Where did everything come from?
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Wal-Mart.
Ðavid Wulff The Royal Woofle Museum
Audioscrobbler :: flickrDie Freiheit spielt auf allen Geigen
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A.A. wrote: a) you won't be convinced even if it was convincing b) you didnt read the article well and think about it c) you went in with the idea whatever this is must be wrong. None of the above. It was simply a very flawed argumnet. 1: from your cite:Calculating the age of the universe is only accurate if the assumptions built into the models being used are also accurate. Translation: The age of the universe is a "best guess" based on our present model of its construction. A fundamental assumption not mentioned is that "age" is a meaningful concept when applied here. Basically, 'age" is only an analogy for the time required for light to reach us from from a point that our current understanding says is a singularity. A.A. wrote: 2-3) I don't get it are you trying to say that we shouldnt assume the universe has a beginning? Exactly. Our brains are hard-wired to presume that things must have a beginning and end (as we do). It is just as reasonable to assume that the concept of a beginning is just as inappropriate here as discussing the 'beginning' of a circle. Without that assumption, most, if not all, arguments for devine creation fall apart. Anger is the most impotent of passions. It effects nothing it goes about, and hurts the one who is possessed by it more than the one against whom it is directed. Carl Sandburg
Rob Graham wrote: None of the above. It was simply a very flawed argumnet. Dont be so quick to dismiss it. Contemplate it and think of what is being said here. Regardless the article does mention the possiblity you raised, more below. Rob Graham wrote: Translation: The age of the universe is a "best guess" based on our present model of its construction. Basically, 'age" is only an analogy for the time required for light to reach us from from a point that our current understanding says is a singularity. The talk of models is about how to best estimate it. Rob Graham wrote: Exactly. Our brains are hard-wired to presume that things must have a beginning and end (as we do). It is just as reasonable to assume that the concept of a beginning is just as inappropriate here as discussing the 'beginning' of a circle. Without that assumption, most, if not all, arguments for devine creation fall apart. There goes the Big Bang theory, not that much of this would change without it. Oh well. I am not sure how appropriate the circle analogy is, unless you are talking about, when the circle came about or something along those lines. Anyway from the article under the title "Its existence is necessary." The first of these possibilities is false, because that would imply that the universe could never cease to exist. We can witness created things being born and dying, coming into existence and disappearing. Thus, there is no reason why the whole universe cannot perish. Basically the idea is that nothing in nature has the characterisitics of lasting forever. Quran Translation Islam Basics Islamic lectures
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Ok I'm looking for somewhat real answers here. I'm a christian and of course I know where the Bible says everything comes from but what about all the other religions out there? Where do they say everything comes from? -Richard
http://www.indigenouspeople.net/legend.htm[^] for your change of pace. _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)
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"God" is a rather naive attempt at explaining something far more complex than you or I are capable of understanding in our lifetimes. In short, God (and consequently religion) is a simplistic cop-out. That is all I will discuss in regard to this thread because should I continue, I will rile up the religions types and they will accuse me of spreading hatred of religion. Instead, I'll mellow myself out with several of these: :beer: :beer: You may now release the 1 vote hounds...
John Theal wrote: You may now release the 1 vote hounds... Naw. Down-voting is an exceptionally lame way of indicating you're too lazy to think up anything else to post. And *my* lazy pointless posts need no backup, thankyouverymuch... ;)
You must be careful in the forest Broken glass and rusty nails If you're to bring back something for us I have bullets for sale...
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Ok I'm looking for somewhat real answers here. I'm a christian and of course I know where the Bible says everything comes from but what about all the other religions out there? Where do they say everything comes from? -Richard
Richard Parsons wrote: I'm a christian and of course I know where the Bible says everything comes from Actually it doesn't. It says that God created all, but it fails to explain where God comes from :-) Our past religion, says that at first, there was the void, Ginnung-Gab, and from the void caame the cow Aud-humla. From Aud-humla came the first creature Buri. Well, it's a bit more complicated, because nothing exact is written, in other scripts it was Humal who was the first creature coming from Gapt, which is the Antropomorphic Ginnung-Gab. A lot of creatures came from Aud-humla, including Ymer, who was fed by the milk of Aud-humla. From Ymers body grew the first humans. And Ymer is the earth. "After all it's just text at the end of the day. - Colin Davies "For example, when a VB programmer comes to my house, they may say 'does your pool need cleaning, sir ?' " - Christian Graus
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Wal-Mart.
