English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

30 answers

Lots of things are at present unknown, but I hope that in time most of the things we are baffled by now will be explained. But I'm sure there will be questions we have not yet thought of that will be unanswered the day we disappear from the universe.

2007-06-28 11:17:43 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 3 1

Thought, my mind is capable of imagining anything, I do not think that I am like a God, but if there is somthing which enables everything which is, I cannot understand how I can imagine anything which doesn't exist, but I can imagine anything.
The big bang theory on time begining with the big bang. I see time as the different between change, there cannot be a big bang unless there was change to enable it, so until the big bang occured, if it occured, things were changing to enable it, that change represents time.
I can see no alternative to infinity, if there is an ending to anything, what is beyond it?
Either nothing, or something, either are a continuation of infinity.
Also I imagine infinity works in other ways,atoms are like tiny solar systems, so perhaps the universe as we know it is just an electron of an atom of a book by shakespeare.
Again if I can imagine it, it must be true, or I am more powerful than the perception of a God.

2007-06-28 12:12:08 · answer #2 · answered by DoctressWho 4 · 1 0

There are many things that cannot be explained, whether they can never be explained is a different matter.
It depends on you philosophical outlook, do you believe that the universe will one day be completely understood or do you believe that there will always be more to discover or that there is something unexplainable out there.
If something is unexplained it is just that, it doesn't bestow on it any other significance or that it will not be explained eventually.
If you believe in the unexplainable then I think you are veering towards religion over science.
Check the link below for some unexplained (not unexplainable) phenomena.

2007-06-28 11:21:55 · answer #3 · answered by seph 2 · 1 0

In my opinion, the universe can never be explained. There will be theories that will pile up in proper time, that complement each other but wont explain the mystery of its begining. Again in my opinion, the universe has no begining and no end. I know it sounds philosophical, but If it had a beggining, where did all the energy in the universe come from ? Can anyone define what time is ?

2007-06-28 11:33:40 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 3 0

Yes. Too numerous to scratch my head. If there are trillions of stars, galaxies, whatever-we will never know- then there are millions of doubts and questions we, ordinary folks have. Our life-span is too short to learn or discover about the actual size,full contents of the Universe. I prefer to leave the deepest mystery questions to those top astronomers, astrophysicists and other scientists who study the Cosmos, daily.

One critical study that these world experts should delve into is this:: Where do large asteroids come from, when will the next few strike Earth and what are the effective ways to deflect them? Will Man with the help of God find answers to these in our life-time?

2007-06-28 17:28:45 · answer #5 · answered by Dolphin-Bird Lover8-88 7 · 1 0

yes, i do ex:
1) how the universe was formed
2) where the material goes once its in a black hole
3) if there is other life
4) how big the universe is (although many say its indefinante, no one can know for sure)
5)well i cant really think of anymore, but there are lots.....

2007-06-28 11:03:17 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 3 0

Yes, there is one "thing" that i can think of now and that is "space" itself or the 'nothing'. the stuff you are existing in at this second. space is something that can never be explained because in the end its just nothing and u cant make nothing into something. if you were to ask yourself 'does space/nothing have any mystical thing about it?' or the ultimate question 'what is nothing'? you cannot ask such a question because then our minds are trying to make nothing into something. get it? so space 'the nothing' that pervades this universe within and without will never be explained. how do you explain something that is nothing...im gonna do my head in.aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa

2007-06-28 15:13:29 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

I think the laws of forces, the electromagnet, gravity, along with the weak an strong nuclear forces, which physics is trying connect with mathematics will have to be understood in a black hole where gravity has crushed 2 or maybe three of the others while in our world appears to be the weaker force.

2007-06-28 13:52:58 · answer #8 · answered by treelaw45 2 · 1 0

What does the universe look like? Does it have a shape? And if it does, is the observer of that shape outside the universe, on a limb of the universe, or in another universe looking in?

If outside the universe, what is outside?

2007-06-28 11:15:58 · answer #9 · answered by Zheia 6 · 3 0

Sure. The main one that has baffled the scientific community for years and years is "where does that OTHER sock disappear to when it goes into the dryer"? Some NASA scientists think there is a planet a few solar systems away which all the socks go.

2007-06-28 11:05:21 · answer #10 · answered by Bob Thompson 7 · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers