I don’t think the boy realizes that he self-associates with the very worst examples of religious extremists.Another really sick post.
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I don’t think the boy realizes that he self-associates with the very worst examples of religious extremists.Another really sick post.
Yes. He is going unhinged. This is not the first time he said atheists need to die. If he lived next door and said that, I would call the police to have him checked out. A lot of mass killers have left hints on social media like this and were ignored.I don’t think the boy realizes that he self-associates with the very worst examples of religious extremists.
I realized my weaknesses with identity protection and did something about it. My info was found on the dark web. Now, I am insured against someone using my info to buy things (hasn't happened) and its privacy protection has erased the dark web info. Currently, I'm on a protected internet instead of an unprotected or public one. Furthermore, I am going to a protected web on my phone, too, as I changed phone service providers.Your threats make you look like a weak man.
I realized my weaknesses with identity protection and did something about it. My info was found on the dark web. Now, I am insured against someone using my info to buy things (hasn't happened) and its privacy protection has erased the dark web info. Currently, I'm on a protected internet instead of an unprotected or public one. Furthermore, I am going to a protected web on my phone, too, as I changed phone service providers.
Oh yeah. Atheists and their scientists still need to die to realize they are wrong lol, but I wouldn't wish their id's were stolen .
There was obviously SOMETHING before The Big Bang
You can believe anything you want, but you seem to enjoy believing in lies. I enjoy now being insured when buying stuff online as delivery makes life easier w/no car right now .I have absolutely no interest in your identity nor would I even coyly threaten you as you have me.. You aren't that important in the scheme of things.
This doesn't make sense. If time ends, then we know there was a beginning of time.And if time ends? Then there is no, "before," or "after."
why?
I don't get your reasoning?
If space ends, then why not time? And if time ends? Then there is no, "before," or "after."
meh. I'm of the opinion that the universe, space, is both infinite and finite.I don't subscribe to the idea that space ends. Our universe 3D, that we perceive, might be finite but, I can't wrap my head around what might be past the physical boundaries of our Universe. Quite probably many -- infinite? -- others?
If you consider the vast number of possibilities, it's hard not to be completely dumb-struck by it.
P.S. I have no doubt that time, as we humans perceive it, as an arrow, behaves very differently to creatures who perceive things very differently.
You are describing the curvature of space. That does not mean the universe is infinite. Those are two different things.meh. I'm of the opinion that the universe, space, is both infinite and finite.
Like an infinite regression. As you approach the edges, the laws break down, so does time, and everything else. So? No matter how fast you appear to be going, or how much distance you appear to be covering, you can never quite cover that last few couple inches to the edge, because you are limited, in how much your speed can/would be, compared to how fast the universe is expanding. . .
Just my observation of how it would work in our dimension. . .
Thus? there is, by definition, NO physical boundary. It is impossible for anything, no light, no particles, nothing, to pass that boundary. Not in our dimension anyhow.
But? You could still try, forever.
Time doesn't really exist. It's a convenient way to mark the expansion of the universe.why?
I don't get your reasoning?
If space ends, then why not time? And if time ends? Then there is no, "before," or "after."
You are describing the curvature of space. That does not mean the universe is infinite. Those are two different things.
Time doesn't really exist. It's a convenient way to mark the expansion of the universe.
Time doesn't really exist. It's a convenient way to mark the expansion of the universe.
Cosmological crisis: We don't know if the universe is round or flat
An analysis of data from the Planck space observatory suggests the universe is spherical, which would be a major headache for cosmologistswww.newscientist.com
This discussion has persisted in one form or another since man first looked up at the stars. What is at the end of the university and what comes after the end. If a big bang started the whole thing, what came before the big bang and what existed.Science posits some things we now take for granted. For example, nothing can exist prior to itself.
matter/energy/space/time exist. Where did all this “stuff” come from? Fair question. Tracing it back with observation and science (particularly physics) we seemingly trace it back to the “Big Bang.” But where did the initial super tiny blob of whatever it was come from?
Our reliance on the rules and laws of science breaks down at that point. We call it by another set of names. We call it “quantum” physics and make reference to how the normal scientific laws are suspended at such a point. Basically, we speak of something that is literally outside the bounds of science. It is LITERALLY super-natural. (Not in the sense of the “divine” or “magic” necessarily; just in the sense of requiring explanation that is above and beyond our understanding of scientific “laws”.).
The geniuses who work in the fields of quantum physics and theoretical physics may be able — in a fashion — to explain how absolute nothing led to the infinitesimal “thing” that went “bang” thereby crating all matter/energy and space itself as well as time. But cannot explain the “why” of it all?
What, exactly, perturbed an absolutely empty void where no energy and no matter existed in no space and outside the parameters of time in order to set the Big Bang and all of creation in the cosmos into motion? Why would absolutely nothing lead to something?
(I placed this post in the science section; but I think it might be logically and fairly placed in a religion section, too.)
Maybe. But if God, where did He Come from?This discussion has persisted in one form or another since man first looked up at the stars. What is at the end of the university and what comes after the end. If a big bang started the whole thing, what came before the big bang and what existed.
All we really know about the creation of the universe is that it was very, very dense and that it very quickly got much less dense.
There are a lot ideas, none that really deserves to be called a theory because theories are based on observations and evidence which simple don't exist. One such idea is that before the Big Bang, the universe was an infinite stretch of an ultra hot, dense material, persisting in a steady state until, for some reason, the Big Bang occurred. This extra-dense universe may have been governed by quantum mechanics. Steven Hawkins said, "Since events before the Big Bang have no observational consequences, one may as well cut them out of the theory and say that time began at the Big Bang," All this is just another way of saying, "We have no fucking idea what existed before the Big Bang.
When man is left with the unexplainable, then he concludes it must be the work
God. Helios, the sun god, drove a chariot daily from east to west across the sky and sailed around the northerly stream of Ocean each night in a huge cup. Lightning was a weapon of Zeus. Thunderbolts were invented by Minerva the goddess of wisdom. Crops failed because the Gods were displeased. Ect, etc.
AFAIK the atheist scientists thought the universe didn't have a beginning and that matter just existed forever. It really wasn't logical as one would have to have an infinite past and an infinite amount of matter. They couldn't explain where this matter came from of why it was infinite. It really wasn't logical.
Today, we know that the universe had a beginning scientifically. Also, we know there had to be matter as logically we can't have something pop into existence from nothing. What we disagree on is what was the cause for the starting matter (spacetime, matter) or singularity to exist.
Getting a little more basic than the creation of the universe would be the creation of laws of science needed to create the universe.I enjoy this thread. I do not have enough information to reach any conclusion which I can support. Even if there’s something I find I inately appealing about the notion of a mind which pre-existed all else, I confess I’m still wondering: Where could such a “mind” come from, in the first place?
I am not a fan of dark matter or dark energy. I think it's bunk.Cosmological crisis: We don't know if the universe is round or flat
An analysis of data from the Planck space observatory suggests the universe is spherical, which would be a major headache for cosmologistswww.newscientist.com