And there was no big bang.
Things are not exploding away from each other, rather it is space that is expanding.
And if there was a big bang it would have started from a point. However wherever you stand in the universe, it appears the big band started from there.
Sothe big bang is entirely a fraud.
2And this fraud has become so popular because it confirms the religious view of a Creator - for if there was a big bang, there must have been a Creator to light the fuse and whoop! here we are.
And the gullible believe in the big bang for the same reason they believe in MBTI - because it suits their preconceptions.
3Gosh, the big bang and MBTI seem so intuitive. But the problem is that apart from the tiny part of the universe we inhabit, the rest of the universe, the very small and the very big, is counter-intuitive.
3The intuitive have never cottoned on to this and in their desperation are taken in by any nostrum that comes along.
Where's Blackmail! when we need him?
This hurts my eyes. The fact that everything appears to be exploding away from the point it is viewed at is not a reason that the big bang is entirely a fraud. In fact it is evidence of an explosion, that is, if you accept Newton's Laws. If you don't think that an object is at rest until it is set in motion, that's okay I guess. If you don't think that objects will remain in motion until acted upon by another force, I guess I can accept that. But the fact that everything is expanding away from everything else is proof that a force acted upon them. It only means that the expansion must be viewed on a three dimensional plane - When I saw Hawking speak he explained it as a balloon inflating. If you draw dots on a balloon and blow it up, each dot will get farther away from every other dot. Surprise! We live in a three-dimensional universe!
2.This is a huge leap of intuition that has no grounding in reality and I cannot understand how you could make this assertion. The fact that something exploded necessarily means that a sentient being, the "Creator," made this happen? What? Let's break this down.
A long time ago, a lot of matter moved for reasons scientifically unexplained as of yet. Anything past this point is speculation, and it provides no evidence for any sort of "Creator." All it means is that the universe DID begin. Anything else is pure speculation. And as far as I have seen, most proponents of the Big Bang Theory don't use it as any evidence for God. The theory adds up well. What's yours?
3.I'm intuitive. And my gut says you're full of shit.![]()
My city, Canberra, the Capital of Australia, was designed from a God's eye view, with the eye of a Landscape Architect.
And my gut says you're full of shit.
Answer, the GOD particle.
You may well be right about me.
1However you are not right about the science.
2You have just repeated the popular misconceptions about science. Just as you repeat and keep on repeating the popular misconceptions about MBTI.
3And if you keep this up, you will become popular.
Small world. My anthropology adviser is from Canberra. Got his PhD from ANU.
Carry on...
...instead of Hawking and Lederman, I should have been learning from you.
I read that book too. And I can accept a "God Particle." But Victor was claiming that the Big Bang theory "confirms the religious view of a creator," which is nonsense. A Particle is not the "creator" that he refers to.
Possibly. In more ways than not Intelligent Design of some sort is more probable and more believable. The simplest solution is more times than not the right one.
I find it easier to believe in an all powerful endless God than in something from nothing.
From a somewhat objective point of view a creator could have made the big bang. Either way, we never throughout all of science can come up with how the universe originated. The big bang cannot work simply because matter (a form of energy) cannot be created or destroyed. It's possible that that matter was always there stretching throughout time into eternity past. However, it's not probable. If it was there throughout eternity past what changed, that it would expand at such an enormous rate? Even with time on it's side the chances are not even close that we would come into being, that life period would come into being. Even if life were to come into being to become the species and the different kinds of life that we have today it would have to evolve. Most evolutions hinder or do not effect the organism at all. Very few are for the better (which we would say that our coming into existence would be towards the better end of the spectrum). So the odds are that life would become extinct and have to start all over again. It doesn't work. It's more plausible to believe in an inexplicable God guiding this universe than to believe it all occurred and came into being because of trillions upon trillions of coincidences.
There is no such thing as coincidence.
Therefore, I choose to believe in providence.
Ohhh, and I never read any book on the Higgs Particle.
Possibly. In more ways than not Intelligent Design of some sort is more probable and more believable. The simplest solution is more times than not the right one.
1I find it easier to believe in an all powerful endless God than in something from nothing.
From a somewhat objective point of view a creator could have made the big bang. Either way, we never throughout all of science can come up with how the universe originated. The big bang cannot work simply because matter (a form of energy) cannot be created or destroyed. It's possible that that matter was always there stretching throughout time into eternity past. However, it's not probable. If it was there throughout eternity past what changed, that it would expand at such an enormous rate? 2Even with time on it's side the chances are not even close that we would come into being, that life period would come into being. Even if life were to come into being to become the species and the different kinds of life that we have today it would have to evolve. Most evolutions hinder or do not effect the organism at all. Very few are for the better (which we would say that our coming into existence would be towards the better end of the spectrum). So the odds are that life would become extinct and have to start all over again. It doesn't work. It's more plausible to believe in an inexplicable God guiding this universe than to believe it all occurred and came into being because of trillions upon trillions of coincidences.
There is no such thing as coincidence.
Therefore, I choose to believe in providence.
1.I wouldn't claim something from nothing. I would only claim that we don't have enough evidence yet to talk about this beginning with any certainty.
2.Actually, with infinite time on its side, not only would our "unlikely" existence be possible, it would be inevitable. And so would every other possibility we could fathom, and then some.
Ohhh, and I never read any book on the Higgs Particle.
That's a helpful addition to your post, thank you. It was worth mentioning that I read the book he was referring to so that he would know my words were coming from the same knowledge base that he had. I understand now that you wouldn't do the same.