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#1
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Black Hole Spawning. A theory proposed by physicist Lee Smolin, known as the fecund universes theory, suggests that every black hole in our universe causes the formation of a new universe. Each universe will have slightly different physical laws than the forerunner universe. In this way, Smolin suggests a sort of natural selection for universes, as laws that lead to the frequent formation of black holes lead to the creation of more universes, while non-black hole forming universes "die out."
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#2
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your* goddamn RnF
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#3
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#4
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I was talking about dark flow which is apples and oranges
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#5
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Dark flow
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Not to be confused with Dark matter, dark energy, or dark fluid. | ||
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#6
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Big bang is intrinsically illogical when you express it mathematically
0+0=0 0*0=0 0-0=0 0/0=undefined | ||
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#7
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Quote:
nothing and nothing is nothing. nothing times nothings is nothing. the difference between nothing and nothing is nothing. the number of times nothing can go into nothing is not defined. It's improper to use an equals sign there. How this relates to the big bang is beyond me. First and foremost the big bang doesn't say we started with nothing, it says we started with something. If anything this supports genesis. There was a beginning. | |||
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#8
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The big bang theory violates the first and second laws (read: not theories) of thermodynamcs
1. matter cannot be created or destroyed 2. Everything tends towards disorder It says 0+0=1, and that everything went from disorder (an unstable singularity) to order (our structured universe) Not only this, but a singularity exploding from rapid spinning (let alone the matter, where'd it get the energy?) would send all particles in the same direction. This is known as conservation of angular momentum, another very basic law of physics. I'm tellin you, full of holes. | ||
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#9
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"Not only this, but a singularity exploding from rapid spinning (let alone the matter, where'd it get the energy?) would send all particles in the same direction. This is known as conservation of angular momentum, another very basic law of physics." - You also have this wrong, first of all you're applying Newtonian physics in the relativistic realm which is improper, please do not make the mistake of applying Newtons laws outside of the Earthly realm (that's where they work). Secondly, if you take a look at the classic picture of the cosmic background radiation it's clear (if properly interpreted) that the universe did not expand uniformly, otherwise that picture instead of having blotches of green, red, and black representing temperature differences would all be the same color. Again - what's your field of expertise in the scientific realm? | |||
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#10
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