VaeVictis:i find it funny that you even consider grammar a sign of intelligence, that itself is a very uneducated claim
Saw a space special last year. Said the size of the non-visible universe is to the visible universe is as the visible universe is to a single atom.
Quote from: ex on February 11, 2012, 09:05:22 PMSaw a space special last year. Said the size of the non-visible universe is to the visible universe is as the visible universe is to a single atom. Hmm, not sure what they would have meant by that.These are the proportions I've seen discussed lately:
They meant the size of the universe we can see is equivalent to the size of an atom, while the size of the parts we can't see is equivalent to our observable universe.
It's far more probable that the universe is a beastly huge thing, far bigger than what some are thinking now. They're going down the wrong path on this one.
Not totally sure what calculations they used, but my best guess is that they used the idea of what has been discovered, usually uncovers a LOT more than we didn't know was there. I tend to lean towards this theory simply because it allows for a larger margin of error. If I'm wrong, the universe is compact, relatively speaking; fine. If I'm right, the universe has barely been discovered, and I like that idea a lot more than the idea that we've got it figured out. Because most the time, we simply don't.That's what I meant by probable...science has shown us over and over again that every time we discover what we think is the "end" of a topic, all the sudden we open a Pandora's box and discover that we now only know less than 1% of the topic we were sure we "knew" completely.Just better to keep the ideas of space-time open, as we don't really know what's going on, we're just guessing.
edit: Yes, I do mean the Universe as we "know" it, based on the Big Bang theory. To my knowledge, that's the main theory to which 99% of scientists agree, right?
I'm not ignorant on this topic.
Because the Big Bang theory makes predictions which have implications about the size and age of the universe, and these are predictions which are consistently being confirmed by experiment.
Well, kinda a low blow to go to the Tubby level.
I lean towards the idea that our universe has a lot more still yet to be discovered
I wasn't saying that either theory is invalid, simply that I lean towards the idea that our universe has a lot more still yet to be discovered, instead of the conflated view that the boundary of the universe is soon to be closed in upon. It's my opinion, quadz, and that's pretty shitty that you would respond to it in this way. I thought I made that pretty obvious it's what I personally thought, not that I was invalidating anyone else's opinions or theories, just that I think it's this way personally. What's wrong with having my personal opinions on this topic?