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Biden hates God.
101. Author: HockeyDadDate: Mon, 8/10/2020, 5:25PM EST
That’s what Mr Jones said spiders are!
102. Author: BrewhaDate: Mon, 8/10/2020, 5:31PM EST
Dg west deptford wrote:
Haven't followed all this butread the last and as an aside-
Do you believe in absolute truth Vic?
Or could you be wrong about everything you think you know?

Not that it matters, but it is a truism that the only absolute truth is that there is no absolute truth. All truth is relative.
Every last bit of it - relative to the predisposed world view of the observer and decider.

It is a nice romantic idea though.

103. Author: BrewhaDate: Mon, 8/10/2020, 5:42PM EST
Speyside wrote:
So if God doesn't exist why are the laws of physics immutable throughout the known universe? Also why is mathematics perfection? You are being intellectually dishonest with yourself when you say you didn't make a change in your life to be an Atheist. When born you neither believed in God or didn't believe in God. So at a minimum you have made one change and it is a significant one. Finally your last paragraph is incomplete. There are some who believe in God, but not religion. Perhaps their lives are based on individual perceptions of right and wrong

Spey,
Physics only requires God to put in perspective relative to our mortality. I know, they talk about a “God Particle” but that is a metaphor. Requiring a God to make the laws is inductive reasoning.

Number are a human logic construct and are not perfect. That’s what we have irrational numbers - its a hole in our logic.





Personally, I feel that each of us comes to know god in his own way. No real need to argue about it unless god is a means to and end. Like getting the godless to stop eating pork.

This is all a fine example:
The questions we ask are more important than the answers we get.
104. Author: Dg west deptfordDate: Mon, 8/10/2020, 5:51PM EST
I've always found it fascinating that people are so afraid to admit there's such a thing as absolute truth or universal logic.
I mean come on does 1+1 always equal 2 or not? Does the sun always rise in the east, or does it occasionally rise in the west?
The fact is I already know you believe in truth and immaterial universal logic. But thinking minds know where that leads...
You either have to give up knowledge and admit you could be wrong about everything you think you know or admit there must be a Creator/Designer who knows everything there is to know.
Making a knowledge claim such as " there is no God" is therefore self refuting. If there's no God you can't know anything for certain. Because the things you don't know could overturn the things you think you know. You could be in the MaTriX. But the fact is you do know some things for certain. Therefore you know for certain there is a Creator and he knows everything there is to know.
So when I hear a self ascribed atheist making knowledge claims, discussing truth and logic i get a little grin.
Epistemology 101 you can't know anything for certain unless you know everything certainly or have special revelation from someone who does.
You see Vic you have to borrow from my worldview every time you want to consider logic, truth or make a knowledge claim of any kind. But you already KNOW that 😉
Atheism reduces a man to absurdity
Thus it was written:
"The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge"
Thanks for listening!
105. Author: BrewhaDate: Mon, 8/10/2020, 7:33PM EST
Dg west deptford wrote:
I've always found it fascinating that people are so afraid to admit there's such a thing as absolute truth or universal logic.
I mean come on does 1+1 always equal 2 or not? Does the sun always rise in the east, or does it occasionally rise in the west?
The fact is I already know you believe in truth and immaterial universal logic. But thinking minds know where that leads...
You either have to give up knowledge and admit you could be wrong about everything you think you know or admit there must be a Creator/Designer who knows everything there is to know.
Making a knowledge claim such as " there is no God" is therefore self refuting. If there's no God you can't know anything for certain. Because the things you don't know could overturn the things you think you know. You could be in the MaTriX. But the fact is you do know some things for certain. Therefore you know for certain there is a Creator and he knows everything there is to know.
So when I hear a self ascribed atheist making knowledge claims, discussing truth and logic i get a little grin.
Epistemology 101 you can't know anything for certain unless you know everything certainly or have special revelation from someone who does.
You see Vic you have to borrow from my worldview every time you want to consider logic, truth or make a knowledge claim of any kind. But you already KNOW that 😉
Atheism reduces a man to absurdity
Thus it was written:
"The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge"
Thanks for listening!

Seeing that all truth is mutable is a matter of observation, not fear. Although some my be predisposed to interpret these things as a measure of fear. And their truth would be that they alone have the courage to embrace the divine perfection of their lords work. Yet, is the world so simple that there can be only one “truth”, one view, one person who is right?

