Posted on 01/03/2003 6:35:40 AM PST by forsnax5
I just finished Stephen Hawkings' "A Brief History Of Time." While he keeps expressing hope that those last pieces of the "big picture" puzzle are just around the corner, you realize the physicists are juggling so many theoretical balls that they are going to crash in a jumble before anyone can pick up the pieces and make sense of it.
I was out of my depth when I was looking for my boots this morning, so I'll wait for Phys to come and decode for the laymen.
I was remarking about an unfortunate coincidence between a feature of Australian creationist Barry Setterfield's cosmology and the last sentence in this article. I say "unfortunate" knowing that the Young Earthies will take anything close for propaganda purposes. I don't think Chaboyer and Krauss are loonies, although modern cosmology for sure has a lot of real questions to answer.
Perhaps the information pressure is between non-zero and negative.
Here’s something to ponder. Feynman said ‘there is plenty of room, down.’ We exist, in conscious interaction with the universe, at a rather specific size ratio. It is as far down to the smallest manifestations of matter as it is ‘up’ to the greatest manifestations, spatially speaking. We make things to help us improve the resolution of larger and smaller, to bring it to our ratio for comprehension. Why do we not try to do the same with the temporal unresolved? The temporal resolution of our perception is extremely limited, accumulating only past, not even having present available to us, just the recent past. Not one of our devices is calibrated to adjust for better temporal resolution.
Time is a total figment. An illusion. If we were photons we would cross the entire universe instantly. Go ahead, resolve the illusion to a finer degree of instantaneous.
How ‘big’ is a photon? And you just made my earlier point (made a few years ago on one of these insane threads) that photons are a little bit of space, a little bit of time, and energy ... they cross the universe always in the present of when they were formed, so the background temporal reality they do not interact with until they ‘arrive’ at something with an ‘accumulation’ of time.
The Justice Brothers!
We are going to be sorry we ever listened to Einstein. From 1905 to now we have been thinking there are photons and that time is another spatial dimension. There are no photons, Einstein invented them, and while he didn’t make time out to be another spatial dimension he didn’t object when Minkowski did that very thing. Einstein misread Kant, as do most of us.
Now that is science for you!
If the scientific observations do not meet the preconditions, make up something that will make it sound cool and all is well again.
Bwahahahahaha
“If the scientific observations do not meet the preconditions ...” You’re stumbling over the obvious ... the preconditions are yet to be defined precisely enough. Remember that the effects of bacterial infection were pretty well understood (the preconditions) before the microscope revealed the little buggers. The effects of DNA were well observed prior to that brilliant lady revealing the molecule via x-ray photography. It was only then that Watson and Crick could fully detail the amazing ‘preconditions’ responsible for genetic evidence.
Why can't we "see" or experience the dark stuff about us?
I've got Iain Nicolson's Dark Side of the Universe : Dark Matter, Dark Energy on hold at my library, and I think I'll peruse it before stepping too deeply into this dark morass.
But I sure appreciate you two and others battting it around a bit.
Thanks.
Obama ‘s winning everything!
Um, I’ll have to say thanks but can’t accept any accolades, ‘I know nothing’. RW is the one using dark energy to heat his digs up there in cold country. LOL ... tell us your secret, RW!
We see effects that don't add up to what other things we see. For example, galaxies are difficult to model since it would take a lot more gravity to shape them than would be available from the material (stars, dust clouds, gas clouds, black holes) that appears to our < Boris Karloff voice > scientific instruments < / BKv >. So we postulate something that has gravity like the visible or nearly visible material but that is not visible and call it dark matter.
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