Discussion:
The CMBR Disproves the Big Bang.
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LaurenceClarkCrossen
2025-02-21 19:39:22 UTC
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The velocity-distance relation requires the furthest galaxies to recede
the fastest, making this Big Bang universe anisotropic.

The CMBR is isotropic.

Therefore, the CMBR disproves the Big Bang.
Chris M. Thomasson
2025-02-21 21:35:47 UTC
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Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation requires the furthest galaxies to recede
the fastest, making this Big Bang universe anisotropic.
The CMBR is isotropic.
Therefore, the CMBR disproves the Big Bang.
For fun, think if the "big bang" was nothing more than a very large
local explosion? Two super massive black holes finally merging into one,
kaaabooom! could be a candidate, perhaps?
LaurenceClarkCrossen
2025-02-21 21:54:12 UTC
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Post by Chris M. Thomasson
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation requires the furthest galaxies to recede
the fastest, making this Big Bang universe anisotropic.
The CMBR is isotropic.
Therefore, the CMBR disproves the Big Bang.
For fun, think if the "big bang" was nothing more than a very large
local explosion? Two super massive black holes finally merging into one,
kaaabooom! could be a candidate, perhaps?
For fun we could be logical and face the fact that a velocity-distance
relationship necessarily places us exactly at the center of the universe
making it obviously absurd nonsense.
LaurenceClarkCrossen
2025-02-22 19:18:19 UTC
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Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
Post by Chris M. Thomasson
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation requires the furthest galaxies to recede
the fastest, making this Big Bang universe anisotropic.
The CMBR is isotropic.
Therefore, the CMBR disproves the Big Bang.
For fun, think if the "big bang" was nothing more than a very large
local explosion? Two super massive black holes finally merging into one,
kaaabooom! could be a candidate, perhaps?
For fun we could be logical and face the fact that a velocity-distance
relationship necessarily places us exactly at the center of the universe
making it obviously absurd nonsense.
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Paul.B.Andersen
2025-02-23 13:46:23 UTC
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Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
--
Paul

https://paulba.no/
LaurenceClarkCrossen
2025-02-23 21:00:55 UTC
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Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
Paul, misconstruing is a tactic of ideologues and is deceitful and
stupid and obvious to everyone.
guido wugi
2025-02-23 23:00:23 UTC
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Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe ;)
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
--
guido wugi
Thomas Heger
2025-02-24 07:31:43 UTC
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Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe ;)
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
The universe has the topology of a large 'ball':

wherever you are, you are at the top position and in the exact center!


You can go wherever you want, you are still in the center and in direct
succession of the 'big-bang'.

So: how can we have such a universe?

Well there exists a book about this topic, which is nicely explained there


"On the Geometry of Time
in Physics and Cosmology"

by A.F. Meyer

https://www.sensibleuniverse.net/pages/book.html

or

https://www.sensibleuniverse.net/Cosmology23/docs/A06-afmayerBook2009.pdf

TH
guido wugi
2025-02-24 11:59:55 UTC
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Post by Thomas Heger
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe ;)
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
A "sphere", I suppose, the "shell" of a "ball".
Post by Thomas Heger
wherever you are, you are at the top position and in the exact center!
You can go wherever you want, you are still in the center and in
direct succession of the 'big-bang'.
The sphere would shrink (backwards) to a point. Yet I've seen also
"infinite" models, eg lines shrinking to a straight "big bang" line with
infinite density.
--
guido wugi
Maciej Wozniak
2025-02-24 12:09:19 UTC
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Post by guido wugi
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe ;)
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
A "sphere", I suppose, the "shell" of a "ball".
The universe has no "topology" except the
one/ones we're assigning to it.
Ross Finlayson
2025-02-25 22:53:06 UTC
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Post by Thomas Heger
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe ;)
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
wherever you are, you are at the top position and in the exact center!
You can go wherever you want, you are still in the center and in direct
succession of the 'big-bang'.
So: how can we have such a universe?
Well there exists a book about this topic, which is nicely explained there
"On the Geometry of Time
in Physics and Cosmology"
by A.F. Meyer
https://www.sensibleuniverse.net/pages/book.html
or
https://www.sensibleuniverse.net/Cosmology23/docs/A06-afmayerBook2009.pdf
TH
Neither Big Bang nor Steady State are falsifiable,
though, over time, the sky survey of the visible
universe aging, has never falsified Steady State,
yet has falsified each the prevous existing models
of Big Bang.

(... without finding something like the toroid bounds.)
J. J. Lodder
2025-02-25 13:27:13 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe ;)
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it


THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry

I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?


Hard to argue with that,

Jan
Ross Finlayson
2025-02-27 04:26:18 UTC
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Permalink
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe ;)
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".

is a line from a song with these lines:

"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."

Infant

Objectivism is a maturity phase in the
philosophical development, not the stopping
point, though it may engender what results
core strength of a sort of personal rationality.

Also "sophism" is seen by some as inherently
hypocritical and self-serving and un-ethical, even.

Though, some find that practical, ....

(Others don't)
Maciej Wozniak
2025-02-27 07:06:59 UTC
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Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe ;)
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Objectivism is a maturity phase in the
There is no such thing and the truth "objective"
is combined from subjective ones by voting.
Ross Finlayson
2025-02-28 05:05:46 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe ;)
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Objectivism is a maturity phase in the
There is no such thing and the truth "objective"
is combined from subjective ones by voting.
The inter-objective is a prime goal in the
matters of true "truth", with regards to the
inter-subjective, which philosophers of science
ascribe to science, and philosophers in metaphysics
connect with a merest teleology, a silver thread,
contemplations and deliberations on de res, de re,
de ratio, de natura, providing a stronger mathematical
platonism for a stronger logicist positivism.

Then, personal objectivism, where, you know, you
are real and the rest of the world is a figment,
is a usual phase of usual deeply and comprehensively
thinking being in the maturation of their philosophy.

Unfortunately, some never reach it, some never leave
it, and some just vacillate.

Yet, there are others, that there is one at all.

Anyways the inter-subjective is incompatible
with naive narcissism.

It's understood that others can understand what
that is, relayable, and relayed.

Anyways, yeah, if you're a real thinking being,
then at some point the world does revolve around you.
You can always keep that belief you believed.

Others needn't.


Anyways neither Steady State nor Big Bang is falsifiable.
Furthermore, the modern sky survey does not point at
the old Big Bang theory, and every few years the Universe
gets hundreds of millions of years older.

... Than what the old theory was, as it's been falsified.
I.e., "the most recent", if not "the current", theory, say.


Also if your logic has material implication it's wrong.
Maciej Wozniak
2025-02-28 07:09:15 UTC
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Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every
direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe ;)
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Objectivism is a maturity phase in the
There is no such thing and the truth "objective"
isĀ  combined from subjective ones by voting.
The inter-objective is a prime goal in the
matters of true "truth"
There is no such thing, however, and and the truth
"objective" is combined from subjective ones by
voting.