Ðavid Wulff The Royal Woofle Museum
Audioscrobbler :: flickrDie Freiheit spielt auf allen Geigen
Cheap shot - i.e. you beat me to it ;P The tigress is here :-D
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Stan Shannon wrote: whether you are religious or not, you have to accept that something outside of, and independent of, the "cause and effect" universe we find ourselves inhabiting had to "act" to start the process That is precisely the assumption I disagree with. It may be a correct one, or it may not, but it cannot, by itself, support your argument. It is only an assumption that has at least one clear alternative (its inverse). At the quantum level, "cause and effect" becomes pretty suspect, and the assumption that there had to be a "start" could well be flawed. What's on the 'other side' of the singularity (big bang)? Just because we can't measure past it (beyond it?) in no way proves that nothing exists past the limit of measurement. IMO, introducing a requirement for an intelligent actor only confuses the issue, introducing the need to explain the origin of that intelligent actor. If you arue that the actor simply always existed, then I can argue with equal justification that the universe simply always existed, and eliminate any need for that actor. Anger is the most impotent of passions. It effects nothing it goes about, and hurts the one who is possessed by it more than the one against whom it is directed. Carl Sandburg
Rob Graham wrote: IMO, introducing a requirement for an intelligent actor only confuses the issue, introducing the need to explain the origin of that intelligent actor. If you arue that the actor simply always existed, then I can argue with equal justification that the universe simply always existed, and eliminate any need for that actor. please don't infer that I'm trying to articulate an "intelligent design" argument. I'm not. If the universe we inhabit was created by an intelligent being, than that being must have a deep and abiding faith in the power of statistical probability. However, I stand by my statement that there must be something external to our cause and effect universe. But, again, I'm not a huge fan of quantum physics which I think over the next several decades will be shown to be based on a mistaken perspective of the underlieing nature of matter. "Capitalism is the source of all true freedom."
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Richard Stringer wrote: The universe is not static and there are many experiments that demonstate this fact. The existance of time , entropy, expansion etc.. The observation that the universe is dynamic in no way relates to any requirement for endpoints (begininning or end). All of the above are equally at home in a cyclic universe. Furthermore, all of the above begin to break down as the state of the universe approaches the big bang. The introduction of an intelligent actor to "start" things only introuces the need to explain what "started" that actor, and so on ad infinitum. Since that approach leads to infinite recursion, I find it more suspect. Anger is the most impotent of passions. It effects nothing it goes about, and hurts the one who is possessed by it more than the one against whom it is directed. Carl Sandburg
Rob Graham wrote: The introduction of an intelligent actor to "start" things only introuces the need to explain what "started" that actor, and so on ad infinitum. Since that approach leads to infinite recursion, I find it more suspect. Unless that "actor" inhabited a universe which did not follow the same cause and effect laws that govern our universe. "Capitalism is the source of all true freedom."
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Rob Graham wrote: None of the above. It was simply a very flawed argumnet. Dont be so quick to dismiss it. Contemplate it and think of what is being said here. Regardless the article does mention the possiblity you raised, more below. Rob Graham wrote: Translation: The age of the universe is a "best guess" based on our present model of its construction. Basically, 'age" is only an analogy for the time required for light to reach us from from a point that our current understanding says is a singularity. The talk of models is about how to best estimate it. Rob Graham wrote: Exactly. Our brains are hard-wired to presume that things must have a beginning and end (as we do). It is just as reasonable to assume that the concept of a beginning is just as inappropriate here as discussing the 'beginning' of a circle. Without that assumption, most, if not all, arguments for devine creation fall apart. There goes the Big Bang theory, not that much of this would change without it. Oh well. I am not sure how appropriate the circle analogy is, unless you are talking about, when the circle came about or something along those lines. Anyway from the article under the title "Its existence is necessary." The first of these possibilities is false, because that would imply that the universe could never cease to exist. We can witness created things being born and dying, coming into existence and disappearing. Thus, there is no reason why the whole universe cannot perish. Basically the idea is that nothing in nature has the characterisitics of lasting forever. Quran Translation Islam Basics Islamic lectures
A.A. wrote: Basically the idea is that nothing in nature has the characterisitics of lasting forever. Oh, you're right!, well, except from energy of course, hmm... A.A. wrote: There goes the Big Bang theory, not that much of this would change without it. Oh well. Not really, nothing in that theory says that our universe is the beginning of All, or the ending for that matter. "After all it's just text at the end of the day. - Colin Davies "For example, when a VB programmer comes to my house, they may say 'does your pool need cleaning, sir ?' " - Christian Graus
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Stan Shannon wrote: whether you are religious or not, you have to accept that something outside of, and independent of, the "cause and effect" universe we find ourselves inhabiting had to "act" to start the process the led to the big bang which led to us. No I don't. Religion is simply an organized method of saying "I don't know" - to be gentle. 500 years ago almost everything that we take for granted in our everyday existance today would fall under the term "miracle". I don't and won't start a religious vs science war because neither side would/could be convinced of anything. Richard In a world of pollution, profanity, adolescence, zits, broccoli, racism, ozone depletion, sexism, stupid guys, and PMS, why the hell do people still tell me to have a nice day? --Unknown
Technically religion is a way of saying "I do know" And as for the religion vs science war, religion always wins because "true" science always backs up religion the Bible. Anytime science has contradicted the Bible science has always been wrong and thus changed views. Can scientist so easily say that they are absolutely correct in everything they believe happen knowing that science has made horrific blunders in the past such as assuming the world was flat? :) -Richard
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Technically religion is a way of saying "I do know" And as for the religion vs science war, religion always wins because "true" science always backs up religion the Bible. Anytime science has contradicted the Bible science has always been wrong and thus changed views. Can scientist so easily say that they are absolutely correct in everything they believe happen knowing that science has made horrific blunders in the past such as assuming the world was flat? :) -Richard
Richard Parsons wrote: Anytime science has contradicted the Bible science has always been wrong and thus changed views. Can you cite an instance of that? EDIT - The mere fact that religion has turned to the methodologies of science in a rediculous effort defend itself is evidence enough of its own validity. "Capitalism is the source of all true freedom."