Yes, one can oversimplify “truth” to be numeric summation. But I would remind you that there are only 10 types of people in the world - those who understand binary and those who don’t.

As an agnostic, I “believe” that there are some things that are unknowable.
And btw man is absurd....
106. Author: bgzDate: Mon, 8/10/2020, 8:56PM EST
Brewha wrote:
Spey,

Number are a human logic construct and are not perfect. That’s what we have irrational numbers - its a hole in our logic.



Just taking a quick break to interrupt the word salad tosser for a minute...

I don't know how irrational numbers means our numbering system is flawed. I would like to see some more about this one.

I mean, absolutely any numbering system out there is going to have integers right?

If your numbering system has integers, then you're inevitability going to end up with irrational numbers.

I mean, could our system be better?... I'm sure it could be, but it's what we got to work, and it seems to work. I mean, I'm sending you this message through the internets right now.

Even our physics is pretty good for the most part, even the parts that end up with complex numbers seem to work out.

I mean, it's hard to explain stuff like Imaginary numbers, but that doesn't make our system inherently bad.

I get you on the rest of your post though... quantum physics basically destroys any hypothesis that requires "fate".
107. Author: frankj1Date: Mon, 8/10/2020, 9:08PM EST
Believe what you like.
Like what you smoke.
108. Author: bgzDate: Mon, 8/10/2020, 9:09PM EST
Dg west deptford wrote:
I've always found it fascinating that people are so afraid to admit there's such a thing as absolute truth or universal logic.


Someone unified relativity and quantum mechanics?

I didn't hear about it.

Dg west deptford wrote:

I mean come on does 1+1 always equal 2 or not?


Brewha gave an excellent example of where 1 + 1 does not equal 2

Dg west deptford wrote:

Does the sun always rise in the east, or does it occasionally rise in the west?


Sounds like a question for Venus... but technically the sun doesn't rise. You know the Earth is round right?

Dg west deptford wrote:

The fact is I already know you believe in truth and immaterial universal logic. But thinking minds know where that leads...
You either have to give up knowledge and admit you could be wrong about everything you think you know or admit there must be a Creator/Designer who knows everything there is to know.
Making a knowledge claim such as " there is no God" is therefore self refuting. If there's no God you can't know anything for certain. Because the things you don't know could overturn the things you think you know. You could be in the MaTriX. But the fact is you do know some things for certain. Therefore you know for certain there is a Creator and he knows everything there is to know.
So when I hear a self ascribed atheist making knowledge claims, discussing truth and logic i get a little grin.
Epistemology 101 you can't know anything for certain unless you know everything certainly or have special revelation from someone who does.
You see Vic you have to borrow from my worldview every time you want to consider logic, truth or make a knowledge claim of any kind. But you already KNOW that 😉


That's some serious word salad there.

Dg west deptford wrote:

Atheism reduces a man to absurdity


Ya... I hear ya, you seem pretty obsessed with other peoples' lack of your faith.
109. Author: fiddler898Date: Tue, 8/11/2020, 6:45AM EST
Dg west deptford wrote:

Atheism reduces a man to absurdity
Thus it was written:
"The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge"
Thanks for listening!


I’m not one for prooftexting, but I’m assuming you know the English word "fear" is actually the Hebrew idiom for "reverence," right? Puts a very different spin on the idea.

A.
110. Author: ZRX1200Date: Tue, 8/11/2020, 8:52AM EST
^ oh what do you know!

hehe....
111. Author: bgzDate: Tue, 8/11/2020, 9:39AM EST
fiddler898 wrote:
I’m not one for prooftexting, but I’m assuming you know the English word "fear" is actually the Hebrew idiom for "reverence," right? Puts a very different spin on the idea.

A.


So you're saying 2000 year old dead guys knew more than you... got it. Not sure why you think I misspelled or misused fear though.... that word didn't even make it's way into my last posts... in fact, I think I cropped it out of yours.

See, using spooky language to an atheist just makes you look like a word salad tosser to us.

Which is ok...

Cause everyone loves a good salad tosser, so welcome!!!
112. Author: opelmanta1900Date: Tue, 8/11/2020, 9:42AM EST
Brewha wrote:
Not that it matters, but it is a truism that the only absolute truth is that there is no absolute truth. All truth is relative.



