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2007-08-10 11:40:02 · 30 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

Hi Beeg Juan, I have a Doctorate, is that enough education for you? Quid pro quo, I have a bit of advice for you as well. Why don't you head down to the clue store, and get yourself a clue. You rookie.

2007-08-10 11:51:07 · update #1

30 answers

SPANDEX

2007-08-10 11:43:13 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

We don't really know how large this place is that the angels occupie. HOw big is heaven? Maybe God made the universe to circle around this place called heaven or his universe.
Doesn't it say some where that God is in the center of the Universe. Makes sense that he would make it circle around him and spread out. I mean we don't know how big he is.
Say you were trying to explain the Universe to an ant?
You live on this planet that rotates the sun in a solar system?
When he sees the end of your foot he thinks your a mountain.
He can't even see you how can he see the Universe?
We can't see God or heaven so how can we understand the Universe?

2007-08-10 11:51:12 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

According to your scientists, the universe is expanding at the speed of light, but that it contains a limited amount of energy, and that it will eventually fizzle out.
The so called 'laws of physics' are merely theories that need to be re-defined, as they are about to be disproven.
Your scientist still do not understand how nerual networks develop self-consciousness, or how the retina processes a 2-Dimensional image into the 3rd dimension, known as perseption, yet they claim that seeing is believing.

2007-08-10 12:13:25 · answer #3 · answered by V Welby 2 · 1 1

What they mean is that the matter in the universe continues to be flying farther and farther apart from the impetus of the original Big Bang. Evidently it is scientifically possible to actually measure this. I suppose the obvious question is how long can this go on, and how far can this matter fly apart on its many trajectories before it gets as far as it is possible to go. Well, of course, that's one of the questions we don't know the answer to yet. But my bet is, if it ever hits a solid sidewall, it's suuuuure gonna make a dent.

2007-08-10 11:50:56 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

It's not expanding "into" anything --- space-time itself is stretching. The most convenient way to think about it is like a balloon. If you drew two dots on a balloon, then inflated it, you'd see the two dots get farther apart --- but they're not expanding "into" anything, because they're still on the balloon, right where they've always been.

That's what the Universe is doing, only you've got a few extra dimensions to contend with.

2007-08-10 11:48:28 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

If it really is, then it's expanding into a bigger universe. I also heard that eventually the universe will expand to far and rip to pieces, exploding all of anything that exist within it... I dont believe it of course.

2007-08-10 11:45:37 · answer #6 · answered by Titus M 4 · 0 1

Itself!

2007-08-10 11:44:37 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

"expanding in to" is a misconception.

In the metric expansion of space, rather than objects in a fixed "space" moving apart into "emptiness", it is the space that contains the objects which is itself changing. It is as if without objects themselves moving, space is somehow "growing" in between them.

2007-08-10 11:43:18 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Some more universe!

2007-08-10 11:54:18 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Some unexplained higher dimensional space.

2007-08-10 11:44:05 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Space is stretching between matter, as it has since the Large Bang.

2007-08-10 11:42:26 · answer #11 · answered by Anonymous · 3 0

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