| Re: Effects of the expansion of physical matter with space. Hey guys, just let me butt in for a moment. Obviously matter is all that's expanding___ o b v i o u s l y m a t t e r is expanding/contracting...
since there's really no such thing as energy___ All energy is matter. Energy is just our subjective description of matter expansions and contractions. When everyone can understand this physical phenomenon, as it truly exists, then maybe science/physics can start advancing, again...
Linguistics___ain't it a bitch...?
Lloyd
[quote=RascalPuff;31386] Quote:
Originally Posted by Graybeard Hey Mr. Greg:
1.. earlier moments refers to a continuing time - there's no 'start'; no 'big bang'. The same amount of energy distributing itself over an increasingly greater area, squared. No contradiction of the law of conservation of mass-energy. Steady state. No beginning. No end. The microcosms are just as infinite and endless as the macrocosms, though comparatively more dense in the microcosms when compared with the value of 'now', and comparatively less dense in the macrocosms when compared with the value of now. There's no 'cross-over' - we're just humming along... Yesterday is smaller and more dense, tomorrow is larger and less dense, and we're constantly in the middle, looking 'down' into the microcosmic - what will become - the present and past, and 'up', into - what will and has become - the macrocosmic future. Graphically it looks like this < with the past as the apparent intersection (infinite smallness and denseness), the middle where we are in the eternal now, and the proceeding enlargement as the future. Yesterday's 60 mph (and celeritas constant) is comparatively slower than today's, and today's is comparatively slower than tomorrows, ad infinitum. We're always in the 'middle' of this proposed contnuum. o b v i o u s l y m a t t e r is not expanding...
Please let me know if this reponds to your three questions.
Thanks for being.
Best regards
- RP
('Where did the energy go?' - It gets bigger, distributes itself over an increasingly greater area, relative to 'us'.) |
__________________ "To develop the skill of correct thinking is in the first place to learn what you have to disregard. In order to go on, you have to know what to leave out; this is the essence of effective thinking." Kurt Godel "Time and space are modes in which we think and not conditions in which we live." Albert Einstein "The uncertainty principle is an absolute, finite, universal constant." L.G. "The tick-tick-tick of the cesium atom is a sliding-time-scaler constant of all finite universal motion." L.G. |