Light Eye
04-27-2006, 11:55 AM
Dear Friends,
Well...Jesu said that "My Fathers house has many rooms." What do you think he
meant?
http://www.theepochtimes.com/news/6-4-27/40900.html
David
One Universe or Many: Scientists Debate the Controversy One of the hottest -
and most mind-bending - questions in modern physics is whether the universe we
inhabit is the only one, or if there are an infinite number of alternative
universes in higher dimensions beyond those we know, or perhaps could know.
Once upon a time, people were certain that the earth was at the center of
the universe, and that everything revolved around it. Later, astronomers proved
that wasn't the case ? that the earth revolves around the Sun, which is just
another star in the Milky Way galaxy, which, it later turned out, is not unique
either; the Milky Way is just one of many galaxies. But at least there is just
one universe, right? Well, maybe not. "Previously we thought that the whole
universe is like one expanding balloon," says Stanford University physicist
Andrei Linde, who originated the so-called "inflationary" or "multiverse"
theory, which plausibly asserts the existence of several universes, each with
its own set of laws, "But then we learned that this balloon creates new
balloons, these balloons create new balloons. And this process goes on
forever?."
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Well...Jesu said that "My Fathers house has many rooms." What do you think he
meant?
http://www.theepochtimes.com/news/6-4-27/40900.html
David
One Universe or Many: Scientists Debate the Controversy One of the hottest -
and most mind-bending - questions in modern physics is whether the universe we
inhabit is the only one, or if there are an infinite number of alternative
universes in higher dimensions beyond those we know, or perhaps could know.
Once upon a time, people were certain that the earth was at the center of
the universe, and that everything revolved around it. Later, astronomers proved
that wasn't the case ? that the earth revolves around the Sun, which is just
another star in the Milky Way galaxy, which, it later turned out, is not unique
either; the Milky Way is just one of many galaxies. But at least there is just
one universe, right? Well, maybe not. "Previously we thought that the whole
universe is like one expanding balloon," says Stanford University physicist
Andrei Linde, who originated the so-called "inflationary" or "multiverse"
theory, which plausibly asserts the existence of several universes, each with
its own set of laws, "But then we learned that this balloon creates new
balloons, these balloons create new balloons. And this process goes on
forever?."
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]