Post by Pincho Paxton on Mar 14, 2014 8:55:39 GMT
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Medieval multiverse heralded modern cosmic conundrums
Pincho Says...
I don't think it's actually correct to use that analogy. The trouble with scientists is that they use too many magic forces, and don't actually work out the real forces. Using real propagation, there are no spaces in the universe, because everything has to be propagated. Scientists have huge gaps in atoms, that's not possible, else you lose propagating forces. Everything has to touch something to pass a message along. It leaves you only one way to create the Universe, so you don't need a multiverse. Newton's 3rd Law is identified by passing information by propagation. Every action has an equal, and opposite reaction, because everything touches something else. Then C becomes a distance of propagation, so C is fixed by the fractal, so C will always be C no matter what scale you are working with. the fractal will always be the same. Some Galaxies are different to other galaxies simply due to the fact that grain structures always create gaps even though they are touching every possible place. That is because grain has to be spherical, or circular. If science really believes that it needs a multiverse then science is in trouble. I mean.. science has 4 forces of energy... that doesn't even make sense. Propagation is a bump force, always will be a bump force. That's energy! That's all that energy is.. locality, and bump. There's nothing special about energy. I think that scientists have got confused by the glow, and the explosion! Bump forces propagated to human scale look exaggerated. They are just bump forces, we translate them into light, and sound. Boom! It's just that those tiny bump forces damage our tiny particles. We are made from quantum parts, the bump forces are quantum, our parts get shifted by them. Science is medieval now.
Medieval multiverse heralded modern cosmic conundrums
Current models agree with observations only if certain parameters take particular values – if the forces holding matter together were stronger or weaker, for instance, the universe would not look the way it does.
Scientists call this the fine-tuning problem, and one way to solve it is to say there must be an infinite number of universes in which all outcomes are possible.
Scientists call this the fine-tuning problem, and one way to solve it is to say there must be an infinite number of universes in which all outcomes are possible.
Pincho Says...
I don't think it's actually correct to use that analogy. The trouble with scientists is that they use too many magic forces, and don't actually work out the real forces. Using real propagation, there are no spaces in the universe, because everything has to be propagated. Scientists have huge gaps in atoms, that's not possible, else you lose propagating forces. Everything has to touch something to pass a message along. It leaves you only one way to create the Universe, so you don't need a multiverse. Newton's 3rd Law is identified by passing information by propagation. Every action has an equal, and opposite reaction, because everything touches something else. Then C becomes a distance of propagation, so C is fixed by the fractal, so C will always be C no matter what scale you are working with. the fractal will always be the same. Some Galaxies are different to other galaxies simply due to the fact that grain structures always create gaps even though they are touching every possible place. That is because grain has to be spherical, or circular. If science really believes that it needs a multiverse then science is in trouble. I mean.. science has 4 forces of energy... that doesn't even make sense. Propagation is a bump force, always will be a bump force. That's energy! That's all that energy is.. locality, and bump. There's nothing special about energy. I think that scientists have got confused by the glow, and the explosion! Bump forces propagated to human scale look exaggerated. They are just bump forces, we translate them into light, and sound. Boom! It's just that those tiny bump forces damage our tiny particles. We are made from quantum parts, the bump forces are quantum, our parts get shifted by them. Science is medieval now.