Is that absolutely true?
113. Author: rfenstDate: Tue, 8/11/2020, 9:48AM EST
bgz wrote:
That's some serious word salad there.

LOL. Never heard that one before.
114. Author: victor809Date: Tue, 8/11/2020, 10:11AM EST
Dg west deptford wrote:
I've always found it fascinating that people are so afraid to admit there's such a thing as absolute truth or universal logic.
I mean come on does 1+1 always equal 2 or not? Does the sun always rise in the east, or does it occasionally rise in the west?

Believing that the sun will always rise in the east is faith. Any number of things may happen which will stop it from doing so tomorrow. Believing that it will always rise in the east is complete folly.

Believing that some integer which is human defined, when a human defined procedure is applied to it and another human defined integer always results in the same human defined result is some sort of profound thing is circular logic. 1+1=2 because we literally defined "1", "+" and "2" to do so.

Quote:

The fact is I already know you believe in truth and immaterial universal logic. But thinking minds know where that leads...
You either have to give up knowledge and admit you could be wrong about everything you think you know or admit there must be a Creator/Designer who knows everything there is to know.

This is nonsense. I have never said I couldn't be wrong. But my willingness to be wrong does not automatically make you correct. It isn't binary....there is an infinite number of possibilities.

Quote:

Making a knowledge claim such as " there is no God" is therefore self refuting. If there's no God you can't know anything for certain. Because the things you don't know could overturn the things you think you know. You could be in the MaTriX. But the fact is you do know some things for certain. Therefore you know for certain there is a Creator and he knows everything there is to know.

Simply wrong. I say there is no god, because there is no evidence for a god. As such, I do not believe there is a god. And yes, there are many possibilities for this world. I deal with the ones which I see evidence for. As a possibility which presents no evidence, is by definition not impacting the world, and therefore not particularly important. An example for this would be the SciFi theory that we are in a simulation run from a supercomputer in another reality. That's fine. If you do not have any awareness or ability to gain awareness of the outside of that simulation, then this is your functional reality.

You realize your little "gotchas" aren't actually "gotchas" right? Like.... I can believe there is no god. Your saying I know there is some omniscient creator is not actually doing anything. Just because you believe that the logic game you're playing makes sense, doesn't mean it actually does.

More importantly. I am fully capable of separating the idea of believing in a god, and following a god. Even if you were able to bring your god down to earth, have him/her unequivocally demonstrate his/her omniscience and omnipotence... I'm not going to follow them. I'll believe they exist (after sufficient testing). But why would I suddenly become a follower? Being born with omniscience and omnipotence doesn't automatically make some deity worthy of my respect.

Quote:

So when I hear a self ascribed atheist making knowledge claims, discussing truth and logic i get a little grin.
Epistemology 101 you can't know anything for certain unless you know everything certainly or have special revelation from someone who does.

Huh? You realize this is the real world right? "Certainty" can mean 98.2% confidence. I'm willing to lead my life on that.
To ascribe some random numbers, I could say I'm 98.2% confident in the current knowledge of how we came about.
the other 1.8% possibility has to then be divided across all infinite possibilities which have no evidence of occurring. So every little possibility, from the christian god, buddhist, aliens, matrix, computer simulation, AI, even stuff you don't think about... like we're stuck in the lower colon of a space whale... or we're the creation of a 4th dimensional child... All that sh$t has to share the same equal possibilities as the other "no evidence" possibilities.

So while I can say I believe with confidence there is no god, I can say with statistical certainty that the god described by any single religious text is statistically impossible.

Quote:

You see Vic you have to borrow from my worldview every time you want to consider logic, truth or make a knowledge claim of any kind. But you already KNOW that 😉

this is absolutely false. To pretend one needs to borrow from religion to consider logic or knowledge makes zero sense.
115. Author: victor809Date: Tue, 8/11/2020, 10:13AM EST
opelmanta1900 wrote:
Is that absolutely true?

now you're trying to play dg's games.
116. Author: HockeyDadDate: Tue, 8/11/2020, 11:19AM EST
victor809 wrote:
So while I can say I believe with confidence there is no god, I can say with statistical certainty that the god described by any single religious text is statistically impossible.



What if God wrote the single religious text? That would be statistically 100% accurate.

