Case proved.hackenslash wrote:I neither affirm nor deny it, fuckwit, thus I'm not challenging you to list anything, I simply challenge you to fucking own your arguments. Getting to that any time soon?





Case proved.hackenslash wrote:I neither affirm nor deny it, fuckwit, thus I'm not challenging you to list anything, I simply challenge you to fucking own your arguments. Getting to that any time soon?
MM doesn't do facts and evidence. He only does "opinion".hackenslash wrote:I'm challenging you to support your assertion, which should be an absolute breeze, given your assertion that there are 'lots' of instances.
Whenever you're ready...
...and Dallas, allegedly.rEvolutionist wrote:MM doesn't do facts and evidence. He only does "opinion".hackenslash wrote:I'm challenging you to support your assertion, which should be an absolute breeze, given your assertion that there are 'lots' of instances.
Whenever you're ready...
A little part of me expanded in the dark recently. Funnily enough, I came up with a solution as well.hackenslash wrote:I should also point out, for completeness, that dark energy doesn't have to accelerate massive objects, and in fact it doesn't do so. The massive objects are actually sitting (relatively) still in space, while the space between them expands.
It's not that it expands into anything, it just expands. It's not an easy image to get; it doesn't help that most programs on cosmology that cover the Big Bang show it as if looking at it from the outside, and there is no outside. That's not easy to show on a TV screen, though.Hermit wrote:What does space expand into? Not trying to be a smartarse here, just asking you and/or XC to explain it to me.
He: Then it's expanding into the back yard.
Yeah, well, when I was about ten or so I was told that the stars are spread throughout the universe, that the universe is all that exists, and that though the stars are an incredibly long distance away from us, they keep getting more distant. That night I looked up at the sky. Three spirals of the Milky Way were clearly discernible. I thought: "All those stars are getting away from us. What lies beyond this universe that they are getting into?" Seems like 50-odd years later I still have the mind of a ten year old kid.trdsf wrote:It's not that it expands into anything, it just expands. It's not an easy image to getHermit wrote:What does space expand into? Not trying to be a smartarse here, just asking you and/or XC to explain it to me.
Current theories of cosmology admit to the possibility of a multiverse and our universe is embedded in that, so there may be a higher-dimensional space for the universe to expand into, but I find eleven-dimensional space to be as hard on the ol' gray cells as trying to imagine absolute nothingness "outside" the expanding universe.Hermit wrote:Yeah, well, when I was about ten or so I was told that the stars are spread throughout the universe, that the universe is all that exists, and that though the stars are an incredibly long distance away from us, they keep getting more distant. That night I looked up at the sky. Three spirals of the Milky Way were clearly discernible. I thought: "All those stars are getting away from us. What lies beyond this universe that they are getting into?" Seems like 50-odd years later I still have the mind of a ten year old kid.
Inflation will have an effect, though...Brian Peacock wrote:Sit down and take a pill. Our universe is inflating, it may be the only domain in town or it may be one among countless others all within some wider domain. It doesn't make much difference to the price of carrots in the end.
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