Trying to determine whether a statement is "true"
or "false" - has no sense and no chance without
understanding the words and the rules of the
language the statement is written in.
Apart of a human brain (or, partially, human
programmed computers) - nothing has the
ability. So, if human brains together
decide it's true - there is nowhere to appeal.

And, BTW - these rules may change. So does truth.
Copernicus didn't discover the truth, he changed
the way we speak instead.
Ross Finlayson
2025-02-28 17:44:36 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe ;)
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Objectivism is a maturity phase in the
There is no such thing and the truth "objective"
is combined from subjective ones by voting.
The inter-objective is a prime goal in the
matters of true "truth"
There is no such thing, however, and and the truth
"objective" is combined from subjective ones by
voting.
Trying to determine whether a statement is "true"
or "false" - has no sense and no chance without
understanding the words and the rules of the
language the statement is written in.
Apart of a human brain (or, partially, human
programmed computers) - nothing has the
ability. So, if human brains together
decide it's true - there is nowhere to appeal.
And, BTW - these rules may change. So does truth.
Copernicus didn't discover the truth, he changed
the way we speak instead.
Comenius has named for him a language of all
the truth, much like for Plato there's ideals,
and idealism and the analytical tradition are
two different things, together, one thing.

There's Leibnitz of course and also after Comenius
he has this great idea that there's an ideal setting,
so scientism, after Compte, say, through Boole and
out into Russell then Carnap and logicist positivism,
the modern logicist position, Leibnitz has an ideal
and it's very much so that both idealism and the
analytical tradition get combined.

The idealist tradition may have been cast a bit
aside, yet philsophers of physics like d'Espagnat
help thoroughly relay that a "real realist" position
in physics, makes for that a continuum mechanics is
in effect real, and for that there is a real mathematical
continuum and a real mathematical infinity, after a
course of deductive analysis, since mere inductive
inference by itself works fine in closed categories
or the finite, yet FAILS as is well-known since Zeno.

So, finitists: are considered, you know, a bit absent.



"Logos 2000: philosophical theory"

Better than your usual, ....
Ross Finlayson
2025-02-28 18:07:19 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe ;)
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Objectivism is a maturity phase in the
There is no such thing and the truth "objective"
is combined from subjective ones by voting.
The inter-objective is a prime goal in the
matters of true "truth"
There is no such thing, however, and and the truth
"objective" is combined from subjective ones by
voting.
Trying to determine whether a statement is "true"
or "false" - has no sense and no chance without
understanding the words and the rules of the
language the statement is written in.
Apart of a human brain (or, partially, human
programmed computers) - nothing has the
ability. So, if human brains together
decide it's true - there is nowhere to appeal.
And, BTW - these rules may change. So does truth.
Copernicus didn't discover the truth, he changed
the way we speak instead.
Comenius has named for him a language of all
the truth, much like for Plato there's ideals,
and idealism and the analytical tradition are
two different things, together, one thing.
There's Leibnitz of course and also after Comenius
he has this great idea that there's an ideal setting,
so scientism, after Compte, say, through Boole and
out into Russell then Carnap and logicist positivism,
the modern logicist position, Leibnitz has an ideal
and it's very much so that both idealism and the
analytical tradition get combined.
The idealist tradition may have been cast a bit
aside, yet philsophers of physics like d'Espagnat
help thoroughly relay that a "real realist" position
in physics, makes for that a continuum mechanics is
in effect real, and for that there is a real mathematical
continuum and a real mathematical infinity, after a
course of deductive analysis, since mere inductive
inference by itself works fine in closed categories
or the finite, yet FAILS as is well-known since Zeno.
So, finitists: are considered, you know, a bit absent.
http://youtu.be/LKnZUg9jPf0
"Logos 2000: philosophical theory"
Better than your usual, ....


"Descriptive differential dynamics: dogma, doubling"
Maciej Wozniak
2025-02-28 19:40:56 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe ;)
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Objectivism is a maturity phase in the
There is no such thing and the truth "objective"
isĀ  combined from subjective ones by voting.
The inter-objective is a prime goal in the
matters of true "truth"
There is no such thing, however, and and the truth
"objective" isĀ  combined from subjective ones by
voting.
Trying to determine whether a statement is "true"
or "false" - has no sense and no chance without
understanding the words and the rules of the
language the statement is written in.
Apart of a human brain (or, partially, human
programmedĀ  computers) - nothing has the
ability. So, if human brains together
decide it's true - there is nowhere to appeal.
And, BTW - these rules may change. So does truth.
Copernicus didn't discover the truth, he changed
the way we speak instead.
Comenius has named for him a language of all
the truth, much like for Plato there's ideals,
and idealism and the analytical tradition are
two different things, together, one thing.
There's Leibnitz of course and also after Comenius
There are also words and the rules of a
language, and without their knowledge
trying to determine what is "true" or
"false" has neither sense nor a chance.
Post by Ross Finlayson
he has this great idea that there's an ideal setting,
so scientism, after Compte, say, through Boole and
out into Russell then Carnap and logicist positivism,
the modern logicist position, Leibnitz has an ideal
and it's very much so that both idealism and the
analytical tradition get combined.
The idealist tradition may have been cast a bit
aside, yet philsophers of physics like d'Espagnat
help thoroughly relay
that a "real realist" position
Post by Ross Finlayson
in physics, makes for that a continuum mechanics is
in effect real, and for that there is a real mathematical
continuum and a real mathematical infinity, after a
course of deductive analysis, since mere inductive
inference by itself works fine in closed categories
or the finite, yet FAILS as is well-known since Zeno.
In physics religious maniacs fuck without any
sense, having their wishes instead any logic.
Ross Finlayson
2025-02-28 23:13:52 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe ;)
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Objectivism is a maturity phase in the
There is no such thing and the truth "objective"
is combined from subjective ones by voting.
The inter-objective is a prime goal in the
matters of true "truth"
There is no such thing, however, and and the truth
"objective" is combined from subjective ones by
voting.
Trying to determine whether a statement is "true"
or "false" - has no sense and no chance without
understanding the words and the rules of the
language the statement is written in.
Apart of a human brain (or, partially, human
programmed computers) - nothing has the
ability. So, if human brains together
decide it's true - there is nowhere to appeal.
And, BTW - these rules may change. So does truth.
Copernicus didn't discover the truth, he changed
the way we speak instead.
Comenius has named for him a language of all
the truth, much like for Plato there's ideals,
and idealism and the analytical tradition are
two different things, together, one thing.
There's Leibnitz of course and also after Comenius
There are also words and the rules of a
language, and without their knowledge
trying to determine what is "true" or
"false" has neither sense nor a chance.
Post by Ross Finlayson
he has this great idea that there's an ideal setting,
so scientism, after Compte, say, through Boole and
out into Russell then Carnap and logicist positivism,
the modern logicist position, Leibnitz has an ideal
and it's very much so that both idealism and the
analytical tradition get combined.
The idealist tradition may have been cast a bit
aside, yet philsophers of physics like d'Espagnat
help thoroughly relay
that a "real realist" position
Post by Ross Finlayson
in physics, makes for that a continuum mechanics is
in effect real, and for that there is a real mathematical
continuum and a real mathematical infinity, after a
course of deductive analysis, since mere inductive
inference by itself works fine in closed categories
or the finite, yet FAILS as is well-known since Zeno.
In physics religious maniacs fuck without any
sense, having their wishes instead any logic.
So, "monkey see, monkey do" is what you're saying.
Maciej Wozniak
2025-03-01 06:38:46 UTC
Reply
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Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
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Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe ;)
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Objectivism is a maturity phase in the
There is no such thing and the truth "objective"
isĀ  combined from subjective ones by voting.
The inter-objective is a prime goal in the
matters of true "truth"
There is no such thing, however, and and the truth
"objective" isĀ  combined from subjective ones by
voting.
Trying to determine whether a statement is "true"
or "false" - has no sense and no chance without
understanding the words and the rules of the
language the statement is written in.
Apart of a human brain (or, partially, human
programmedĀ  computers) - nothing has the
ability. So, if human brains together
decide it's true - there is nowhere to appeal.
And, BTW - these rules may change. So does truth.
Copernicus didn't discover the truth, he changed
the way we speak instead.
Comenius has named for him a language of all
the truth, much like for Plato there's ideals,
and idealism and the analytical tradition are
two different things, together, one thing.
There's Leibnitz of course and also after Comenius
There are also words and the rules of a
language, and withoutĀ  their knowledge
trying toĀ  determine what is "true" or
"false" has neither sense nor a chance.
Post by Ross Finlayson
he has this great idea that there's an ideal setting,
so scientism, after Compte, say, through Boole and
out into Russell then Carnap and logicist positivism,
the modern logicist position, Leibnitz has an ideal
and it's very much so that both idealism and the
analytical tradition get combined.
The idealist tradition may have been cast a bit
aside, yet philsophers of physics like d'Espagnat
help thoroughly relay
that a "real realist" position
Post by Ross Finlayson
in physics, makes for that a continuum mechanics is
in effect real, and for that there is a real mathematical
continuum and a real mathematical infinity, after a
course of deductive analysis, since mere inductive
inference by itself works fine in closed categories
or the finite, yet FAILS as is well-known since Zeno.
In physics religious maniacs fuck without any
sense, having their wishes instead any logic.
So, "monkey see, monkey do" is what you're saying.
No, that's not.
J. J. Lodder
2025-02-28 11:41:46 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe ;)
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,