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A.A. wrote: Basically the idea is that nothing in nature has the characterisitics of lasting forever. Oh, you're right!, well, except from energy of course, hmm... A.A. wrote: There goes the Big Bang theory, not that much of this would change without it. Oh well. Not really, nothing in that theory says that our universe is the beginning of All, or the ending for that matter. "After all it's just text at the end of the day. - Colin Davies "For example, when a VB programmer comes to my house, they may say 'does your pool need cleaning, sir ?' " - Christian Graus
jan larsen wrote: Oh, you're right!, well, except from energy of course, hmm You totally missed my point, but expected someone to invoke the laws of Thermodynamics and the "Conservation of Energy." The second law is closer to what I am talking about. jan larsen wrote: Not really, nothing in that theory says that our universe is the beginning of All, or the ending for that matter. http://liftoff.msfc.nasa.gov/academy/universe/b\_bang.html 'Nuff said Quran Translation Islam Basics Islamic lectures
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Technically religion is a way of saying "I do know" And as for the religion vs science war, religion always wins because "true" science always backs up religion the Bible. Anytime science has contradicted the Bible science has always been wrong and thus changed views. Can scientist so easily say that they are absolutely correct in everything they believe happen knowing that science has made horrific blunders in the past such as assuming the world was flat? :) -Richard
Anything that relies on "faith" as a cornerstone of its belief has got a problem. And I do believe that "religion" held that the Earth was the center of the universe and many other now defunct beliefs. Even had a few put to death over this. BTW the Egyptians and the Chinese knew that the earth was not flat thousands of years ago. Richard In a world of pollution, profanity, adolescence, zits, broccoli, racism, ozone depletion, sexism, stupid guys, and PMS, why the hell do people still tell me to have a nice day? --Unknown
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jan larsen wrote: Oh, you're right!, well, except from energy of course, hmm You totally missed my point, but expected someone to invoke the laws of Thermodynamics and the "Conservation of Energy." The second law is closer to what I am talking about. jan larsen wrote: Not really, nothing in that theory says that our universe is the beginning of All, or the ending for that matter. http://liftoff.msfc.nasa.gov/academy/universe/b\_bang.html 'Nuff said Quran Translation Islam Basics Islamic lectures
A.A. wrote: You totally missed my point If you say so, but what was your point then if it wasn't: 'Basically the idea is that nothing in nature has the characterisitics of lasting forever.'? A.A. wrote: 'Nuff said About what?, the given text doesn't contradict my statement: 'nothing in that theory says that our universe is the beginning of All, or the ending for that matter.'. The Big Bang is just a model that gives some good answers to a lot of observations. It is solely concerned about our universe, it isn't a secret that physicists can't explain the state of the universe in the first seconds (or something like that :-)), and it isn't the purpose of the theory to explain where our universe originated. Actually, some theorize about the universe being in constant inflating/deflating state. "After all it's just text at the end of the day. - Colin Davies "For example, when a VB programmer comes to my house, they may say 'does your pool need cleaning, sir ?' " - Christian Graus
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But all of your questions assume a quantum universe - a universe that obeys a set of physical principles which we have managed to grasp intellectually. What universe caused that universe? Even if you argue that guantum physics allows something to come from nothing, where did that principle come from? (I've studied Quantum physics as far as three semesters of calculus will allow me to go, so I'm not going to pretend that I can go beyond a very limited appreciation of the subject - but I can say that I cannot help but feel that quantum physics will prove to be scientifically invalid during the course of this century.) "Capitalism is the source of all true freedom."
