Friday, September 17, 2010

Cruising Men In Brampton

pea

pea




bothering me so much always been a question.

scientists argue that the universe is alive and there for about 14 billion years. I do not know how it counted. 14 billion years is still quite a lot. Even if it would be 140 billion years, the essence of my question will not change. And what was before that? another universe? and what was before the others? or next to the universe, of whose existence we are aware of our senses, there are other universes? whether they are similar to ours, or whether it is something totally different?

If we imagine the universe as human life. Man is born to someone, and often leaves someone behind. Sometimes we do not leaves. Fact. Well ok, but the universe it with something that came from. Interesting for me is the theory that the universe is expanding and growing. Imagine that the universe is beaten into the shape of a pea. As can be pushed into such a grain of the entire mass of the universe? Pea is palpable borders, edges. In addition to grain pea there something you can not define the word-peas. Everything-just-not-spots. Right? I think that we have a bag of peas, and each universe is such a pea. So let each of them will be as impressive as the supposedly expand our universe. Once finished space in the bag. The bag expands along with the peas? I used to end up with bags of storage.

Indeed, I am able to believe in evolution, indeed, without even batting an eye to accept that the people who invented the theory of the expanding universe - which is 14 billion years - they are right. But what is next? What was before? And what will happen afterwards. Complete nothing?

When I was about 6-7 years, such thinking has deprived me thinking about the existence of god. The concept of god that I knew my time was ridiculously small compared to the universe. Very but very limited temporarily, but primarily spatially.

Actually it would be very nice can stand alongside peas and look at all the next. See if there is something else, and as for me must be. Extremely returns to me the idea that our universe is only a drop, unless the bacterium in a spoon of soup-held by an accidental vagrant, who wanders to and fro, and just sat on the soup. His world must obviously be enormous, and probably also has its limits, beyond which is another drifter with a spoonful of soup.

Infinitum. How

it's all you can honestly say that there is no driving force, something which has created a long time ago and have enough arguments would certainly reject it, or defend?

universe is like a fractal, is not it?