Jan
Maciej Wozniak
2025-02-28 12:26:33 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe ;)
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,
And a relativistic idiot always know who
is wrong or not. After he analyzed M&M
experiment - how could he be mistaken
about such a triviality?
Post by J. J. Lodder
Jan
Ross Finlayson
2025-02-28 17:36:32 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe ;)
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,
Jan
In his own little world


Us stronger mathematical platonists have
a bit more thorough grounding where
we're all right.

And not "not even wrong".
J. J. Lodder
2025-03-01 10:53:07 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe ;)
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,
Jan
In his own little world
That is not an answer.
(except perhaps in your little world)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Us stronger mathematical platonists have
a bit more thorough grounding where
we're all right.
And not "not even wrong".
Platonism has no relation with reality.
If it has, it is no longer Platonism,

Jan
Maciej Wozniak
2025-03-01 12:29:14 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe
;)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,
Jan
In his own little world
That is not an answer.
(except perhaps in your little world)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Us stronger mathematical platonists have
a bit more thorough grounding where
we're all right.
And not "not even wrong".
Platonism has no relation with reality.
If it has, it is no longer Platonism,
JJ locuta! Causa finita!
Ross Finlayson
2025-03-01 15:41:03 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe
;)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,
Jan
In his own little world
That is not an answer.
(except perhaps in your little world)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Us stronger mathematical platonists have
a bit more thorough grounding where
we're all right.
And not "not even wrong".
Platonism has no relation with reality.
If it has, it is no longer Platonism,
JJ locuta! Causa finita!
"Amicus Plato, finito"


A strong mathematical platonism, that the
objects of mathematics are quite real,
and a stronger logicist positivism,
that we have a science about it,
combines the best of both the idealistic
and the analytic traditions.

Often it's Hegel who's ascribed to having
that sort of put together, best, then though
there are lots of kinds of soi-disant Hegelians,
we're logical Hegelians, not polemical.


So, in the Wissenschaft der Logik, Hegel
puts together quite a good theory. Of course,
it takes a bit of a thorough reading of Kant
to arrive at why the Sublime is extra-ordinary,
and besides that Kant and Schopenhauer and so
on have their "qualitas occultas", which in a
way are sort of like "hidden a.k.a. supplementary
variables of the real wave equation", has that
it's a super-classical sort of thinking, that
Derrida and Husserl very much assert that the
objects of mathematics or geometry are beyond
ideal, quite real.


Axiomless natural deduction, a spiral-space-filling
curve as a natural continuum, a Comenius language,
answering the fundamental question of metaphysics,
and so on: amicus Plato.


Of course this has a rather perfect philosophy
and theory of science to go along with a merest
teleology, a causality and purpose of things,
together make a theory where foundation is
pre-axiomatic, yet entirely logical and mathematical.


The CMBR experiment thoroughly paint-canned
older Big Bang theories, yet Steady State is
also unfalsifiable, so, as time goes on and
the sky survey continues, it makes an older
Big Bang theory.


It's a continuum mechanics, ....
Maciej Wozniak
2025-03-01 17:38:34 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe
;)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,
Jan
In his own little world
That is not an answer.
(except perhaps in your little world)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Us stronger mathematical platonists have
a bit more thorough grounding where
we're all right.
And not "not even wrong".
Platonism has no relation with reality.
If it has, it is no longer Platonism,
JJ locuta! Causa finita!
"Amicus Plato, finito"
A strong mathematical platonism, that the
objects of mathematics are quite real,
and a stronger logicist positivism,
that we have a science about it,
combines the best of both the idealistic
and the analytic traditions.
Often it's Hegel who's ascribed to having
that sort of put together, best, then though
there are lots of kinds of soi-disant Hegelians,
we're logical Hegelians, not polemical.
So, in the Wissenschaft der Logik, Hegel
puts together quite a good theory. Of course,
it takes a bit of a thorough reading of Kant
to arrive at why the Sublime is extra-ordinary,
and besides that Kant and Schopenhauer and so
on have their "qualitas occultas", which in a
way are sort of like "hidden a.k.a. supplementary
variables of the real wave equation", has that
it's a super-classical sort of thinking, that
Derrida and Husserl very much assert that the
objects of mathematics or geometry are beyond
ideal, quite real.
Axiomless natural deduction
No such thing again.



