taoist
New member
Good grief, GS!
15 billion years
Eternity
If you can't see a difference between these two, between finite and infinite, I don't think I can help you. The BB theory stops at 15 billion years, it doesn't go on. Anything beyond that is suitable for fantasy publishers, not science journals. Between those two figures, 15 billion and eternity, there's an awfully, awfully, awfully, awfully .... awfully big gap. Awfully, as in full of awe, squared, cubed and higher-order exponentiated.
But I'm thinking you're confused about the nature of matter. Whatever it was blowing up 15 billion years ago, it bore little relation to the stuff we see around us today. It wasn't just itty-bitty atoms and photons and bosons and whatnot. In the first place, depending on which version of string theory you favor, if any, it was something swimming around in a 9 or 10 dimensional space composed of "particles" if you can even call them that, on the order of 10^-WOW ... aka "goshawful small". And whatever that stuff was, it wasn't eternal.
Who has, you ask. Thousands certainly, tens of thousands probably. I moved into the pure math side after doing my master's work. And yeah, I've taught the lower level calculus series, and I did well in the advanced series, but it's not my specialty. In any case, I'll tell you a secret. Topology is a LOT more fun. We don't tell that to the math dudes going in for applied, cause it would just make them jealous.
So hush!
15 billion years
Eternity
If you can't see a difference between these two, between finite and infinite, I don't think I can help you. The BB theory stops at 15 billion years, it doesn't go on. Anything beyond that is suitable for fantasy publishers, not science journals. Between those two figures, 15 billion and eternity, there's an awfully, awfully, awfully, awfully .... awfully big gap. Awfully, as in full of awe, squared, cubed and higher-order exponentiated.
But I'm thinking you're confused about the nature of matter. Whatever it was blowing up 15 billion years ago, it bore little relation to the stuff we see around us today. It wasn't just itty-bitty atoms and photons and bosons and whatnot. In the first place, depending on which version of string theory you favor, if any, it was something swimming around in a 9 or 10 dimensional space composed of "particles" if you can even call them that, on the order of 10^-WOW ... aka "goshawful small". And whatever that stuff was, it wasn't eternal.
Like I said, so would I. But it hasn't been done yet. You still have the chance to be the first on your block to discover it. The great thing about science is it's a book without a last page, just a latest one. If ever there was a contest for a real life model for an open view theology, science and scientific discovery have to be in the finals.And I would like to see a theory about a natural origin of the universe. I took plenty of calculus so dont worry (not as much as you probably, but who has?
Who has, you ask. Thousands certainly, tens of thousands probably. I moved into the pure math side after doing my master's work. And yeah, I've taught the lower level calculus series, and I did well in the advanced series, but it's not my specialty. In any case, I'll tell you a secret. Topology is a LOT more fun. We don't tell that to the math dudes going in for applied, cause it would just make them jealous.
So hush!