Something like the Book of Mormon that came from the golden plates.
117. Author: opelmanta1900Date: Tue, 8/11/2020, 11:22AM EST
victor809 wrote:
now you're trying to play dg's games.

I don't know who that is...

But no games... the statement was essentially "There are no absolute truths. Except there are."

It's so profound I was hoping i could find a link to a t-shirt emblazoned with the slogan....
118. Author: victor809Date: Tue, 8/11/2020, 11:25AM EST
HockeyDad wrote:
What if God wrote the single religious text? That would be statistically 100% accurate.

Something like the Book of Mormon that came from the golden plates.


Huh?
Did you just say "what if" and "100% accurate"?

IF a god wrote a text, THEN the god described would be accurate. But without any evidence of the existence of any god, or any evidence after that of the writing of text by any god.... then each text and each god have essentially equal statistical probability. So divide that 1.8% by an infinite number of possibilities, and that's the chance of being correct about that particular one.
119. Author: BrewhaDate: Tue, 8/11/2020, 1:00PM EST
bgz wrote:
Just taking a quick break to interrupt the word salad tosser for a minute...

I don't know how irrational numbers means our numbering system is flawed. I would like to see some more about this one.

I mean, absolutely any numbering system out there is going to have integers right?

If your numbering system has integers, then you're inevitability going to end up with irrational numbers.

I mean, could our system be better?... I'm sure it could be, but it's what we got to work, and it seems to work. I mean, I'm sending you this message through the internets right now.

Even our physics is pretty good for the most part, even the parts that end up with complex numbers seem to work out.

I mean, it's hard to explain stuff like Imaginary numbers, but that doesn't make our system inherently bad.

I get you on the rest of your post though... quantum physics basically destroys any hypothesis that requires "fate".

Is fairness I was pointing out that our number systems are not "perfect". They are our own construct of logic and have flaws that need special rules - "Thou shalt not decide by zero".
Hell, humans used numbers for uncounted centuries before we even invented the zero (a Hindu guy in the 7th century).

Who know - we have created Hex, binary - maybe a number system based on Planks constant would fix things up a bit...
120. Author: bgzDate: Tue, 8/11/2020, 1:25PM EST
Brewha wrote:
Is fairness I was pointing out that our number systems are not "perfect". They are our own construct of logic and have flaws that need special rules - "Thou shalt not decide by zero".
Hell, humans used numbers for uncounted centuries before we even invented the zero (a Hindu guy in the 7th century).

Who know - we have reacted Hex, binary - maybe a number system based on Planks constant would fix things up a bit...



Interesting, I've actually been thinking of something similar. Possible explanation for some things in relativity.

Thought about the concept of maybe c is only constant to our relatve perception, but is not constant relative to the size of space. Basically think about it this way... our ruler in our local gravitational potential is a meter... but relatively speaking, in expanded space, the ruler locally would still be a meter... but it would appear larger to an outside observer. Thus, if our distances were defined by the size of a single unit of space, then c would not be constant. Anyway, just a thought experiment I had... thought I would share it.
121. Author: BrewhaDate: Tue, 8/11/2020, 1:26PM EST
opelmanta1900 wrote:
Is that absolutely true?

Of course not.....Think
122. Author: victor809Date: Tue, 8/11/2020, 1:30PM EST
bgz wrote:
Interesting, I've actually been thinking of something similar. Possible explanation for some things in relativity.

Thought about the concept of maybe c is only constant to our relatve perception, but is not constant relative to the size of space. Basically think about it this way... our ruler in our local gravitational potential is a meter... but relatively speaking, in expanded space, the ruler locally would still be a meter... but it would appear larger to an outside observer. Thus, if our distances were defined by the size of a single unit of space, then c would not be constant. Anyway, just a thought experiment I had... thought I would share it.


I don't know a ton about astrophysics, but if you're asking about whether the observation of distant objects takes into account the expansion of the galaxy over time, and the fact that observations in the now are of things which actually occurred millions/billions of years ago and only reached us at the speed of light now.... they have already been accounting for that and I believe the expanding distance measured by that unit c over the same time.
123. Author: bgzDate: Tue, 8/11/2020, 1:37PM EST
victor809 wrote:
I don't know a ton about astrophysics, but if you're asking about whether the observation of distant objects takes into account the expansion of the galaxy over time, and the fact that observations in the now are of things which actually occurred millions/billions of years ago and only reached us at the speed of light now.... they have already been accounting for that and I believe the expanding distance measured by that unit c over the same time.