, a spiral-space-filling
Post by Ross Finlayson
curve as a natural continuum, a Comenius language,
answering the fundamental question of metaphysics,
and so on: amicus Plato.
Of course this has a rather perfect philosophy
and theory of science to go along with a merest
teleology, a causality and purpose of things,
together make a theory where foundation is
pre-axiomatic, yet entirely logical and mathematical.
The CMBR experiment thoroughly paint-canned
older Big Bang theories, yet Steady State is
also unfalsifiable, so, as time goes on and
the sky survey continues, it makes an older
Big Bang theory.
It's a continuum mechanics, ....
Ross Finlayson
2025-03-01 22:52:38 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe
;)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,
Jan
In his own little world
That is not an answer.
(except perhaps in your little world)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Us stronger mathematical platonists have
a bit more thorough grounding where
we're all right.
And not "not even wrong".
Platonism has no relation with reality.
If it has, it is no longer Platonism,
JJ locuta! Causa finita!
"Amicus Plato, finito"
A strong mathematical platonism, that the
objects of mathematics are quite real,
and a stronger logicist positivism,
that we have a science about it,
combines the best of both the idealistic
and the analytic traditions.
Often it's Hegel who's ascribed to having
that sort of put together, best, then though
there are lots of kinds of soi-disant Hegelians,
we're logical Hegelians, not polemical.
So, in the Wissenschaft der Logik, Hegel
puts together quite a good theory. Of course,
it takes a bit of a thorough reading of Kant
to arrive at why the Sublime is extra-ordinary,
and besides that Kant and Schopenhauer and so
on have their "qualitas occultas", which in a
way are sort of like "hidden a.k.a. supplementary
variables of the real wave equation", has that
it's a super-classical sort of thinking, that
Derrida and Husserl very much assert that the
objects of mathematics or geometry are beyond
ideal, quite real.
Axiomless natural deduction
No such thing again.
, a spiral-space-filling
Post by Ross Finlayson
curve as a natural continuum, a Comenius language,
answering the fundamental question of metaphysics,
and so on: amicus Plato.
Of course this has a rather perfect philosophy
and theory of science to go along with a merest
teleology, a causality and purpose of things,
together make a theory where foundation is
pre-axiomatic, yet entirely logical and mathematical.
The CMBR experiment thoroughly paint-canned
older Big Bang theories, yet Steady State is
also unfalsifiable, so, as time goes on and
the sky survey continues, it makes an older
Big Bang theory.
It's a continuum mechanics, ....
Oh, Hegel has one.

In fact you might figure it's the one there is.
Ross Finlayson
2025-03-01 22:56:53 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe
;)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,
Jan
In his own little world
That is not an answer.
(except perhaps in your little world)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Us stronger mathematical platonists have
a bit more thorough grounding where
we're all right.
And not "not even wrong".
Platonism has no relation with reality.
If it has, it is no longer Platonism,
JJ locuta! Causa finita!
"Amicus Plato, finito"
A strong mathematical platonism, that the
objects of mathematics are quite real,
and a stronger logicist positivism,
that we have a science about it,
combines the best of both the idealistic
and the analytic traditions.
Often it's Hegel who's ascribed to having
that sort of put together, best, then though
there are lots of kinds of soi-disant Hegelians,
we're logical Hegelians, not polemical.
So, in the Wissenschaft der Logik, Hegel
puts together quite a good theory. Of course,
it takes a bit of a thorough reading of Kant
to arrive at why the Sublime is extra-ordinary,
and besides that Kant and Schopenhauer and so
on have their "qualitas occultas", which in a
way are sort of like "hidden a.k.a. supplementary
variables of the real wave equation", has that
it's a super-classical sort of thinking, that
Derrida and Husserl very much assert that the
objects of mathematics or geometry are beyond
ideal, quite real.
Axiomless natural deduction
No such thing again.
, a spiral-space-filling
Post by Ross Finlayson
curve as a natural continuum, a Comenius language,
answering the fundamental question of metaphysics,
and so on: amicus Plato.
Of course this has a rather perfect philosophy
and theory of science to go along with a merest
teleology, a causality and purpose of things,
together make a theory where foundation is
pre-axiomatic, yet entirely logical and mathematical.
The CMBR experiment thoroughly paint-canned
older Big Bang theories, yet Steady State is
also unfalsifiable, so, as time goes on and
the sky survey continues, it makes an older
Big Bang theory.
It's a continuum mechanics, ....
Oh, Hegel has one.
In fact you might figure it's the one there is.
Of course when 2MASS after WMP discovered that
what was the visible universe is just the local
supercluster, and that after fixing for redshift
bias that redshift/blueshift was more like 51/49
than 99/1, that really thoroughly paintcanned
what were the inflationary/expansionary theories,
which were merely exercises in model fitting, the data.
Maciej Wozniak
2025-03-02 06:42:40 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe
;)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,
Jan
In his own little world
That is not an answer.
(except perhaps in your little world)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Us stronger mathematical platonists have
a bit more thorough grounding where
we're all right.
And not "not even wrong".
Platonism has no relation with reality.
If it has, it is no longer Platonism,
JJ locuta! Causa finita!
"Amicus Plato, finito"
A strong mathematical platonism, that the
objects of mathematics are quite real,
and a stronger logicist positivism,
that we have a science about it,
combines the best of both the idealistic
and the analytic traditions.
Often it's Hegel who's ascribed to having
that sort of put together, best, then though
there are lots of kinds of soi-disant Hegelians,
we're logical Hegelians, not polemical.
So, in the Wissenschaft der Logik, Hegel
puts together quite a good theory. Of course,
it takes a bit of a thorough reading of Kant
to arrive at why the Sublime is extra-ordinary,
and besides that Kant and Schopenhauer and so
on have their "qualitas occultas", which in a
way are sort of like "hidden a.k.a. supplementary
variables of the real wave equation", has that
it's a super-classical sort of thinking, that
Derrida and Husserl very much assert that the
objects of mathematics or geometry are beyond
ideal, quite real.
Axiomless natural deduction
No such thing again.
, a spiral-space-filling
Post by Ross Finlayson
curve as a natural continuum, a Comenius language,
answering the fundamental question of metaphysics,
and so on: amicus Plato.
Of course this has a rather perfect philosophy
and theory of science to go along with a merest
teleology, a causality and purpose of things,
together make a theory where foundation is
pre-axiomatic, yet entirely logical and mathematical.
The CMBR experiment thoroughly paint-canned
older Big Bang theories, yet Steady State is
also unfalsifiable, so, as time goes on and
the sky survey continues, it makes an older
Big Bang theory.
It's a continuum mechanics, ....
Oh, Hegel has one.
Hegel has one what?
There is no "axiomless natural deduction".
Nothing natural in deduction, it's a word
game and it requires axioms, because without
them the words are meaningless.
Ross Finlayson
2025-03-02 16:00:30 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift
distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every
direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the
universe
;)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,
Jan
In his own little world
That is not an answer.
(except perhaps in your little world)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Us stronger mathematical platonists have
a bit more thorough grounding where
we're all right.
And not "not even wrong".
Platonism has no relation with reality.
If it has, it is no longer Platonism,
JJ locuta! Causa finita!
"Amicus Plato, finito"
A strong mathematical platonism, that the
objects of mathematics are quite real,
and a stronger logicist positivism,
that we have a science about it,
combines the best of both the idealistic
and the analytic traditions.
Often it's Hegel who's ascribed to having
that sort of put together, best, then though
there are lots of kinds of soi-disant Hegelians,
we're logical Hegelians, not polemical.
So, in the Wissenschaft der Logik, Hegel
puts together quite a good theory. Of course,
it takes a bit of a thorough reading of Kant
to arrive at why the Sublime is extra-ordinary,
and besides that Kant and Schopenhauer and so
on have their "qualitas occultas", which in a
way are sort of like "hidden a.k.a. supplementary
variables of the real wave equation", has that
it's a super-classical sort of thinking, that
Derrida and Husserl very much assert that the
objects of mathematics or geometry are beyond
ideal, quite real.
Axiomless natural deduction
No such thing again.
, a spiral-space-filling
Post by Ross Finlayson
curve as a natural continuum, a Comenius language,
answering the fundamental question of metaphysics,
and so on: amicus Plato.
Of course this has a rather perfect philosophy
and theory of science to go along with a merest
teleology, a causality and purpose of things,
together make a theory where foundation is
pre-axiomatic, yet entirely logical and mathematical.
The CMBR experiment thoroughly paint-canned
older Big Bang theories, yet Steady State is
also unfalsifiable, so, as time goes on and
the sky survey continues, it makes an older
Big Bang theory.
It's a continuum mechanics, ....
Oh, Hegel has one.
Hegel has one what?
There is no "axiomless natural deduction".
Nothing natural in deduction, it's a word
game and it requires axioms, because without
them the words are meaningless.
Nope, wrong.

