Yes, very Little.Quote from trainr:
A little science for you.
trainr,
You should understand how cosmic variance imposes crippling constraints on the results of some equations before you claim such degree of accuracy as to be within a few thousand years. When we begin calculations that encompass all that ever existed in all time that ever was, we're working within margins of error that swallow multiples upon multiples of your "six thousand year" packets. You have to include functions to derive the average pulse per second of the CBR since the beginning of time (which were, at one time, about a million squared per second!), then count the total number of those pulses since time began! All this must be calculated while taking account of time dilation, cosmic density and... everything anywhere that has ever been.
Any claim to have, "done the math" is as comical as your misunderstanding of relativity.
Apparently you've read one of those, "Science proves the Bible" books. These authors introduce the reader to scientific principles and proofs, dumbed down and meshed neatly into a narrative of faith. They do some math that looks impressive and is numerically correct, but bereft of meaning. They imbue the eager reader with a little knowledge, and a lot of danger that he who bought the book will make a fool of himself. I suggest you not shop for science at church.
I can't stop reading your side splitting rendition of, "special relativity." If I tried to write the opposite of Einstein's version, I couldn't do better than what you accomplished with such lampoonish brevity.
This is my favorite part:
"Einstein discovered by analysis that light is peculiar to our universe and doesn't seem to conform to universal laws; all conforms to light, making things relative to light (hence the "relativity" of this theory, which is no longer a theory, but a law). Although the speed of light is known to us as 186,000 m/sec, in reality, the actual speed is instantaneous, but the rate of time's passage varies (is "relative") to make it appear that light always moves at this speed."
I'd be interested to hear your take on some other subjects like evil robots and the flux capacitor.
Anti-Madder