joobz
Tergiversator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2006
- Messages
- 17,998
I remember Laserbeak!
He's the cassette to soundwave....
there is a creator!!
I remember Laserbeak!
I've recently been re-reading the novel "Earth" by David Brin. It is a sci-fi book about the near-future with some fascinating projections and tons of real science, in addition to the fantasy of a micro black hole dropped into the center of the planet. Great space opera. But one of the best things about it is the intros to the chapter which are a collection of media-like news blurbs, legends, statistics and scientific prose. The scientific prose is great. Allow me to share one with you.
You probably just read the recipe wrong. Maybe you didn't set the supervolcano to maximum or sumpin.A good description. However, it is not clear how this can take place in 6000 years - it seems it would take a great deal longer.![]()
You probably just read the recipe wrong. Maybe you didn't set the supervolcano to maximum or sumpin.![]()
Trickey, you are definitely extremely intelligent. Nobody can string together such an amazing array of words as you just have and not be Mensa material. However, the universe and all the life within it is just too orderly and fantastic to seriously believe it all just happened by luck.
Trickey, this ineffable omnipresence, of which everything consists, including you and me, is just so sophisticated and complex, light years beyond our little limited conscious minds's ability to comprehend, it must be giggling at us right now. We are here doing exactly what we are doing right now for not only our amusement, but for ITS' amusement. We are among the more entertaining too, I'll bet.
Imagine a big brained dude like Albert Einstein devoting the last 30 years of his life to trying his best to prove that everything is UNIFIED. Hell, he couldn't quite get it done. However, he just knew it was so. Damn!
When we get a chance to talk with him, perhaps, we can ask him about it. I think he'll say, "Damn that ineffable oneness is some kind of smart."
You probably just read the recipe wrong. Maybe you didn't set the supervolcano to maximum or sumpin.![]()
Is this like the 2 hours at 250 = 1 hour at 500 cooking rule?
Imagine a big brained dude like Albert Einstein devoting the last 30 years of his life to trying his best to prove that everything is UNIFIED. Hell, he couldn't quite get it done. However, he just knew it was so. Damn!
."
snip
In the universe, a light year is practically nothing. Light from the nearest star in our galaxy takes 17 years to reach us. Think how long the ones in other galaxies take.
snip

No, the sun is Ra (or Helios. I get them confused). It is a god, not a star.I thought it was roughly eight minutes
/sorry nit picky
// or is the sun NOT in our galaxy???
snip.
LOL. Interesting analogy. In the universe, a light year is practically nothing. Light from the nearest star in our galaxy takes 17 years to reach us. Think how long the ones in other galaxies take.
snip![]()
I have been reading up Wittgenstein...
[nitpick]The nearest star-not our sun-is about 4.3 light-years away. Nearest spiral galaxy, Andromeda is about 2.5 million light-years away...and headed toward us. [/nitpick]
cool website: http://www.atlasoftheuniverse.com/
Mia culpa on my bad astronomy (no relation to Phil Plait).
And yeah, that really is a cool site. Here's some really big numbers from that site:
Number of stars within 100 million light years = 200 trillion
Number of large galaxies within 1 billion light years = 3 million
Number of stars in the visible universe = 30 billion trillion (30,000,000,000,000,000,000,000)
So, lots and lots of chances. Lots and lots of time. It would be unbefreakinglievable if something didn't roll a yahtzee with those odds.
And take a look at this map of the universe. Does that look ordered to anybody?
[qimg]http://www.atlasoftheuniverse.com/supercls.gif[/qimg]
And take a look at this map of the universe. Does that look ordered to anybody?
And take a look at this map of the universe. Does that look ordered to anybody?
Mia culpa on my bad astronomy (no relation to Phil Plait).
And yeah, that really is a cool site. Here's some really big numbers from that site:
Number of stars within 100 million light years = 200 trillion
Number of large galaxies within 1 billion light years = 3 million
Number of stars in the visible universe = 30 billion trillion (30,000,000,000,000,000,000,000)
So, lots and lots of chances. Lots and lots of time. It would be unbefreakinglievable if something didn't roll a yahtzee with those odds.
And take a look at this map of the universe. Does that look ordered to anybody?
http://www.atlasoftheuniverse.com/supercls.gif