Stan Shannon wrote: but I can say that I cannot help but feel that quantum physics will prove to be scientifically invalid during the course of this century. Bugger, does that mean that all Laser based products will suddenly stop functioning :-) "After all it's just text at the end of the day. - Colin Davies "For example, when a VB programmer comes to my house, they may say 'does your pool need cleaning, sir ?' " - Christian Graus
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Stan Shannon wrote: but I can say that I cannot help but feel that quantum physics will prove to be scientifically invalid during the course of this century. Bugger, does that mean that all Laser based products will suddenly stop functioning :-) "After all it's just text at the end of the day. - Colin Davies "For example, when a VB programmer comes to my house, they may say 'does your pool need cleaning, sir ?' " - Christian Graus
jan larsen wrote: Bugger, does that mean that all Laser based products will suddenly stop functioning Well, no more than space ships to the moon will stop working because Newton's physics was overturned by Einstein. Just because a theory can reliably predict a set of behaviors does not mean that the theory is the only possible way to explain those behaviors - just the most obvious given our understanding of the behaviors as we are able to observe and measure them at any given time. I think the quantum universe will crumble as we learn more about the actual structure of space time. (Frankly, my money is still on "the ether") "Capitalism is the source of all true freedom."
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jan larsen wrote: Bugger, does that mean that all Laser based products will suddenly stop functioning Well, no more than space ships to the moon will stop working because Newton's physics was overturned by Einstein. Just because a theory can reliably predict a set of behaviors does not mean that the theory is the only possible way to explain those behaviors - just the most obvious given our understanding of the behaviors as we are able to observe and measure them at any given time. I think the quantum universe will crumble as we learn more about the actual structure of space time. (Frankly, my money is still on "the ether") "Capitalism is the source of all true freedom."
Stan Shannon wrote: I think the quantum universe will crumble as we learn more about the actual structure of space time. For that to be correct it still has to reproduce the results of all the experiments done with quantum mechanics, and that includes all the spooky action at a distance entanglement stuff, as well as tunneling and all that stuff with the slit experiments. Just like quantum mechanics predicts large objects are governed by special relativity and large slow objects behave like Newton's physics.
I can imagine the sinking feeling one would have after ordering my book, only to find a laughably ridiculous theory with demented logic once the book arrives - Mark McCutcheon
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Stan Shannon wrote: I think the quantum universe will crumble as we learn more about the actual structure of space time. For that to be correct it still has to reproduce the results of all the experiments done with quantum mechanics, and that includes all the spooky action at a distance entanglement stuff, as well as tunneling and all that stuff with the slit experiments. Just like quantum mechanics predicts large objects are governed by special relativity and large slow objects behave like Newton's physics.
I can imagine the sinking feeling one would have after ordering my book, only to find a laughably ridiculous theory with demented logic once the book arrives - Mark McCutcheon
andy brummer wrote: Just like quantum mechanics predicts large objects are governed by special relativity It is my understanding that it does not predict that. That, in fact, quantum mechanics and realativity contridict each other in ways significant enough that both cannot be valid. "Capitalism is the source of all true freedom."
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andy brummer wrote: Just like quantum mechanics predicts large objects are governed by special relativity It is my understanding that it does not predict that. That, in fact, quantum mechanics and realativity contridict each other in ways significant enough that both cannot be valid. "Capitalism is the source of all true freedom."
Stan Shannon wrote: It is my understanding that it does not predict that. That, in fact, quantum mechanics and realativity contridict each other in ways significant enough that both cannot be valid. From wilipedia[^]: Mechanics can be subdivided into classical mechanics, relativistic mechanics, non-relativistic quantum mechanics, and relativistic quantum mechanics (quantum field theory). Dirac came up with the first successful relatvisic quantum wave equation, which not only required a particle with half integer spin like the electron, but predicted anti-matter before it was discovered in cosmic rays. Also, the entire field of particle physics is based on the mass-energy relationship and is one of the strongest validations of the principle. Also, decay times of particles and the energy to velocity relationship for particles going something like .999999999c are verified in particle accelerators all the time. Special relativity and qunatum mechanics agree to a level of precision unrivaled by any other physical science. In fact, all the units of measure except mass are based on relativistic quantum mechanics. Here is where the theory breaks down. Predicting the masses of particles, and quantum gravity. Field theory predicts that particles will have infinite mass, but if you replace the infities with the measured values, everything works out. So, it's predictive power is limited, but it agrees completely with the measured values. Which is ok because plain general and special relativity just accept masses as input values anyway. You need quantum theory to have "quantized" masses to begin with. As far as quantum gravity goes, we are somewhere in the ether stages. There are a number of competing theories, each one stranger then the last. I've only studied quantum mechanics for 4 semseters, which just got me to somewhere in the mid-1920's level of knowledge. Someone like John could tell you alot more about this stuff, but from the way I understand it, Quantum Mechanics only deals with particles in a space as distributions in that space. It doesn't have any way to treat changes to the geometry of the space that it is emeded in. General Relativity is a theory that couples the geometry of a space to the masses that are embeded in it. I think that is what must be overcome. What really suc