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Questions for those who know

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Back Room
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  • L Lost User

    Why do scientists believe the unvierse was created from a huge explosion about 15 billion years ago? What proof do they have? Why should we believe the scientists? Did anybody really see that explosion? Why can't it be that God created the Univ. first, set it in motion and then built the laws of physics into it so that it would appear everything originated from a big bang? Is this the right forum to ask these questions or should it be the operating systems/sys admin forum? :confused:

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    Simon Walton
    wrote on last edited by
    #32

    The Big Bang is one of the many theories out there of the creation of the universe. It's fine if you want to beleive that there was a creator of some kind, but scientists are looking at evidence to base their theories. The Big Bang theory is based on the fact, as Chris says, that the universe is expanding, which was discovered early last century. Simon I need your clothes, your boots, and your copy of VS.NET. Sonork ID 100.10024

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    • C ColinDavies

      Chris Maunder wrote: Light travels at a constant velocity mmm, Learn something new every day ! Regardz Colin J Davies

      Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin

      More about me :-)

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      jan larsen
      wrote on last edited by
      #33

      Yes, it is not long ago a danish scientist succeeded in slowing down a ray of light to under 100 km/h. Allthough it sounds pretty cool, i have no idea of what could possibly be the value of this. According to my little sister it should be: "Light in a vacuum travels at a constant velocity" "It could have been worse, it could have been ME!"

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      • C Christian Graus

        Ignorant wrote: Is this the right forum to ask these questions or should it be the operating systems/sys admin forum? LOL !!!! I believe in God, I don't believe in evolution. I also believe in the big bang, and that the earth is more than 6,000 years old. Reading the Bible without making assumptions does not contradict these things. I don't think God created the world and set things in motion so that physical evidence would trick us. I'd actually kind of hate to live in a world created by a God who set out to fool and confuse people..... Christian The tragedy of cyberspace - that so much can travel so far, and yet mean so little. And you don't spend much time with the opposite sex working day and night, unless the pizza delivery person happens to be young, cute, single and female. I can assure you, I've consumed more than a programmer's allotment of pizza, and these conditions have never aligned. - Christopher Duncan - 18/04/2002

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        David Wulff
        wrote on last edited by
        #34

        Christian Graus wrote: I'd actually kind of hate to live in a world created by a God who set out to fool and confuse people..... But how else can you explain the Platypus? :rolleyes: ____________________ David Wulff hu·mour Pronunciation Key (hymr) n. & v. Chiefly British Dave's Code Project Screensaver and Wallpaper page.

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        • D David Wulff

          Christian Graus wrote: I'd actually kind of hate to live in a world created by a God who set out to fool and confuse people..... But how else can you explain the Platypus? :rolleyes: ____________________ David Wulff hu·mour Pronunciation Key (hymr) n. & v. Chiefly British Dave's Code Project Screensaver and Wallpaper page.

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          Lost User
          wrote on last edited by
          #35

          Or a politician? Or a programmer? :)

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          • S Shog9 0

            Everyone needs to believe something. Many people just choose incorrectly. Ignorant wrote: Ignorant That's rather insulting, doncha think? ---Shog3---_**

            From now on we can call C# and MC++ "The square wheel languages"

            **_

            -- Jack Handy, The Lounge

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            Lost User
            wrote on last edited by
            #36

            Shog9 wrote: That's rather insulting, doncha think? It ain't bad as arrogant though.

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            • L Lost User

              Shog9 wrote: That's rather insulting, doncha think? It ain't bad as arrogant though.

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              Shog9 0
              wrote on last edited by
              #37

              Ignorant wrote: It ain't bad as arrogant though. I will concede that point :-O Certainly enough people bit to make it interesting. :) ---Shog9---_**

              From now on we can call C# and MC++ "The square wheel languages"

              **_

              -- Jack Handy, The Lounge

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              • C ColinDavies

                Chris Maunder wrote: Anyway, I can see another huge Cosmology thread happening here and unfortunately I've got a big, big day of work ahead, so I'm gonna have to walk away from this one. What a shame :-( Yes your "inflationary stage" seems sensible to me. However where I see difficulty is light superceding the limits of the Universe (if we consider it finite and the etxterior not a vaccum) What I'm really trying to articulate though Chris is that I'm not going to be greatly surprised oneday if someone of authority states, "The Universe is 42 Billion years old", because I can easily imagine that some of the current thoughts are way off track. Regardz Colin J Davies

                Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin

                More about me :-)

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                Chris Losinger
                wrote on last edited by
                #38

                90% of everything we know is probably wrong (including my grasp of statistics). but as long as any theory we currently have a) helps us get along day to day or b) serves as a point from which we can come up with new theorys, it's worth having. i'd rather be sometimes wrong and constantly reaching, than stuck in the 8th century. -c


                Uncorrected personality traits that seem whimsical in a child may prove to be ugly in a fully-grown adult.    Robyn Hitchcock

                ISEffects - effects for images

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                • C Chris Losinger

                  90% of everything we know is probably wrong (including my grasp of statistics). but as long as any theory we currently have a) helps us get along day to day or b) serves as a point from which we can come up with new theorys, it's worth having. i'd rather be sometimes wrong and constantly reaching, than stuck in the 8th century. -c


                  Uncorrected personality traits that seem whimsical in a child may prove to be ugly in a fully-grown adult.    Robyn Hitchcock

                  ISEffects - effects for images

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                  ColinDavies
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #39

                  Chris Losinger wrote: 90% of everything we know is probably wrong (including my grasp of statistics). [jk] That calculates to 99.9 recurring % of everthing I believe you know is wrong. Thus there is a fain chance something you know is correct, since you know this everthing else will probably be wrong. [/jk] I agree with your other points Chris, although I'm unsure why you selected the 8th century. :-) Its just anytime I have a semimeaningful conversation about cosmological issues it crates more questions for me than it answers. Regardz Colin J Davies

                  Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin

                  More about me :-)

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                  • C ColinDavies

                    Chris Losinger wrote: 90% of everything we know is probably wrong (including my grasp of statistics). [jk] That calculates to 99.9 recurring % of everthing I believe you know is wrong. Thus there is a fain chance something you know is correct, since you know this everthing else will probably be wrong. [/jk] I agree with your other points Chris, although I'm unsure why you selected the 8th century. :-) Its just anytime I have a semimeaningful conversation about cosmological issues it crates more questions for me than it answers. Regardz Colin J Davies

                    Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin

                    More about me :-)

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                    Chris Losinger
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #40

                    ****Colin Davies wrote: although I'm unsure why you selected the 8th century something about the unquestioned rule the church in europe at the time... :) -c


                    Cheap oil. It's worth it!

                    ISEffects - effects for images

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                    • C ColinDavies

                      Chris Maunder wrote: Light travels at a constant velocity mmm, Learn something new every day ! Regardz Colin J Davies

                      Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin

                      More about me :-)

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                      benjymous
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #41

                      Damnit, my spectacles have stopped working because of that :-/ -- Help me! I'm turning into a grapefruit!

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