Luckyflux said:
I don't believe in the Big Bang. I simply believe that the Universe always existed. Why is that not right?
I know my anwer will sound harsh, but here it is: you got it wrong from the first sentence. You can't believe on not believe in a scientific theory. At the time being, the Big Bang is the one theory on the origin of the universe that best matches observational data. You can't discard that on a whim because you don't like it.Luckyflux said:
I don't believe in the Big Bang.
Because fact proved that wrong. Do you know better?I simply believe that the Universe always existed. Why is that not right?
Well, the correct wording is that Hoyle disagreed with the Big Bang Theory since he found it philosophically troubling. However, the theological position of Fred Hoyle is highly confusing, since he apparently support Intelligent Design. I will let that can of worms for another debate.Deuterostome said:
Hoyle hated the BBT because he was an avowed atheist.
iguana_tonante said:Well, the correct wording is that Hoyle disagreed with the Big Bang Theory since he found it philosophically troubling. However, the theological position of Fred Hoyle is highly confusing, since he apparently support Intelligent Design. I will let that can of worms for another debate.Deuterostome said:
Hoyle hated the BBT because he was an avowed atheist.
scotthm said:
I'm surprised no one has mentioned the fact that the farthest galaxies tend to be younger, smaller, and more primitave in structure and composition than galaxies closer to us. This alone would indicate that the the universe had a beginning.
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Further from *us*.Luckyflux said:
scotthm said:
I'm surprised no one has mentioned the fact that the farthest galaxies tend to be younger, smaller, and more primitave in structure and composition than galaxies closer to us. This alone would indicate that the the universe had a beginning.
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A couple of things about that...further from what? If there was an Earth close to those Galaxies, then what would those Scientists think? Would they think the Universe had a beginning?
From the remnants of dead stars, as I understand it.And what about finding young stars among the old and faint stars? If those stars formed when the universe was "young", then how did younger, brighter stars form next to them?
As I understand it (let's wait for somebody more experienced then I to confirm this), it's because the redshift is so consistent. *All* the far away galaxies are moving away from us.Luckyflux said:
I understand the red shift, but couldn't that just be natural motion of the Universe? Kind of like a raft in a pool, it will float around and move around in all different directions, sometimes moving away and sometimes moving forward.
Andromeda is so close to us, that it doesn't really count.Isn't the Andromeda Galaxy merging with the Milky Way? That would suggest that those Galaxies are moving toward each other. Unless it is the Gravity of each Galaxy pulling each other closer...but I don't know.
PlixTixiplik said:
Yes, the "red-shift" Doppler effect indicates that all galaxies are moving away from each other, suggesting an inflationary universe.
Also, discovery of the cosmic background radiation confirmed the basics of the inflationary theories. It is the remnants of the Big Bang - from the time 400,000 years after the Big Bang when the universe was much smaller and hotter.
-MEC
iguana_tonante said:
I know my anwer will sound harsh, but here it is: you got it wrong from the first sentence. You can't believe on not believe in a scientific theory. At the time being, the Big Bang is the one theory on the origin of the universe that best matches observational data. You can't discard that on a whim because you don't like it.
Freakness said:
iguana_tonante said:
I know my anwer will sound harsh, but here it is: you got it wrong from the first sentence. You can't believe on not believe in a scientific theory. At the time being, the Big Bang is the one theory on the origin of the universe that best matches observational data. You can't discard that on a whim because you don't like it.
that is the dumbest fucking thing i've ever heard. of course you can believe or not believe in a scientific theory. you can believe or not believe whatever the hell you want. nobody is OBLIGATED to believe anything just because science or religion or your mom tells you "this is what seems to make the most sense right now." science doesn't progress by everyone towing the current party line, it progresses by someone saying "what we currently think is wrong, such-and-such makes more sense to me" and then trying to prove it. what kind of dogmatic scientific fascism are you promoting here?
David cgc said:
So you wouldn't have a problem if I believed you were the Parkside Strangler and had killed a dozen joggers over the past two years? I mean, if no body is OBLIGATED to believe something based on reality, then there's no possible objection, right?
ancient said:
The multiverse theory is a stretch at best, imo. Sure there are some interesting observations and all, but ours is probably the only universe, imo. Other dimensions, maybe, but not independent planes.
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