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Quote by: Technosoul What is in darkness shall come to light. |
But it won't be done in this little bit of
pseudoscience.
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Quote by: Technosoul Our solar system was created by what I will call the "Black hole theory". |
You can call it whatever you want, but it is not, never has been and never will be a scientific theory.
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Quote by: Technosoul Athough it is not a theory because scientist can observe it happening through telescopes. |
Truly, it is not a theory but not for the reasons that you state. You see, a theory is an explanation for observed events. If something can be observed, then it may, in fact, have a theory that explains it. You speak like most scientific illiterates in that you think that a scientific theory is some sort of wild guess that can some day grow up to be a fact. Go and learn something.
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Quote by: Technosoul Many years ago they discovered the black holes at what they believed was the far distant "other side" of the universe. They noticed that it seemed as if the black holes were consuming a[n] illuminated solar system. |
Note in the
definition of pseudoscience that your statements so far are excellent examples of the first point: pseudoscience makes use of vague and exaggerated or untestable claims. First of all, do you even know what a black hole is? What is the "other side" of the universe? Specifically, where have they been observed to "seem" to consume "illuminated" solar systems. What do you mean by "illuminated?" What is a solar system?
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Quote by: Technosoul The first observations failed to take into account the curved natue of space and time, for as we look through the curved lens we see things upside down and back to front. |
Obviously you have no understanding of what is meant by the relativistic terms used in talking about the nature of space/time. The curvature of space does not act as a lens that reverses what we see. Your statement is a prime example of pseudoscience.
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Quote by: Technosoul So what they were watching was time in reverse, meaning they were watching a lighted solar system come out of a black hole, much like a human is born out of a womb. |
But why would time be reversed? What does that have to do with the curvature of space?
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Quote by: Technosoul Based on that eyewitness observation by science we now know that our own solar system no doubt also came out of such a black hole. |
Balderdash. Since there were no such "eye witness" observations, we know nothing of the sort. Where is this magical black hole that spits out solar systems? Please explain the physics by which the alleged production of solar systems happens. You know, you're going to have to rewrite a whole bunch of well understood physics before your "theory" can be given consideration without gales of laughter. Good luck with that.
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Quote by: Technosoul This would be the best "fact" we can report of with supportive evidence. |
What supportive evidence? You haven't given any?
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Quote by: Technosoul And so we know where we came from but are still speculating on "what" that "where" might be. What is a Black Hole? A portal to another dimention, a void of creative nothingness? The womb of a Goddess? Or - and most logically - something else not yet comprehended. |
Maybe speaking in mumbo-jumbo should be added to the list of the characteristics of pseudoscience. Do you think that your above statements actually carry meaningful discussion?
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Quote by: Technosoul This idea will soon become the most pouplar teaching form science but it might take ages for science to give us a nice sounding theory about what a black hole is, meanwhile religions and phylosophy (and science fiction writers) will fill in the gap, as expected. |
Or, the gap will be filled with meaningless and obscure pseudoscience that teach us nothing and explain nothing while bordering on religion itself.
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Quote by: Isherwood I'm confused. |
No doubt what he was trying to do. He certainly didn't explain anything.
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Quote by: The Architect Hold on, the big bang theory is that the universe started as a singularity ( point) and some event triggered a rapid expansion of all the particle inside that point. |
He was talking about the solar system, not the universe.