What does that even mean? That it's homogeneous and isotropic in every direction, or, that it's literally geometrically flat?No , the Universe is flat
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What does that even mean? That it's homogeneous and isotropic in every direction, or, that it's literally geometrically flat?No , the Universe is flat
What does that even mean? That it's homogeneous and isotropic in every direction, or, that it's literally geometrically flat?
I was only pulling your leg, marra. I know the answer I was just checking if you did.I generally get about 25% of what Lawrence Krauss talks about. He does a 1.5 hour lecture but here is a 14 minute shortie.
I was only pulling your leg, marra. I know the answer I was just checking if you did.
I actually agree with our last point. The caveman would also invent an answer like a god created it all. Christianity comes from a set of Bronze Age writings and beliefs. I am just incredulous that people still believe all of that shit today.
I suppose it's an easier answer though to something people don't understand. "I don't understand XYZ therefore god did it". You're certainly not the only person with such beliefs.
My original point was kind of we are exploring space and are making discoveries all the time but don't really know what it all means. In the same way a caveman would explore a car and the individual parts and components but would know how it works or what it's really intended for.
You could also say the car in my example was created it didn't just happen out of nothing.
You know that cars are created because you have millions of examples of cars being created by PEOPLE. You have one Universe and no access to a creator or any idea how the creator would create the Universe except for a story written in an old book by people who wiped their arses with clumps of grass. You contrast designed things with nature.
Sorry mate but I just have a different view to you and many others, I find it difficult to believe that everything we see around us and into deep space could have came from nothing in a big bang.
I'm not a churchgoer at the moment nor am I a religous nut and have an open mind on a lot of things but I just have the view there is a level intelligence beyond what we can currently comprehend that is playing a part in some way.
Whether that is called God, HAL, Dave or IT, to me ir doesn't really matter.
Interestingly enough the older a physicist/mathematician gets the more likely they are to start finding "God" in their work. One of the most famous cases recently is reknowned mathematician Roger Penrose...came from nothing in a big bang.
Interestingly enough the older a physicist/mathematician gets the more likely they are to start finding "God" in their work. One of the most famous cases recently is reknowned mathematician Roger Penrose...
Roger Penrose - Wikipedia
Will the "God Particle" Replace God? | HuffPost
Scientist debunks Hawking's 'no God needed' theory | ICN
I think Penrose has gone slightly mental tbf. A few years ago he was big into fractals. "Everything is a fractal! Secrets of the Universe" type stuff, then suddenly he shows up with this Hameroff fella shouting about "God/consciousness is in the particles!".They are also more likely to go bald and develop Alzheimers as they get older.