I know what you're talking about, but that's not what I was saying.

I'm saying the same object expanded space will appear larger to us if we were to observe it from our local gravity as opposed to observing it in our own.
124. Author: victor809Date: Tue, 8/11/2020, 1:40PM EST
bgz wrote:
I know what you're talking about, but that's not what I was saying.

I'm saying the same object expanded space will appear larger to us if we were to observe it from our local gravity as opposed to observing it in our own.


I mean... if a meter is expanded external to our local gravity, that would have been identified already.

Items in space would be the same size to an astronaut as they travel with the item from earth, to space (lets say both the observer and the object expand 2x)... but both would appear larger to observers on earth.

I think our tech is sufficient that we would have picked up on that (perhaps not with something as small as an astronaut, but with measurements of planets/moons as well as the distances to them.

(granted... I only am assuming our tech is sufficient to have noticed that. A small enough difference may not get picked up)
125. Author: BrewhaDate: Tue, 8/11/2020, 1:41PM EST
bgz wrote:
Interesting, I've actually been thinking of something similar. Possible explanation for some things in relativity.

Thought about the concept of maybe c is only constant to our relatve perception, but is not constant relative to the size of space. Basically think about it this way... our ruler in our local gravitational potential is a meter... but relatively speaking, in expanded space, the ruler locally would still be a meter... but it would appear larger to an outside observer. Thus, if our distances were defined by the size of a single unit of space, then c would not be constant. Anyway, just a thought experiment I had... thought I would share it.

Hmmm....

Well, when energy acts on timespace it does physical distort it. And since time and space are only locally constant.........Hmmmm.


You're thinking like Albert, you know.
126. Author: bgzDate: Tue, 8/11/2020, 1:50PM EST
victor809 wrote:
I mean... if a meter is expanded external to our local gravity, that would have been identified already.

Items in space would be the same size to an astronaut as they travel with the item from earth, to space (lets say both the observer and the object expand 2x)... but both would appear larger to observers on earth.

I think our tech is sufficient that we would have picked up on that (perhaps not with something as small as an astronaut, but with measurements of planets/moons as well as the distances to them.

(granted... I only am assuming our tech is sufficient to have noticed that. A small enough difference may not get picked up)


I don't think our tech would be able to detect that. Even deeper in our solar system I would think the difference would be too small to detect. Gravity is pretty weak relative to the other forces.

Our ability to test gravity is quite limited... thus the reason we still don't have a unified theory.

Then again, I'm not in the field, I'm just a fan and keep up with all the latest, so there's a good chance I'm wrong;)
127. Author: victor809Date: Tue, 8/11/2020, 2:00PM EST
bgz wrote:
I don't think our tech would be able to detect that. Even deeper in our solar system I would think the difference would be too small to detect. Gravity is pretty weak relative to the other forces.

Our ability to test gravity is quite limited... thus the reason we still don't have a unified theory.

Then again, I'm not in the field, I'm just a fan and keep up with all the latest, so there's a good chance I'm wrong;)


I am only making uneducated assumptions as well. The extent of my knowledge is Niel Degrasse Tyson podcasts. Which, while fun to listen to, are not going to give one deep understanding of the specific equations, or the tools used for measurement.
128. Author: bgzDate: Tue, 8/11/2020, 2:09PM EST
You should watch some Sean Carrol, that dude is awesome. I've watched quite a few of his lectures.

I actually envision if you were able to teleport a ruler from here, to the deepest known void, the ruler wouldn't be able to hold it's mass together due to the lack of gravitational potential.

Again, I'm probably wrong;)
129. Author: victor809Date: Tue, 8/11/2020, 2:13PM EST
bgz wrote:
You should watch some Sean Carrol, that dude is awesome. I've watched quite a few of his lectures.

I actually envision if you were able to teleport a ruler from here, to the deepest known void, the ruler wouldn't be able to hold it's mass together due to the lack of gravitational potential.

