Thx on the avatar note Rickie.
And Sarkus, there you go that's one way of putting it. A pretty good way
And Sarkus, there you go that's one way of putting it. A pretty good way
Not exactly, but it does reduce the need to have God as an explanation for life and it's variety.EVOLUTION DOES NOT DISPROVE GOD'S EXISTENCE
Really? Those are very high odds. I think it's much lower.He is right, the chances of life happening by accident is about 1-1000, far too much to be by chance, there had to be an intelligent designer in the 3000 years of earths existence. Is that proof enough for you? I think you will have no argument left!
Sarkus said:You're still looking at it the wrong way. You're looking at the end product and asking what the chances were that gave rise to it - which in your mind is staggering.
But... (and I've used this example before)...
Shuffle a deck of cards.
Deal them out face up, one by one, and record the order in which they are revealed - all 52 of them.
The way you're looking at it - looking at the end product - the order of those cards - and say "Wow - what was the chance they would end up in that order?".
The answer is roughly 1 in 10^68 (or 1 with 68 zeroes after it).
Staggering.
And yet you did it - just by dealing the cards.
Your way of looking at it only holds if we were chosen as the "end product" before the cards got shuffled and dealt.
If you choose an order for the cards BEFORE you deal them, then yes, the chance of you being right is 1 in 10^68.
But we, humans, weren't chosen before the Earth began.
We are just a product of the way it has gone.
Great if everything was random. But life and everything didn't evolve randomly.The way you're looking at it - looking at the end product - the order of those cards - and say "Wow - what was the chance they would end up in that order?".
The answer is roughly 1 in 10^68 (or 1 with 68 zeroes after it).
Staggering.
And yet you did it - just by dealing the cards.
Cris said:Sarkus,
Great if everything was random. But life and everything didn't evolve randomly.
Actually I'm not sure what you are saying.
Sounds like yet another of the uninformed knocks on our mainstay theories, I would bet my house this has been thought of and rebutted many times before, I personally am not holding my breath for too long on this one.Actually it never banged. It has always been, the BB theory has been overthrown, though unfortunately do to "religious/political" powers scientist against the BB theory are made to look like potzies. But their observations, and theories are gaining support.
clack
clack
click
Big Bang Cosmology Meets an Astronomical Death
Well there you go.
Godless
Provita said:Wow, so are there any theories replacing BB?
Wow, so are there any theories replacing BB?
Sounds like yet another of the uninformed knocks on our mainstay theories, I would bet my house this has been thought of and rebutted many times before, I personally am not holding my breath for too long on this one.
clickThere is a revolution just beginning in astronomy/cosmology that will rival the one set off by Copernicus and Galileo. This revolution is based on the growing realization that the cosmos is highly electrical in nature. It is becoming clear that 99% of the universe is made up not of "invisible matter", but rather, of matter in the plasma state. Electrodynamic forces in electric plasmas are much stronger than the gravitational force.
clickA group of cosmologists, other scientists and engineers have published an open letter in New Scientist May 22nd 2004. Their purpose is to draw attention to the current policy on research funding which seems to be governed by dogmatism and prejudice in favour of "establishment" science. The specific case refers to the denial of funding for research into Plasma Cosmology. The Big Bang theory has been the generally accepted explanation of the origins of the Universe since 1965, in spite of serious theoretical problems. New observational evidence is now accumulating against Big Bang. Lerner and his supporters contend that Plasma Cosmology provides a superior basis for understanding the Universe. They protest that decisions on research funding are taken in the interests of supporting the status quo rather than advancing scientific understanding.
Godless said:
Yes I am truely willing to lose my house to the next grandeurly deluded fruit that believes he has found a) a fault in a cast iron theory b) believes he can fix it.Godless said:Truly willing to loose your house are you? That's what happens when one talks without even being informed. I've been doing this kind of research quite a while now. Basically don't take my word for it, just follow the EVIDENCE!!
I dont wish to blow around in anyones farts I could much better devote time to tried and tested theories that are perfectly up to date with current measurement and evidence.Godless said:The best thing to do however is read my links instead of commenting without even reading the damn thing!. Then draw your own conclusions, however if you can't "even understand a damn thing" my suggestion would be, Don't blow farts out in the wind without an "education" on Plasma theory!!.
THE PLASMA UNIVERSE
I dont wish to blow around in anyones farts I could much better devote time to tried and tested theories that are perfectly up to date with current measurement and evidence.
According to the big bang model, the uniform microwave background radiation indicates that matter in the early universe was distributed extremely smoothly. For a long time there was no evidence of any fluctuations or "lumpiness" out of which galaxies could have condensed. However, in April 1992 it was announced that NASA's Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) satellite had found tiny inhomogeneities or "ripples" in the background radiation. While some scientists hailed the results as the discovery of the Holy Grail, others took a more sober view because the fluctuations are much too vast in size to be the ancestors of the galaxies and clusters observed today, and the fluctuations are only about 30 millionths of a kelvin -- far too minuscule to act as the seeds for structures to form from. So although COBE's findings were welcomed by big bang theorists, they "simultaneously relegated most of cosmologists' specific models for the formation of the universe to the trash bin" (Scientific American, July 1992, p. 9).
nubianconcubine said:can someone explain the plasma universe to me??
i can understand the BB theory. big pre-primordial explosion. stuff goes everywhere, cools off, gravity "pools" lots of it together wherever it happened to "land", etc. etc...
now could someone help me understand a plasma universe. what exactly does that mean? did plasma "gel" to form more solid matter? are these plasma rivulets like energy rivers? what?
don't bother giving me links unless they're to site like "The Known Universe and Theories of Its Creation For Dummies".
Diogenes' Dog said:Yes, we are getting into cosmology a bit deep. Are we still on the topic of religion?
In brief NC: Galaxies are redder than they should be. Hubble saw that the further away, the redder they were. One explanation for this is that they are travelling away from us - which means the universe is expanding. Extrapolate backwards and you get the Big Bang theory - that at some time in the past the universe expanded from almost nothing, and continues to expand. Other evidence followed such as Gamow's 'Cosmic Microwave Background' measurements - which support the BB theory as the hypothesised afterglow of the BB.
The plasma universe theory challenges that the redshifting of galaxies is because they are moving away. It says that light, moving through space containing plasma (charged matter essentially) loses energy, and thus becomes redder (redder light has lower energy). The microwave background is explained differenly too. So it is one of the "steady state theories" consistent with a universe that is not explanding, and either started some other way (without a bang), or always was...
I think Godless is overstating the demise of the BB. There's a way to go yet to establish plasma cosmology as a better explanation. However....
Rickie said:WOW!!!!, i never thought of it like that. that was a very good explaination. it makes a lot of sence. so here's the real question, were humans planned before the world began or are we just the product of what happens?
Can either be proven? or is it just a matter of opinion, or a matter of belief?
I don't think it can be answered 100%, i think it's a matter of choice. which do u choose to believe? which comes back to my statement, it takes just as much "faith" to believe it's all by fluke as it does to believe God/surpreme being caused it.
Lawdog said:We can be certain that God exists because the Roman Catholic Church says so. (The Church says that we can be certain).
No scientific evidence needs to, or can be, or should be produced.
Only the Church has the right, given by God himself,
to make authoritative pronouncements concerning the divine reality.
The Church also affirms that the human mind is capable of concluding, through various evidences, that God exists.
However, to try and prove or disprove God from a scientific standpoint is useless and vain.
The role of Science is not to be a philosophical ground,
but an instrument of coming to knowledge about the physical reality.
God is pure spirit, therefore Science can never make a certain conclusion concerning God.