this plane, but existing outside it. Here's a couple of questions I have that others might have answers for (or links to possible answers): 1. Does 'space' - the bits not occupied by what we call 'matter' - have non-zero mass? 2. Has space, whether it has mass or not, any kind of cohesion that we might call 'surface tension' - analogous, say, to the cohesive tension of an expanded (or expanding) rubber balloon? |
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archduke_piccolo 15-May-20, 17:08 |
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![]() ... my daughter (living in Oz, and expecting her first in June) sent this to me via facebook: Me to Aidan: "If multiverse theory is real, does that mean there's a universe in which it isn't?" Aidan: "I need a beer." |
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![]() My personal opinion, is our Universe is a white hole. (Bad name for it) in other words. Matter falling into the gravity well of a black hole. Is transformed into the purest most efficient form of raw energy, and since quantum mechanics has a limit on how small something can be, there isn't a singularity at all. The energy hits the central point and bounces out. Yes similar to blowing up a balloon. Something is dumping in energy into the universe. Since there isn't a central point. Everywhere is the central point. And the universe expands because more energy is being dumped into it. World's within world's; world's without end |
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stalhandske 15-May-20, 19:59 |
![]() No, the universe is expanding because substance transmutes into space. |
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stalhandske 15-May-20, 20:24 |
![]() If I understand this correctly, this interesting question concerns the composition of what we often call "nothing", i.e. the ether or the vacuum. According to one theory that I currently support, this is composed of pairs of quanta (photons) in opposite phase so they are "invisible". Photons have no mass <2. Has space, whether it has mass or not, any kind of cohesion that we might call 'surface tension' - analogous, say, to the cohesive tension of an expanded (or expanding) rubber balloon?> In my view the answer is "no". |
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stalhandske 15-May-20, 20:51 |
![]() <In my view the answer is "no".> Already Newton considered the void as a remarkably mobile and elastic substance. Indeed, the changes in photon wavelengths are huge as matter transforms into vacuum and vice versa. So may be I was too hasty and the answer should have been "yes"? |
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