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| 11 Jul 2015 02:24 AM |
^
Hello, I'm Chandler. I make jokes when I'm uncomfortable. |
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ArizTrad
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| Joined: 06 Jun 2011 |
| Total Posts: 3311 |
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| 11 Jul 2015 02:26 AM |
is butterfly effect reaal
But, that's just common sense. |
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| 11 Jul 2015 02:32 AM |
All the evidence points to the butterfly effect.
The Lorenz attractors are a great example of this. They show that small changes can yield spectacularly chaotic results
Hello, I'm Chandler. I make jokes when I'm uncomfortable. |
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| 11 Jul 2015 02:35 AM |
What happens when four blackholes combine?
Even the word “hopeless” has the word “hope” in it. And if you rearrange the letters it spells “peeslosh!” The last part was probably unnecessary, I'm sorry. |
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| 11 Jul 2015 02:42 AM |
Let's keep things simpler for the moment:
When two black holes collide, they are predicted to send huge gravitational ripples through the space-time fabric know as "gravity waves".
They become one massive black hole.
four black holes would simply amplify the effect
Hello, I'm Chandler. I make jokes when I'm uncomfortable. |
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| 11 Jul 2015 02:46 AM |
b moar questions
Hello, I'm Chandler. I make jokes when I'm uncomfortable. |
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| 11 Jul 2015 02:49 AM |
do you believe in god
-Balagtas |
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| 11 Jul 2015 02:49 AM |
"do you believe in god"
no
Hello, I'm Chandler. I make jokes when I'm uncomfortable. |
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| 11 Jul 2015 02:51 AM |
could you state a brief, but an enlightening statement about your belief for christians
-Balagtas |
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| 11 Jul 2015 02:52 AM |
I have a TV guide for Chanandler Bong....
Even the word “hopeless” has the word “hope” in it. And if you rearrange the letters it spells “peeslosh!” The last part was probably unnecessary, I'm sorry. |
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gerov
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| Joined: 05 Feb 2011 |
| Total Posts: 5504 |
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| 11 Jul 2015 02:55 AM |
I can't think of a question.
Sir, please stop that. |
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| 11 Jul 2015 03:04 AM |
Well, first of all I'd like to say that atheism isn't a belief. It's an acceptance.
I grew out of Catholicism because I personally found the idea of a humanoid omnipotent being inexplicably creating the universe... sort of silly and childish. And then I learned of all the evidence against the idea of God.
Now I didn't come here to bash religion, I came here to make an enlightening, and thought provoking statement so here it goes:
Science. There are so many things that science has given you. All technology has been made possible by it. Computers. Modern medicine. The list goes on.
The premise of religion is a bible (or another holy book). These books make blind assertions that seem to answer the question: "Where did we come from?"
All throughout history we've blamed unexplained phenomenon on... just that. Blind assertions. Mostly about deities. We used to blame volcanic eruptions on gods. Lightning on gods. Solar eclipses on gods.
But what happened? Science. Science came along and tested our claims. Of course we now know that lightning comes from static discharge in clouds. Volcanic eruptions come from magma underground.
Science is now starting to challenge the very same question the religions today have nailed down. "Where did we come from?"
Progress is slow, but the evidence is still there. The God hypothesis is now under trial, and is currently failing the test.
It is time for us humans to embrace that which gives us our medicine. Our vaccines. And our knowledge of how the world works.
It is time for us humans... to abandon the idea of religion.
Hello, I'm Chandler. I make jokes when I'm uncomfortable. |
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rtr56
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| Joined: 06 Apr 2011 |
| Total Posts: 1072 |
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| 11 Jul 2015 03:08 AM |
| if mr. ching bought 17 watermelons and 508889 cheeseburgers what is the diameter of the sun? |
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| 11 Jul 2015 03:11 AM |
| Appropriate size, weight, material, height and depth of a set of flyable wings that can be carried by a human on his/her back? |
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| 11 Jul 2015 03:18 AM |
| the sun is currently about 1400000km in diameter but in about 5 billion more years, the sun would have consumed all of its hydrogen and then it will expand due to the outwards pressure and then it will have a diameter of about 2au (astronomical units), soon afterwards it will appear very bright but its surface temperature would be cooler than its main sequence, and then soon afterwards the outter shell of our sun would shed of and create a planetary nebula and then our sun would be almost no more, except for the remenant which would be called a white dwarf and our sun would remain a white dwarf till a VERY long time when it eventually cools down, we havent observed a cooled down white dwarf because it would tke VERY long for it to have completely cool down. |
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| 11 Jul 2015 03:20 AM |
"I grew out of Catholicism because I personally found the idea of a humanoid omnipotent being inexplicably creating the universe... sort of silly and childish. And then I learned of all the evidence against the idea of God.
Now I didn't come here to bash religion, I came here to make an enlightening, and thought provoking statement so here it goes."
ffs |
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Cudbert
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| Joined: 18 Dec 2010 |
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| 11 Jul 2015 03:28 AM |
| but for bigger stars than our sun, their fate is quite different, bigger stars tend to consume their fuel much more quicker than younger stars due to the force of gravity creating an extreme pressue and causeing more nuclear fusion to hapen but what also happens is that the nuclear fusion can create elements up to iron while our sun might create elements up to carbon/oxygen. after iron is create, nuclear fusion wont happen anymore and because of this, the force of gravity takes over and causes the star to collapse and due to the electron degeneracy presssure, the atms inside the star would fuse together and this would create an exceptionally HUGE ammount of energy and would create an explosion known as a supernova. after the supernova depending on the mass of star, it would either become a neutron star which is a VERY dense star or it would have sufficient mass and gravitational force to become a black hole which is basicaly like a large amount of mass in an infinitely small space. black holes are very interesting and they appear black because the gravitational force is so extreme that even light may not be able to escape its pull and so anything inside the event horizon may not escape the black hole. neutron stars are interesting because they are extremely dense stars |
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| 11 Jul 2015 03:28 AM |
| my goodness that took a little bit of time to write |
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| 11 Jul 2015 01:05 PM |
"ffs"
what?
And yes, the death of stars is a very interesting topic. You seem to know a lot about it!
and yes, I have friends, but not many.
Hello, I'm Chandler. I make jokes when I'm uncomfortable. |
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