Re: I dont know whos your god
[QUOTE=AussieSteve;14419298]Facts are facts. If your facts and my facts differ, at least one of us doesn't have facts.
We are sure that time didn't exist before the Big Bang. Sure to the extent that we can be sure.
The "evidence" for a multiverse is theoretical physicists with internally consistent mathematical models. Nothing based on observation or physical reality. These models are typically created for the specific purpose of trying to avoid the universe having an absolute beginning, due to the obvious implications. In the mid 20th century, physicists threw their toys around for decades at the idea of the universe having a beginning, because of these implications. Until the evidence got too great to avoid. Now many of them are scrambling.
Occam's Razor favors the explanation that has the greatest explanatory power and/or invokes the fewest hypothesises. Try and explain the origin of multicellular life and the sexual reproduction by which it propagates, from inanimate matter, by natural means, without invoking dozens of unverifiable hypotheses that are actually at odds with observation. You can't. People have been trying for the best part of a century and the truth is that we are getting further from having a natural explanation, not closer (That's not hyperbole).
There's a double standard at play here. People will accept an explanation, no matter how ludicrous, if it sits comfortably with them. But they demand unreasonable levels of evidence for explanations that don't. This is true in many areas of our life, but it's most prominent in matters of religion... and in matters of one's favourite basketball player :oldlol:[/QUOTE]
[QUOTE=SATAN;14419309][IMG]https://media.giphy.com/media/RBeddeaQ5Xo0E/giphy.gif[/IMG][/QUOTE]
This is one of my favorite ones.
Discuss the beginnings of the universe, and then suddenly, it is about he origins of life. Two separate things that are only common in that the jury is still out.
Reality is, we are not sure that time did not exist prior to the Big Bang. We have no evidence one way or the other.
We also are not sure what happens to the matter that enters a black hole, and what dark matter/energy is.
Approximately 85% of the matter is dark, so it is a pretty big deal. And there is real evidence to support this.
It is a wild and wiggly world out there, and there is so much more to learn.
[video=youtube;dvwH8Qij0JY]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dvwH8Qij0JY[/video]