Philosophy had long arrived at that there
are principles and ideals and first principles
and final causes, and the Principle of Sufficient
Reason to be fulfilling and fulfilled is both
more and less than any system of axiomatization,
which given, is known since antiquity to have
a counter-argument.

So, "axiomless natural deduction" is quite usual
since something like Heraclitus' dual monism,
about Platon's One and these kinds of things.

Hegel in Wissenschaft der Logik, for example,
makes for an axiomless natural deduction,
what is a "dually-self infraconsistency",
the theory with no paradoxes at all, of it all.

Then, many people just read half of that
and have a half-account, much like they abuse
Aristotle and pick only one of prior and posterior,
when "modern classical logic" is only "modern
quasi-modal classical logic" and forgot Chrysippus'
mood-al being all sophist Epicurean Plotinist
specious hypocritical self-serving Comptean Boolean
Russellian empirical logicist positivists of the
weaker nominalist fictionalist variety, and not
even minding their p's and q's.


Of course there are modern accounts like "modal logic"
and "relevance logic" that help put that away.
Yet, "classical logic" is _not_ necessarily "the
quasi-modal logic".


So, one can still have stronger mathematical platonism,
AND, stronger logicist positivism.

It's a realist position.
Maciej Wozniak
2025-03-02 16:18:00 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift
distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every
direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the
universe
;)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,
Jan
In his own little world
That is not an answer.
(except perhaps in your little world)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Us stronger mathematical platonists have
a bit more thorough grounding where
we're all right.
And not "not even wrong".
Platonism has no relation with reality.
If it has, it is no longer Platonism,
JJ locuta! Causa finita!
"Amicus Plato, finito"
A strong mathematical platonism, that the
objects of mathematics are quite real,
and a stronger logicist positivism,
that we have a science about it,
combines the best of both the idealistic
and the analytic traditions.
Often it's Hegel who's ascribed to having
that sort of put together, best, then though
there are lots of kinds of soi-disant Hegelians,
we're logical Hegelians, not polemical.
So, in the Wissenschaft der Logik, Hegel
puts together quite a good theory. Of course,
it takes a bit of a thorough reading of Kant
to arrive at why the Sublime is extra-ordinary,
and besides that Kant and Schopenhauer and so
on have their "qualitas occultas", which in a
way are sort of like "hidden a.k.a. supplementary
variables of the real wave equation", has that
it's a super-classical sort of thinking, that
Derrida and Husserl very much assert that the
objects of mathematics or geometry are beyond
ideal, quite real.
Axiomless natural deduction
No such thing again.
, a spiral-space-filling
Post by Ross Finlayson
curve as a natural continuum, a Comenius language,
answering the fundamental question of metaphysics,
and so on: amicus Plato.
Of course this has a rather perfect philosophy
and theory of science to go along with a merest
teleology, a causality and purpose of things,
together make a theory where foundation is
pre-axiomatic, yet entirely logical and mathematical.
The CMBR experiment thoroughly paint-canned
older Big Bang theories, yet Steady State is
also unfalsifiable, so, as time goes on and
the sky survey continues, it makes an older
Big Bang theory.
It's a continuum mechanics, ....
Oh, Hegel has one.
Hegel has one what?
Nope, wrong.
Philosophy had long arrived at that there
Don't give a damn to what philosophy arrived.
There is no "axiomless natural deduction".
Nothing natural in deduction, it's a word
game and it requires axioms, because without
them the words are meaningless.
Yes, right.
Ross Finlayson
2025-03-02 16:42:37 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift
distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every
direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the
universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the
universe
;)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,
Jan
In his own little world
That is not an answer.
(except perhaps in your little world)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Us stronger mathematical platonists have
a bit more thorough grounding where
we're all right.
And not "not even wrong".
Platonism has no relation with reality.
If it has, it is no longer Platonism,
JJ locuta! Causa finita!
"Amicus Plato, finito"
A strong mathematical platonism, that the
objects of mathematics are quite real,
and a stronger logicist positivism,
that we have a science about it,
combines the best of both the idealistic
and the analytic traditions.
Often it's Hegel who's ascribed to having
that sort of put together, best, then though
there are lots of kinds of soi-disant Hegelians,
we're logical Hegelians, not polemical.
So, in the Wissenschaft der Logik, Hegel
puts together quite a good theory. Of course,
it takes a bit of a thorough reading of Kant
to arrive at why the Sublime is extra-ordinary,
and besides that Kant and Schopenhauer and so
on have their "qualitas occultas", which in a
way are sort of like "hidden a.k.a. supplementary
variables of the real wave equation", has that
it's a super-classical sort of thinking, that
Derrida and Husserl very much assert that the
objects of mathematics or geometry are beyond
ideal, quite real.
Axiomless natural deduction
No such thing again.
, a spiral-space-filling
Post by Ross Finlayson
curve as a natural continuum, a Comenius language,
answering the fundamental question of metaphysics,
and so on: amicus Plato.
Of course this has a rather perfect philosophy
and theory of science to go along with a merest
teleology, a causality and purpose of things,
together make a theory where foundation is
pre-axiomatic, yet entirely logical and mathematical.
The CMBR experiment thoroughly paint-canned
older Big Bang theories, yet Steady State is
also unfalsifiable, so, as time goes on and
the sky survey continues, it makes an older
Big Bang theory.
It's a continuum mechanics, ....
Oh, Hegel has one.
Hegel has one what?
Nope, wrong.
Philosophy had long arrived at that there
Don't give a damn to what philosophy arrived.
There is no "axiomless natural deduction".
Nothing natural in deduction, it's a word
game and it requires axioms, because without
them the words are meaningless.
Yes, right.


