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Old Aug 19, 2018, 01:49 PM
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amicus_curiae amicus_curiae is offline
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Originally Posted by DechanDawa View Post
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Originally Posted by amicus_curiae View Post
Michael,

I wanted to reply to other posts, but your #50 is too juicy!

Your summation, I think, drives your reasoning and I don’t think that’s good. Over and over again, we see that mythologies are created out of fear: Fear of attack from the Winter’s wolves and, yes, always, the fear of death.

I think that it’s just as unlikely that one can create a viable philosophy of life from fear as a theology.

Now.

The current thought isn’t that the Universe will become a large black hole but rather that it will collapse into the impossibly small shape of the tiniest bit of energy mixed with a larger bit of matter; as it was at the beginning. Will there come another Big Bang? Who knows? No one. It’s impossible to even theorise what comes afterward.

I say that I’m a believer in science but I’m also a cynic, a skeptic: I believe that some sciences are collections of ‘maybes’ — with severely limited knowledge, maybe X is maybe at this time. But, again as a skeptic, it seems to me that we deal with probabilities based upon what we know now. Particle physics assures us, with almost 100% certainty, that the Higgs field exists and, with my limited knowledge, I accept that certainty (when explained by my particle physicist friends in children’s language).

The only thing that I’m 99.9% certain of is that there is no creator, no spirits or spirit worlds, and no ‘meaning’ of evolved human consciousness.

And that’s my story.
I thought the main theory was that the Universe would just continue to expand.

I wonder what the .1% believes? You left a thread hanging in the tapestry. Intriguing.
Our Universe is expanding now, theoretically much more quickly than was posited, oh, 50-years ago. The one constant has been the belief that expansion will cease and the Universe will collapse, returning to the incredibly small and dense form of matter and energy that gave birth to the Big Bang. After that, who knows? I like to think that it will bang again!

The .1% isn’t what others might believe but only my personal uncertainty that I could be wrong!
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amicus_curiae

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