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12 answers

Sorry, XEEK, but the responsibility falls on you. When a radically new hypothesis, such as yours, is presented, it is the responsibility of the on making the offer to suggest why they should be taken seriously.

So, what evidence do you have that leads you to conclude that our "...universe is an air bubble in a jar of peanut butter"?

HTH

Charles

2007-02-19 04:09:53 · answer #1 · answered by Charles 6 · 1 0

Prove to me that is an air bubble in a jar of peanut butter.

2007-02-19 12:09:26 · answer #2 · answered by starkid2286 2 · 0 0

Your analogy is correct .For the air bubble to exist it must be surrounded by a substance that contains the Bubble. Your question shows good inovative thinking rather that repeating what theories allude to .
However; though we can assign properties to the peanut butter neccessary for holding the bubble together ,we cannot determine why it does so, except at magical theoretical Big Bang theory were the believers of the theory would just dream on.
So In your analogy the peanut butter of space must be some kind of substance whose configuration explains gravity & magnetism.This unknown substance was from the Greeks to modern time called Aether. It was this aether that Einstein attributed a force to. He did show it in his Field equation, but no one really gave heed to it till at the present time in which they just ascertained that there is an Aether force resultant from an Energy which exists in space and called it "dark energy."
we cannot prove you wrong you can only be proven correct.

2007-02-19 12:54:57 · answer #3 · answered by goring 6 · 0 1

Your analogy is pretty close to reality. Our Universe is like a dimensional bubble in an infinite jar of multidimensional forces that peculated out of the possibilities of the jar. When viewed from the inside all you can experience is the Universe itself. When viewed from the outside, our Universe is just a little bubble of forces frozen in place yet interacting with everything within the bubble. Eventually the bubble of our Universe will expand forever until it fades and dissipates.

2007-02-19 12:12:41 · answer #4 · answered by ? 6 · 0 0

Prove you're right. There is no spectrum we have ever measured that shows peanut butter vapor in space. If we were in a bubble, there would be some of the vapor in it.

2007-02-19 12:59:51 · answer #5 · answered by Gene 7 · 0 0

While yours is an entertaining exercise in hyperbole...you fall into the same trap so many people do when posing ridiculous theories. The burden is upon you to prove your hypothesis...you cannot simply say something is true and then make others disprove you.

And perhaps that was your point.

2007-02-19 12:19:57 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

really?i could prove you wrong?......okay i'll ask you a question back.How many jars of peanut butter is available in this world?

2007-02-19 12:12:19 · answer #7 · answered by nur a 1 · 0 0

Im allergic to peanut butter i would be dead by now

2007-02-19 13:21:47 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Charles makes a good point. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.

Also, define your hypothesis more clearly and state what evidence, if found, would falsify your hypothesis.

This is how science works, mate.

2007-02-19 12:12:25 · answer #9 · answered by gebobs 6 · 0 0

I'm allergic to peanuts and I am OK most of the time.

2007-02-19 12:12:06 · answer #10 · answered by huangporules 2 · 0 0

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