To: LibWhacker; JoeProBono
2 posted on
09/19/2013 6:58:36 PM PDT by
Alex Murphy
(Just a common, ordinary, simple savior of America's destiny.)
To: LibWhacker
Goodbye Big Bang, hello black hole?
3 posted on
09/19/2013 6:59:44 PM PDT by
dfwgator
To: LibWhacker
I remember hearing this idea, or something similar, on Art Bell back in the 1990’s
4 posted on
09/19/2013 7:03:16 PM PDT by
Nowhere Man
(Wayne Green - W2NSD - Silent Key - Rest In Peace)
To: LibWhacker
Where did the four-dimensional star and the black hole come from?
5 posted on
09/19/2013 7:04:08 PM PDT by
Cicero
(Marcus Tullius)
To: LibWhacker
“the 4D universe preceding it”
Where did the 4D universe come from?
From another universe preceding it?
That line of thought is logically fallacious — infinite regression.
Where then did the 4D universe come from?
From nothing?...
Nothing causes nothing to come into existence. Causeless effects?
Logically fallacious...
To: LibWhacker
“For all physicists know, dragons could have come flying out of the singularity,”
It was flying pigs and unicorns that came out of the singularity.
7 posted on
09/19/2013 7:07:03 PM PDT by
Redcitizen
(.)
To: LibWhacker
Genesis 1
1. In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.
That's all we need to know.
Sorry Atheists, that's how it happened and that's how it is to be.
Actually ? the new name for Atheists, is ? Deniers.
To: LibWhacker
What really is the difference between a singularity and a black hole? How can someone theorize a point with all the mass in the universe, without that point being a black hole?
To: LibWhacker
13 posted on
09/19/2013 7:26:34 PM PDT by
preacher
(I am not a global warming hoax denier.)
To: LibWhacker
Immensely thought provoking theory, yet I fail to see why we look to beauty consultants for answers to questions of such grand magnitude.
15 posted on
09/19/2013 7:28:27 PM PDT by
Dysart
(Being nuts has its advantages...and the machete doesn't hurt, either.)
To: LibWhacker
It is said that the light of a distant star takes thousands, maybe millions of years to reach Earth. How do we know if those stars still exist? Maybe they exploded or burned out long ago, and we are just now seeing their light. Maybe the entire visible universe is just an illusion of light. Something to chew on.
18 posted on
09/19/2013 7:49:36 PM PDT by
jespasinthru
(Proud member of the Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy.)
To: LibWhacker
Personally I think it all started not with a 4D star but rather with WD-4D
21 posted on
09/19/2013 7:56:27 PM PDT by
wonkowasright
(Wonko from outside the asylum)
To: LibWhacker
What? No Way! Leave the Big Bang Theory alone!. We would miss Sheldon, Leonard, Howard, Raj, and Penny...
23 posted on
09/19/2013 8:08:13 PM PDT by
PubliusMM
(RKBA; a matter of fact, not opinion. 01-20-2016; I pray we make it that long.)
To: LibWhacker
Yet another theory that will no doubt be knocked down by other physicists within 2 months. These things pop up more than Japanese porn sites on an unsecure computer. Loop quantum gravity models, oscillating models, etc.
It seems to be a contest to see who can come up with the most bizarre way of refuting an absolute beginning to the universe. A four dimensional star collapsing? What is this, Twilight Zone?
To: LibWhacker
But I thought the science was settled and there was consensus?
28 posted on
09/19/2013 8:34:20 PM PDT by
Tanniker Smith
(Rome didn't fall in a day, either.)
To: LibWhacker
Humans obviously weren't around at the time the universe began. And God's not talking...
29 posted on
09/19/2013 8:59:36 PM PDT by
TheDon
(Inside Every Liberal is a Totalitarian Screaming to Get Out.)
To: LibWhacker
30 posted on
09/19/2013 9:34:18 PM PDT by
TBP
(Obama lies, Granny dies.)
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