The idea of Comenius language is that
the true words already exist, then we
discover them, to disclose them, the a-letheia,
that mathematics is discovered not invented,
for example relating what is called "the fundamental
question of metaphyics", why there is something rather
than nothing, that the Principle of Sufficient Reason
gets satisfied in _inversion_ not _contradiction_.

Then formalism is for particular forms
in symbolism, then that for example,
Euclid's geometry may be arrived at
from axiomless geometry.
Maciej Wozniak
2025-03-02 17:21:25 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift
distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every
direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the
universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the
universe
;)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a
possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,
Jan
In his own little world
That is not an answer.
(except perhaps in your little world)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Us stronger mathematical platonists have
a bit more thorough grounding where
we're all right.
And not "not even wrong".
Platonism has no relation with reality.
If it has, it is no longer Platonism,
JJ locuta! Causa finita!
"Amicus Plato, finito"
A strong mathematical platonism, that the
objects of mathematics are quite real,
and a stronger logicist positivism,
that we have a science about it,
combines the best of both the idealistic
and the analytic traditions.
Often it's Hegel who's ascribed to having
that sort of put together, best, then though
there are lots of kinds of soi-disant Hegelians,
we're logical Hegelians, not polemical.
So, in the Wissenschaft der Logik, Hegel
puts together quite a good theory. Of course,
it takes a bit of a thorough reading of Kant
to arrive at why the Sublime is extra-ordinary,
and besides that Kant and Schopenhauer and so
on have their "qualitas occultas", which in a
way are sort of like "hidden a.k.a. supplementary
variables of the real wave equation", has that
it's a super-classical sort of thinking, that
Derrida and Husserl very much assert that the
objects of mathematics or geometry are beyond
ideal, quite real.
Axiomless natural deduction
No such thing again.
, a spiral-space-filling
Post by Ross Finlayson
curve as a natural continuum, a Comenius language,
answering the fundamental question of metaphysics,
and so on: amicus Plato.
Of course this has a rather perfect philosophy
and theory of science to go along with a merest
teleology, a causality and purpose of things,
together make a theory where foundation is
pre-axiomatic, yet entirely logical and mathematical.
The CMBR experiment thoroughly paint-canned
older Big Bang theories, yet Steady State is
also unfalsifiable, so, as time goes on and
the sky survey continues, it makes an older
Big Bang theory.
It's a continuum mechanics, ....
Oh, Hegel has one.
Hegel has one what?
Nope, wrong.
Philosophy had long arrived at that there
Don't give a damn to what philosophy arrived.
There is no "axiomless natural deduction".
Nothing natural in deduction, it's a word
game and it requires axioms, because without
them the words are meaningless.
Yes, right.
http://youtu.be/GgoRuwa2Zcs
POURNmVLwp-dyzjYr-&index=5
The idea of Comenius language is that
the true words already exist, then we
discover them, to disclose them, the a-letheia,
that mathematics is discovered not invented,
So the idea of Comenius language is hopeless
wishful thinking.
Ross Finlayson
2025-03-02 17:41:02 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the
redshift
distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every
direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the
universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact
centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the
universe
;)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,
Jan
In his own little world
That is not an answer.
(except perhaps in your little world)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Us stronger mathematical platonists have
a bit more thorough grounding where
we're all right.
And not "not even wrong".
Platonism has no relation with reality.
If it has, it is no longer Platonism,
JJ locuta! Causa finita!
"Amicus Plato, finito"
A strong mathematical platonism, that the
objects of mathematics are quite real,
and a stronger logicist positivism,
that we have a science about it,
combines the best of both the idealistic
and the analytic traditions.
Often it's Hegel who's ascribed to having
that sort of put together, best, then though
there are lots of kinds of soi-disant Hegelians,
we're logical Hegelians, not polemical.
So, in the Wissenschaft der Logik, Hegel
puts together quite a good theory. Of course,
it takes a bit of a thorough reading of Kant
to arrive at why the Sublime is extra-ordinary,
and besides that Kant and Schopenhauer and so
on have their "qualitas occultas", which in a
way are sort of like "hidden a.k.a. supplementary
variables of the real wave equation", has that
it's a super-classical sort of thinking, that
Derrida and Husserl very much assert that the
objects of mathematics or geometry are beyond
ideal, quite real.
Axiomless natural deduction
No such thing again.
, a spiral-space-filling
Post by Ross Finlayson
curve as a natural continuum, a Comenius language,
answering the fundamental question of metaphysics,
and so on: amicus Plato.
Of course this has a rather perfect philosophy
and theory of science to go along with a merest
teleology, a causality and purpose of things,
together make a theory where foundation is
pre-axiomatic, yet entirely logical and mathematical.
The CMBR experiment thoroughly paint-canned
older Big Bang theories, yet Steady State is
also unfalsifiable, so, as time goes on and
the sky survey continues, it makes an older
Big Bang theory.
It's a continuum mechanics, ....
Oh, Hegel has one.
Hegel has one what?
Nope, wrong.
Philosophy had long arrived at that there
Don't give a damn to what philosophy arrived.
There is no "axiomless natural deduction".
Nothing natural in deduction, it's a word
game and it requires axioms, because without
them the words are meaningless.
Yes, right.
http://youtu.be/GgoRuwa2Zcs
POURNmVLwp-dyzjYr-&index=5
The idea of Comenius language is that
the true words already exist, then we
discover them, to disclose them, the a-letheia,
that mathematics is discovered not invented,
So the idea of Comenius language is hopeless
wishful thinking.
No, it's an _ideal_ that we may _attain_ to.

