Quote from Anti-Madder:
Yes, very Little.
trainr,
You should understand how cosmic variance imposes crippling constraints on the results of some equations
How so?
before you claim such degree of accuracy as to be within a few thousand years.
Where did I do that? Also, since Iâm not trying to be exact, despite your claim that I am, I used words like âabout.â I used these particular words so no one would assume I was attempting to be precise.
Actually, Iâm using numbers developed by those who are doing the research and are published in peer-reviewed journals. I guess you could disagree with them if you want to.
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.
What six thousand year packets?
Any claim to have, "done the math" is as comical as your misunderstanding of relativity.
So, I didnât do the math?
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.
How so?
Could you give me a quick Yes or No on the following, just to see what you understand:
1. Is the rate of timeâs passage fixed?
2. If not, do conditions affect it?
3. Would the rate of timeâs passage be the same for an observer present at the beginning of the universe as it would be for us on a current-earth frame of reference?
4. Is the speed of light variable or constant?
Also, if speed of light is a constant, why does it appear to vary? What is the relative part of Einsteinâs theory?
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 like it myself.
Would you agree that for light time does not exist?