Again, I'm probably wrong;)


That I'm pretty sure is incorrect.
the ruler would hold together just fine (assuming it survived reassembly after a teleportation). Forces holding it together are mostly not gravity. But even just gravity should be sufficient, especially in a void with no other gravitational forces. The individual molecules would be exerting the only gravitational forces around, so they would stay together. Sort of the opposite effect of how a black hole's enormous gravity will strip molecules off as you spaghettify
130. Author: bgzDate: Tue, 8/11/2020, 2:21PM EST
victor809 wrote:
That I'm pretty sure is incorrect.
the ruler would hold together just fine (assuming it survived reassembly after a teleportation). Forces holding it together are mostly not gravity. But even just gravity should be sufficient, especially in a void with no other gravitational forces. The individual molecules would be exerting the only gravitational forces around, so they would stay together. Sort of the opposite effect of how a black hole's enormous gravity will strip molecules off as you spaghettify


Ok, lets go the other way with it, lets teleport it to the center of the earth, is its overall structure going to stay the same, or is it going to collapse?

I'm making the claim that in the deepest of voids, the space between the particles would be too far to effectively hold it's structure. At the very least it would become incredibly brittle.

Unfortunately, this is not testable... kinda curious now, probably have to research it more later.
131. Author: victor809Date: Tue, 8/11/2020, 2:26PM EST
bgz wrote:
Ok, lets go the other way with it, lets teleport it to the center of the earth, is its overall structure going to stay the same, or is it going to collapse?

I'm making the claim that in the deepest of voids, the space between the particles would be too far to effectively hold it's structure. At the very least it would become incredibly brittle.

Unfortunately, this is not testable... kinda curious now, probably have to research it more later.


Center of the earth the pressure is too high, it would become something denser than it currently is.

But there's no reason to think that the "void" would increase space between individual molecules enough that molecular interactions cannot keep it together. Possibly because you haven't defined "void" sufficiently. Remember, if we're just talking perfect vacuum.... solid objects retain their structure in a perfect vacuum. If you are defining "void" differently, such as a direction away from the center or towards the center of the universe, then you have to specify.
132. Author: bgzDate: Tue, 8/11/2020, 2:36PM EST
Void meaning a place in space time where the effects of expansion are relevent. We have no means to test such a place. We cant even get out of our own galaxy let alone to a point in space where expansion matters.

You sound certain that you are correct though... we need to get us a physicist in here.
133. Author: victor809Date: Tue, 8/11/2020, 2:59PM EST
bgz wrote:
Void meaning a place in space time where the effects of expansion are relevent. We have no means to test such a place. We cant even get out of our own galaxy let alone to a point in space where expansion matters.

You sound certain that you are correct though... we need to get us a physicist in here.


I mean.... that's a weird identification of a place. I'm assuming you would mean "outer" edges of the universe then... or even outside of the boundary of what we describe as the outer edge of the expanding universe... but I'm pretty sure we have not actually been able to identify that horizon at this time. So defining what happens outside that horizon is difficult.

Without any evidence to expect another force to increase the distance between molecules, then it becomes a lot of supposition.

but I don't know what astrophysicists think on this. Perhaps you should pose this question... they do a "cosmic queries" thing on Startalk.
134. Author: bgzDate: Tue, 8/11/2020, 3:20PM EST
I'll have to come up with a better way to explain what's going on in my head.

Basically, I'm taking the best theory we got, and doing a thought experiment on what the theory is stating.

If space is expanding... then the individual units of space expand... or more space is created in the absense of a meaningful gravitational field, or it's just one plane that gets larger but there are no meaningful units of space.

A paper got published recently claiming to have found evidence that suggests there may be individual units of space. That's what caused my thought experiment.

So my thought experiment was exploring the possibility of individual units of space time expanding in the absense of a meaningful gravitational field.

I took it farther than what I described, but if you can't visualize what I'm saying, then the rest if it will split your dome. Ive actually considered seeking out some physicists to discuss this, as nothing that I'm saying disagrees with the standard model. It's just going down the rabbit hole of what it means if individual units of space actually exist.
135. Author: delta1Date: Tue, 8/11/2020, 3:52PM EST
the other possibility is that you're trying to understand concepts beyond the capacity of the tools at hand...like the pouch of tools used by the horse and buggy set compared to the garage full in a Formula 1 race car team...
136. Author: bgzDate: Tue, 8/11/2020, 3:55PM EST
That's exactly what I'm trying to do!!!

Unfortunately, whether or not the universe is fundamentally discreet is still an unknown.

