Added: 1 year ago
From: suedeslounge
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  • Thanks - I have for a long time been very sceptic to the big bang theory. Seeing thunderbolts of the goods made more sense to me than anything I've ever seen or heard about the universe. I'm just a simple accountant but my interest for cosmology has been with me since childhood and I have seen almost every documentary made on the matter. You sum it up in a very nice matter.

    Again - Thank you

    Dag Dietrich from Norway

  • Thank you, that was very interesting, you made good points.

  • do you already have your thoughts published somewhere else?

    if so, where.

    what does it take to get work published? i have nothing else but this work.

  • i knew maths was bollox at school, 2 + 2 does not add up too 5

  • I was just wondering that far away stars (younger stars) could have an diferent element in composition of light it self or diferet elements composition witch light go trough , i mean imagine a younger star emiting more red than blue , will that show on light refraction bands ? is it posible stars emit more in some bands than others ?

    I trully feel like astronomy is stuck somewhere , i hope they can prove neutrinos can travel faster than light so they can reformulate it all fromm bottom up.

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  • and what about time dilation, atom bomb, sattelites using relativity, energy mass equivalence, and other things that seem to be pretty correct

  • @GRIJZEKAK you are right they are still correct... LOL

  • you're so right about the monetary system. It perverts and it destroys creativity. it makes us learn things we don't necessarily agree with.

  • I think, though I'm hardly a physicist, the BBT model states that all stellar bodies are moving apart, so regardless of your place in the universe, faraway objects would all appear to have a higher red shift. I guess I just don't understand the implication of quantized red shifts, and how this observation would have to place us at the center of the universe.

    Make no mistake, I really do want to understand. Last week I believed that black holes were real, this week I'm questioning everything.

  • science has fallen prey to false authority,too much officiality and has become a quintessential mumbo-jumbo pseudo-academic religion.postulations are taken for granted.no physical contact and no philosophy at all.i ve always admired Aristotelian practicality and simplicity.also,nature has proven to us,throughout the ages,that even the most complexed manifestations can be broken down to simple basic forms.science today seems filled with anti-logical process and no actual observational philosophy.

  • Great talk!

    I hope you make more of them.

  • I enjoyed watching this series - well done. The argument is always made by relativists that their theory is good at making predictions - I think you have correctly pointed out the pitfall of math as the primary tool of confusionism. One could counter that Einstein's theory (sometimes) makes correct predictions because of its mathematical equivalence to another theory from which it borrowed heavily, which describes an entirely different universe - Lorentz ether theory (LET) .

  • Very good. Lets put down the mainstream crap.

  • ok nice talk. You must understand that, IF Enstein is wrong, then you must come up with other theory. I hate that people can so easily disrespect work of scientists!!!

    Maybe you right, I like your critic view of stuff, but saying Enstein or Newton or other scientist is wrong without proof is same as accepting dogma.

  • @night3x What makes you think there are not any alternate hypotheses? And why would he HAVE to come up with one? Big Bang was not the first nor is it the only. And he did provide proof that Einstein was wrong. Didnt you watch the video?

  • @night3x

    Enstein was not a scientist,he was a math physicist.

    Nikola Tesla was a scientest,and a true one at that.

    And Tesla was right all along.

  • - how does plasma interact with the light spectrum?

  • @tetekofa I have been looking for the answer to that question. If I find it, I'll let you know, so long as I can remember where I'm posting this.

  • - how plasma interact with the light spectrum?

  • - interesting.

  • COme back to OT noob

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