Metaphor may fail, that there is a, "strong metonymy".


Maciej Wozniak
2025-03-02 22:08:02 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the
redshift
distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every
direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the
universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact
centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of
the
universe
;)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a
possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,
Jan
In his own little world
That is not an answer.
(except perhaps in your little world)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Us stronger mathematical platonists have
a bit more thorough grounding where
we're all right.
And not "not even wrong".
Platonism has no relation with reality.
If it has, it is no longer Platonism,
JJ locuta! Causa finita!
"Amicus Plato, finito"
A strong mathematical platonism, that the
objects of mathematics are quite real,
and a stronger logicist positivism,
that we have a science about it,
combines the best of both the idealistic
and the analytic traditions.
Often it's Hegel who's ascribed to having
that sort of put together, best, then though
there are lots of kinds of soi-disant Hegelians,
we're logical Hegelians, not polemical.
So, in the Wissenschaft der Logik, Hegel
puts together quite a good theory. Of course,
it takes a bit of a thorough reading of Kant
to arrive at why the Sublime is extra-ordinary,
and besides that Kant and Schopenhauer and so
on have their "qualitas occultas", which in a
way are sort of like "hidden a.k.a. supplementary
variables of the real wave equation", has that
it's a super-classical sort of thinking, that
Derrida and Husserl very much assert that the
objects of mathematics or geometry are beyond
ideal, quite real.
Axiomless natural deduction
No such thing again.
, a spiral-space-filling
Post by Ross Finlayson
curve as a natural continuum, a Comenius language,
answering the fundamental question of metaphysics,
and so on: amicus Plato.
Of course this has a rather perfect philosophy
and theory of science to go along with a merest
teleology, a causality and purpose of things,
together make a theory where foundation is
pre-axiomatic, yet entirely logical and mathematical.
The CMBR experiment thoroughly paint-canned
older Big Bang theories, yet Steady State is
also unfalsifiable, so, as time goes on and
the sky survey continues, it makes an older
Big Bang theory.
It's a continuum mechanics, ....
Oh, Hegel has one.
Hegel has one what?
Nope, wrong.
Philosophy had long arrived at that there
Don't give a damn to what philosophy arrived.
There is no "axiomless natural deduction".
Nothing natural in deduction, it's a word
game and it requires axioms, because without
them the words are meaningless.
Yes, right.
http://youtu.be/GgoRuwa2Zcs
POURNmVLwp-dyzjYr-&index=5
The idea of Comenius language is that
the true words already exist, then we
discover them, to disclose them, the a-letheia,
that mathematics is discovered not invented,
So the idea of Comenius language is hopeless
wishful thinking.
No, it's an _ideal_ that we may _attain_ to.
Yes, it's some wishful-thinking bullshit.
Ross Finlayson
2025-03-02 22:32:20 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the
redshift
distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every
direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the
universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact
centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of
the
universe
;)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a
possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,
Jan
In his own little world
That is not an answer.
(except perhaps in your little world)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Us stronger mathematical platonists have
a bit more thorough grounding where
we're all right.
And not "not even wrong".
Platonism has no relation with reality.
If it has, it is no longer Platonism,
JJ locuta! Causa finita!
"Amicus Plato, finito"
A strong mathematical platonism, that the
objects of mathematics are quite real,
and a stronger logicist positivism,
that we have a science about it,
combines the best of both the idealistic
and the analytic traditions.
Often it's Hegel who's ascribed to having
that sort of put together, best, then though
there are lots of kinds of soi-disant Hegelians,
we're logical Hegelians, not polemical.
So, in the Wissenschaft der Logik, Hegel
puts together quite a good theory. Of course,
it takes a bit of a thorough reading of Kant
to arrive at why the Sublime is extra-ordinary,
and besides that Kant and Schopenhauer and so
on have their "qualitas occultas", which in a
way are sort of like "hidden a.k.a. supplementary
variables of the real wave equation", has that
it's a super-classical sort of thinking, that
Derrida and Husserl very much assert that the
objects of mathematics or geometry are beyond
ideal, quite real.
Axiomless natural deduction
No such thing again.
, a spiral-space-filling
Post by Ross Finlayson
curve as a natural continuum, a Comenius language,
answering the fundamental question of metaphysics,
and so on: amicus Plato.
Of course this has a rather perfect philosophy
and theory of science to go along with a merest
teleology, a causality and purpose of things,
together make a theory where foundation is
pre-axiomatic, yet entirely logical and mathematical.
The CMBR experiment thoroughly paint-canned
older Big Bang theories, yet Steady State is
also unfalsifiable, so, as time goes on and
the sky survey continues, it makes an older
Big Bang theory.
It's a continuum mechanics, ....
Oh, Hegel has one.
Hegel has one what?
Nope, wrong.
Philosophy had long arrived at that there
Don't give a damn to what philosophy arrived.
There is no "axiomless natural deduction".
Nothing natural in deduction, it's a word
game and it requires axioms, because without
them the words are meaningless.
Yes, right.
http://youtu.be/GgoRuwa2Zcs
POURNmVLwp-dyzjYr-&index=5
The idea of Comenius language is that
the true words already exist, then we
discover them, to disclose them, the a-letheia,
that mathematics is discovered not invented,
So the idea of Comenius language is hopeless
wishful thinking.
No, it's an _ideal_ that we may _attain_ to.
Yes, it's some wishful-thinking bullshit.
_Inevitable_ ....