So everything I said above was exactly what I said it was, just a thought experiment.
137. Author: Dg west deptfordDate: Tue, 8/11/2020, 3:56PM EST
All absurd except for Opel who has indeed found the heart of the matter then had the balls to point it out.
Lots of chuckles there in those predictable absurd responses.
And no you can't even claim 98% knowledge because
You could be wrong about that.
Unless of course you borrow from my worldview

138. Author: CelticBomberDate: Tue, 8/11/2020, 4:11PM EST
Brewha wrote:
I know, they talk about a “God Particle” but that is a metaphor.


Ugh I hate that term. It was created by the press and a book publisher. No scientist ever called the Higgs boson the "God Particle". It was called the "Goddamn Particle" as a joke among physicists.
139. Author: victor809Date: Tue, 8/11/2020, 4:13PM EST
bgz wrote:
I'll have to come up with a better way to explain what's going on in my head.

Basically, I'm taking the best theory we got, and doing a thought experiment on what the theory is stating.

If space is expanding... then the individual units of space expand... or more space is created in the absense of a meaningful gravitational field, or it's just one plane that gets larger but there are no meaningful units of space.

A paper got published recently claiming to have found evidence that suggests there may be individual units of space. That's what caused my thought experiment.

So my thought experiment was exploring the possibility of individual units of space time expanding in the absense of a meaningful gravitational field.

I took it farther than what I described, but if you can't visualize what I'm saying, then the rest if it will split your dome. Ive actually considered seeking out some physicists to discuss this, as nothing that I'm saying disagrees with the standard model. It's just going down the rabbit hole of what it means if individual units of space actually exist.


So here's where I see an issue with your theory.... and this is totally idle speculation....
if individual units of space are expanding (I would disagree with the "in the absence of a meaningful gravitational field" as the matter you've teleported will contain its own gravitational forces) then the other forces contained within any matter will also be expanding. Example..... let's say electrical force keeping two ions together can reach 15 nm in distance.... well, as your space expands, so does that 15 nm.... there's no reason to think that it will only reach 7nm at that time.
140. Author: victor809Date: Tue, 8/11/2020, 4:16PM EST
Dg west deptford wrote:
All absurd except for Opel who has indeed found the heart of the matter then had the balls to point it out.
Lots of chuckles there in those predictable absurd responses.
And no you can't even claim 98% knowledge because
You could be wrong about that.
Unless of course you borrow from my worldview


Dude.... 98.2% is a cbid term for "Who knows, I'm throwing a random made up number in here" (you're new, so I'll let it go... this time).

But more importantly, your certainty because of your "worldview" is not real. You are certain because of faith. Which is the opposite of evidence. I will never substitute faith in the unprovable for certainty.
141. Author: Dg west deptfordDate: Tue, 8/11/2020, 4:32PM EST
victor809 wrote:
Dude.... 98.2% is a cbid term for "Who knows, I'm throwing a random made up number in here" (you're new, so I'll let it go... this time).

Thanks for the grace! I need it. Please let it go next time as well?

But more importantly, your certainty because of your "worldview" is not real. You are certain because of faith. Which is the opposite of evidence. I will never substitute faith in the unprovable for certainty.


^ is that absolutely true or could you be wrong about that?
Beer
You asked for it absurd guy.
142. Author: bgzDate: Tue, 8/11/2020, 4:40PM EST
victor809 wrote:
So here's where I see an issue with your theory.... and this is totally idle speculation....
if individual units of space are expanding (I would disagree with the "in the absence of a meaningful gravitational field" as the matter you've teleported will contain its own gravitational forces) then the other forces contained within any matter will also be expanding. Example..... let's say electrical force keeping two ions together can reach 15 nm in distance.... well, as your space expands, so does that 15 nm.... there's no reason to think that it will only reach 7nm at that time.


I would argue that the gravitational field of the ruler would be insignificant relative to the expansion of space. Yes, 15 nm would be 15nm.... because of how we define the meter. That's not what I'm arguing. Im arguing you would fill the same space, but the space itself would be expanded limiting the ability of the matter to hold their bonds.

Again, this is assuming space is discreet... which is currently unknown.
143. Author: victor809Date: Tue, 8/11/2020, 4:40PM EST
Dg west deptford wrote:
^ is that absolutely true or could you be wrong about that?
Beer
You asked for it absurd guy.


