Salutatio Mark!
04-Feb-98, Mark Bloss wrote to Richard Meic
Subject: Time and Again
RM>>> Question: Leading theorists of our day claim that time began at
RM>>> the Big Bang (the BB is something I still dispute). Why does
RM>>> time have to have a beginning? IMO, claiming such is sheer
RM>>> speculation, built from assumption.
RM>>> There starting from scratch. Your turn. ;)
MR>> I think the Big Bang is an admirable model. It seems quite
MR>> plausible given the observed red shift which would seem to
MR>> suggest that (depending on how you look at it) the stars are
MR>> moving away from each other, or the space between the stars is
MR>> stretching.
RM>> How does one solve the problem of the "river of galaxies"
RM>> observed recently? It kinda trashes their calculations a bit,
RM>> right?
MB> Nope. Not by a long shot. This phenomena is explained by a large
MB> gravity well.
But all matter is supposed to be expanding away from each other
relatively equally due to the explosion of the primordial atom.
Has the origin of this "gravity well" been found? Has anyone
detected the cause? Or is it just a quick sweep under the rug?
Here's a tip, the river of galaxies in no way show the same
expansion cheracteristics as the rest of the universe, thus are
not the result of a big bang.
RM>> Sounds like a good policy. Consider that 99% of the universe is
RM>> highly conductive plasma, and the presence of magnetic fields all
RM>> the way up to the galactic Superclusters. Plasma is greatly
[...]
RM>> worth mentioning? Is it fear of losing funding for their pet
RM>> project? Is it sheer ignorance of the chosen kind? It is
RM>> something for you to think about, while you are on that fence. ;)
MB> It's really simple, Richard. In the big bang model,
MB> electromagnetism has NO EFFECT in the early Universe immediately
MB> following the initial expansion.
And how is this known to be true? What support do they have that
is so convincing that they are willing to rule out the most
powerful force in nature? I have read much material on the BB model
and have not seen one reference pointing to any sort of support
for ignoring magnetism as a player (other than assumption, of
course).
MB> It is not until molecules have
MB> begun to combine that the strong force comes into play.
In order of strongest to weakest:
Electromagnetism
Strong Nuclear
Weak Nuclear
Gravitation
I was talking about (pay attention ;) *Electromagnetism*, not the
Strong Nuclear force.
MB> This is
MB> understood by every proponent of the big bang model, and is
MB> mentioned at every turn. How explicit must one be?
Correction,... PUSHED by every proponent of the BB model. "How
explicit must one be"? Explicit enough to remove any shadow of
doubt. C'mon, Mark this is supposed to be science. Direct me to
the source that shows so clearly that magnetism played no role at
all in the early universe (I am looking for the concrete
evidence, not data that "suggests", or "aludes" or in any way
allows fudging room. Nor am I looking for mere mathematics,
because math can say what ever one wants it to say). It is time
that the BB model gets put to the test of the scientific method,
which means that those proponents MUST try (I mean really TRY) to
disprove the theory, because by failing to disprove a theory one
then gains true support for it. So far this has not been done.
All they have been doing is looking to prove it,... we all know
that one can prove what ever one wants to prove. That is
easy,... REAL science is hard work.
Dicere...
email address (vrmeic@spots.ab.ca)
Richard Meic
--- Terminate 5.00/Pro
---------------
* Origin: (0) Always watching. (1:134/242.7)
|