There goes science making another one of their grandiose statements about potential discoveries that hardly ever, or even ever ever pan out. You know, one of the promises made by NASA about Hubble, not that it hadn't exceeded all that it did accomplish, was the possibility of it getting a glimpse of the first light of creation. So, now we have an image of the earliest light.Hey,NASA, no prize for the earliest light only the light of the first moment of creation.Then there was God's particle eventually identified by the Haldron Collider that if identified would bring forth wonderful things emanating from God's Cosmic Treasure Chest of Eternal Love and Bliss.They themselves forget what it was that would occur to Earth via God's infinite Cornucopia of yet Revealed Wonders.
1 posted on
05/29/2015 3:11:48 PM PDT by
lbryce
To: lbryce
Um, whatever you’re smoking, maybe you should stop.
O.o
2 posted on
05/29/2015 3:43:06 PM PDT by
Ophiucus
To: lbryce
Far out man. Groovy Here is the light when it passed through my lava lamp and curtain beads and hit the wall. The black light may have had some impact.
![](https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/originals/56/08/7d/56087d5b6ea5a36c210ca4853c7aeeff.jpg)
Suddenly I want to hear Eleanor Rigby
To: lbryce
8 posted on
05/29/2015 5:02:27 PM PDT by
Oratam
To: lbryce
Personally, I’m interested to learn however little I may of what was going on in the “mind” of God when he whimed up existence.
Thanks for posting.
11 posted on
05/29/2015 5:57:45 PM PDT by
onedoug
To: lbryce
The article is lacking any attempt to explain what a “better understanding” of the early universe might possibly entail, and how the enhanced ability to detect Rayleigh scattering might possibly relate to that “better understanding”. There’s probably an interesting story here, but the article chose not to get into it. Probably because the author doesn’t understand it.
To: lbryce
I wonder how many folks are aware of the weird paranormal things happening at the CERN complex?
20 posted on
05/31/2015 8:47:48 AM PDT by
MHGinTN
(Is it really all relative, Mister Einstein?)
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