You put too much stake in your fantasy about "absolute truths".

I don't look forward to when you find out what 0 Kelvin is called.
144. Author: victor809Date: Tue, 8/11/2020, 4:46PM EST
bgz wrote:
I would argue that the gravitational field of the ruler would be insignificant relative to the expansion of space. Yes, 15 nm would be 15nm.... because of how we define the meter. That's not what I'm arguing. Im arguing you would fill the same space, but the space itself would be expanded limiting the ability of the matter to hold their bonds.

Again, this is assuming space is discreet... which is currently unknown.


The gravity of the molecules of the ruler will definitely NOT be insignificant, if you're in a void where there are no other forces acting on the ruler. think about it... there's nothing to pull the molecules away from each other. In this imaginary void, there is no gravity other than that of the molecules. The only forces in this scenario are gravity between molecules, electromagnetic forces, and the weak and strong interactions of particles. Unless one or more of these forces start pushing away from each other, or some imaginary wind blows through, there will be no other force to cause the particles to move away from each other. Even if the space between the molecules is "expanded" so you've got a ruler perfectly blown up 2x... the only forces are the ones pulling the particles together. Even if you expand everything to the point that particle A is so far away from particle B that the electromagnetic, gravitational, weak and strong forces between them cannot affect them.... what force would cause them to do anything other than stand where they are?
145. Author: Dg west deptfordDate: Tue, 8/11/2020, 4:59PM EST
I love the Absolute Truth that absolute zero doesn't exist because my Lord made it so.
Glory to God.
Thanks Vic.
146. Author: victor809Date: Tue, 8/11/2020, 5:03PM EST
Dg west deptford wrote:
I love the Absolute Truth that absolute zero doesn't exist because my Lord made it so.
Glory to God.
Thanks Vic.


Why would you think absolute zero doesn't exist?
147. Author: fiddler898Date: Tue, 8/11/2020, 5:04PM EST
bgz wrote:
So you're saying 2000 year old dead guys knew more than you... got it. Not sure why you think I misspelled or misused fear though.... that word didn't even make it's way into my last posts... in fact, I think I cropped it out of yours.

See, using spooky language to an atheist just makes you look like a word salad tosser to us.

Which is ok...

Cause everyone loves a good salad tosser, so welcome!!!


bgz, if you look at my reference, I wasn’t responding to you, sorry if I gave you that impression.

And Z, you know that I know less than I think I know..
I think... 😇
148. Author: ZRX1200Date: Tue, 8/11/2020, 5:11PM EST
At least you’re thinking....

You got a leg up on most us asshats here.
149. Author: bgzDate: Tue, 8/11/2020, 5:17PM EST
victor809 wrote:
The gravity of the molecules of the ruler will definitely NOT be insignificant, if you're in a void where there are no other forces acting on the ruler. think about it... there's nothing to pull the molecules away from each other. In this imaginary void, there is no gravity other than that of the molecules. The only forces in this scenario are gravity between molecules, electromagnetic forces, and the weak and strong interactions of particles. Unless one or more of these forces start pushing away from each other, or some imaginary wind blows through, there will be no other force to cause the particles to move away from each other. Even if the space between the molecules is "expanded" so you've got a ruler perfectly blown up 2x... the only forces are the ones pulling the particles together. Even if you expand everything to the point that particle A is so far away from particle B that the electromagnetic, gravitational, weak and strong forces between them cannot affect them.... what force would cause them to do anything other than stand where they are?


Yeah, expansion is a b*tch to wrap your head around. Unfortunatly you just conceeded that the ruler would appear relatively larger in expanded space.

This whole argument because I read an article that evidence suggested space is discreet. Unfortunately we can't test this because we can't teleport matter to a void.... or even get within a 100 million lightyears of a void for that matter. It's all hypothesis till you have experimental evidence or solid math to back it up. Because it's unknown whether space is discreet, we might as well be arguing about who's god is better.
150. Author: bgzDate: Tue, 8/11/2020, 5:19PM EST
fiddler898 wrote:
bgz, if you look at my reference, I wasn’t responding to you, sorry if I gave you that impression.

And Z, you know that I know less than I think I know..
I think... 😇


Oh, this wasn't aimed at you, it was aimed at dg.

It was the salad tossing reference wasn't it :)
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