Eventually, researchers will learn the possibility that certain supernova events do not end with the demise of a star, but rather the birth of the solar system.
There is a lovely logical consistency which links the transition phase of a supernova event from a giant star without a solar system to a smaller, more stable star with a solar system.
The one thing that all the ET science shows forget is that there may
be other tool making creatures in the galaxy, but it does not take
much to miss eachother in "time".
What will be much more thrilling to me personally is the eventual
discovery of a rocky planet covered with liquid water orbiting around
another star.
On Wednesday, October 25, 2006 at 3:46:49 PM UTC-6, Jim Klein wrote:
The one thing that all the ET science shows forget is that there may
be other tool making creatures in the galaxy, but it does not take
much to miss eachother in "time".
Arthur C. Clarke recognized this. The way he put it was:
"We may find apes or angels, but never men."
- we may miss civilizations because they destroyed themselves,
or died of some natural cause, but if we are late instead of too
early, then what we will find aren't Star Trek-style aliens, but
instead beings millions of years or more beyond us.
Of course, though, one thing he _didn't_ realize was that this
eliminates one of the favored arguments to debunk flying
saucers. If the transition moment between being just animals
and being an elderly civilization with godlike powers is so
brief on a cosmic scale... then a society _in_ that phase *would*
be immensely interesting for aliens to study.
Not that I believe in flying saucers, even so, but that _one_ argument >against them is at least partly fallacious means we should rely on
the others.
Eventually, researchers will learn the possibility that certain supernova events do not end with the demise of a star, but rather the birth of the solar system. The loss of mass of the antecedent star creates the planets around it as the solar systemmoves in tandem with other stars in a galactic orbit so it tidies up the origins of a solar system after the formation of a galaxy.
It is now 32 years since the geometry was worked out in incomplete form yet fours years later in May 1994, the image of SN1987a showed up-than it is learned traditionally which makes it difficult for those who have no knowledge of this language to feel what it represents although some more than others have this talent-
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/342527605/figure/fig1/AS:907747965030402@1593435388377/An-ST-image-of-SN-1987A-in-the-year-1997-Credit-is-given-to-the-Hubble-Space-Telescope_Q640.jpg
Over the years I have come to understand the language of mathematics, not the semi-masonic equations of present theorists, but a feel for the mathematics in antiquity that built many of the great systems we inherit. It is felt in a perceptive way more
"When a natural discourse paints a passion or an effect, one feels within oneself the truth of what one reads, which was there before, although one did not know it. Hence, one is inclined to love him who makes us feel it, for he has not shown us hisown riches, but ours. And thus this benefit renders him pleasing to us, besides that such community of intellect as we have with him necessarily inclines the heart to love. " Pascal
Somehow, readers know that the materials which make up their own existence may have come from the great parent star that still serves our journey through life and it is loved for that.
There is plenty of other life out there, but, other than perhaps >observations, we're never going to make contact, at least not in the
form that we are. I know that most will reject what I am about to say
and, if so, so be it, but think spiritual maturity and closeness to God,
our Creator.
God placed plenty of life on other planets. Most of it is spiritually
and more technology advanced than ours as we are one of the lowest on
the totem pole. We pretty much rejected God from the start, but other >planets did not. Thus, they receive the rewards. His Son was sent to
our planet, which makes us very unique and standing out above many of
the others as God did not have to do this and allow a part of Himself to
be subjected to what happened here. When they say Jesus is the savior
that is no joke!
Our civilization has come and gone many times throughout thousands of
years. God has intervened by slowing us down many times, or trying to
change our path to something better, but civilization as we know it is
about to reset and start again. How it ends up that way is uncertain,
but there are many variables in place such as plagues, overpopulation, >nuclear, etc etc that will contribute to the worldly collapse. God may
or may not end the world as we know it at that time. If not, everything
will start again. The big problem our planet has is instability.
Humankind just can't unify long enough to get to the spiritual and
therefore technological advancement necessary to move on to the next
level.
Laugh if you want to, but then again I don't embrace the theories out
there concerning the start of the universe.
Laugh if you want to, but then again I don't embrace the theories out
there concerning the start of the universe.
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