Ladislav Tondl's a platonist, according to himself, ....
Ross Finlayson
2025-03-03 18:14:02 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the
redshift
distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in
every
direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the
universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact
centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the
centre of
the
universe
;)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a
possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,
Jan
In his own little world
That is not an answer.
(except perhaps in your little world)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Us stronger mathematical platonists have
a bit more thorough grounding where
we're all right.
And not "not even wrong".
Platonism has no relation with reality.
If it has, it is no longer Platonism,
JJ locuta! Causa finita!
"Amicus Plato, finito"
A strong mathematical platonism, that the
objects of mathematics are quite real,
and a stronger logicist positivism,
that we have a science about it,
combines the best of both the idealistic
and the analytic traditions.
Often it's Hegel who's ascribed to having
that sort of put together, best, then though
there are lots of kinds of soi-disant Hegelians,
we're logical Hegelians, not polemical.
So, in the Wissenschaft der Logik, Hegel
puts together quite a good theory. Of course,
it takes a bit of a thorough reading of Kant
to arrive at why the Sublime is extra-ordinary,
and besides that Kant and Schopenhauer and so
on have their "qualitas occultas", which in a
way are sort of like "hidden a.k.a. supplementary
variables of the real wave equation", has that
it's a super-classical sort of thinking, that
Derrida and Husserl very much assert that the
objects of mathematics or geometry are beyond
ideal, quite real.
Axiomless natural deduction
No such thing again.
, a spiral-space-filling
Post by Ross Finlayson
curve as a natural continuum, a Comenius language,
answering the fundamental question of metaphysics,
and so on: amicus Plato.
Of course this has a rather perfect philosophy
and theory of science to go along with a merest
teleology, a causality and purpose of things,
together make a theory where foundation is
pre-axiomatic, yet entirely logical and mathematical.
The CMBR experiment thoroughly paint-canned
older Big Bang theories, yet Steady State is
also unfalsifiable, so, as time goes on and
the sky survey continues, it makes an older
Big Bang theory.
It's a continuum mechanics, ....
Oh, Hegel has one.
Hegel has one what?
Nope, wrong.
Philosophy had long arrived at that there
Don't give a damn to what philosophy arrived.
There is no "axiomless natural deduction".
Nothing natural in deduction, it's a word
game and it requires axioms, because without
them the words are meaningless.
Yes, right.
http://youtu.be/GgoRuwa2Zcs
POURNmVLwp-dyzjYr-&index=5
The idea of Comenius language is that
the true words already exist, then we
discover them, to disclose them, the a-letheia,
that mathematics is discovered not invented,
So the idea of Comenius language is hopeless
wishful thinking.
No, it's an _ideal_ that we may _attain_ to.
Yes, it's some wishful-thinking bullshit.
_Inevitable_ ....
Ladislav Tondl's a platonist, according to himself, ....
Would you agree that Tondl's "vote" about
the semantics and syntax of science, is, weighty?

That it has, ..., heft?

J. J. Lodder
2025-03-02 18:46:04 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift
distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every
direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the
universe
;)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,
Jan
In his own little world
That is not an answer.
(except perhaps in your little world)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Us stronger mathematical platonists have
a bit more thorough grounding where
we're all right.
And not "not even wrong".
Platonism has no relation with reality.
If it has, it is no longer Platonism,
JJ locuta! Causa finita!
"Amicus Plato, finito"
A strong mathematical platonism, that the
objects of mathematics are quite real,
and a stronger logicist positivism,
that we have a science about it,
combines the best of both the idealistic
and the analytic traditions.
Often it's Hegel who's ascribed to having
that sort of put together, best, then though
there are lots of kinds of soi-disant Hegelians,
we're logical Hegelians, not polemical.
So, in the Wissenschaft der Logik, Hegel
puts together quite a good theory. Of course,
it takes a bit of a thorough reading of Kant
to arrive at why the Sublime is extra-ordinary,
and besides that Kant and Schopenhauer and so
on have their "qualitas occultas", which in a
way are sort of like "hidden a.k.a. supplementary
variables of the real wave equation", has that
it's a super-classical sort of thinking, that
Derrida and Husserl very much assert that the
objects of mathematics or geometry are beyond
ideal, quite real.
Axiomless natural deduction
No such thing again.
, a spiral-space-filling
Post by Ross Finlayson
curve as a natural continuum, a Comenius language,
answering the fundamental question of metaphysics,
and so on: amicus Plato.
Of course this has a rather perfect philosophy
and theory of science to go along with a merest
teleology, a causality and purpose of things,
together make a theory where foundation is
pre-axiomatic, yet entirely logical and mathematical.
The CMBR experiment thoroughly paint-canned
older Big Bang theories, yet Steady State is
also unfalsifiable, so, as time goes on and
the sky survey continues, it makes an older
Big Bang theory.
It's a continuum mechanics, ....
Oh, Hegel has one.
Fine, let him keep it.
If it is about Hegel it is not about science,

Jan
Ross Finlayson
2025-03-02 20:16:29 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift
distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every
direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the
universe
;)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,
Jan
In his own little world
That is not an answer.
(except perhaps in your little world)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Us stronger mathematical platonists have
a bit more thorough grounding where
we're all right.
And not "not even wrong".
Platonism has no relation with reality.
If it has, it is no longer Platonism,
JJ locuta! Causa finita!
"Amicus Plato, finito"
A strong mathematical platonism, that the
objects of mathematics are quite real,
and a stronger logicist positivism,
that we have a science about it,
combines the best of both the idealistic
and the analytic traditions.
Often it's Hegel who's ascribed to having
that sort of put together, best, then though
there are lots of kinds of soi-disant Hegelians,
we're logical Hegelians, not polemical.
So, in the Wissenschaft der Logik, Hegel
puts together quite a good theory. Of course,
it takes a bit of a thorough reading of Kant
to arrive at why the Sublime is extra-ordinary,
and besides that Kant and Schopenhauer and so
on have their "qualitas occultas", which in a
way are sort of like "hidden a.k.a. supplementary
variables of the real wave equation", has that
it's a super-classical sort of thinking, that
Derrida and Husserl very much assert that the
objects of mathematics or geometry are beyond
ideal, quite real.
Axiomless natural deduction
No such thing again.
, a spiral-space-filling
Post by Ross Finlayson
curve as a natural continuum, a Comenius language,
answering the fundamental question of metaphysics,
and so on: amicus Plato.
Of course this has a rather perfect philosophy
and theory of science to go along with a merest
teleology, a causality and purpose of things,
together make a theory where foundation is
pre-axiomatic, yet entirely logical and mathematical.
The CMBR experiment thoroughly paint-canned
older Big Bang theories, yet Steady State is
also unfalsifiable, so, as time goes on and
the sky survey continues, it makes an older
Big Bang theory.
It's a continuum mechanics, ....
Oh, Hegel has one.
Fine, let him keep it.
If it is about Hegel it is not about science,
Jan
How about Ladislav Tondl?


You flake SR-ian sock-bot, ....
J. J. Lodder
2025-03-02 12:12:10 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe
;)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,
Jan
In his own little world
That is not an answer.
(except perhaps in your little world)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Us stronger mathematical platonists have
a bit more thorough grounding where
we're all right.
And not "not even wrong".
Platonism has no relation with reality.
If it has, it is no longer Platonism,
JJ locuta! Causa finita!
"Amicus Plato, finito"
A strong mathematical platonism, that the
objects of mathematics are quite real,
and a stronger logicist positivism,
that we have a science about it,
combines the best of both the idealistic
and the analytic traditions.
Great. Now derive the Theory of Everything,
without using empirical input of course,

Jan
Maciej Wozniak
2025-03-02 13:33:16 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe
;)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,
Jan
In his own little world
That is not an answer.
(except perhaps in your little world)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Us stronger mathematical platonists have
a bit more thorough grounding where
we're all right.
And not "not even wrong".
Platonism has no relation with reality.
If it has, it is no longer Platonism,
JJ locuta! Causa finita!
"Amicus Plato, finito"
A strong mathematical platonism, that the
objects of mathematics are quite real,
and a stronger logicist positivism,
that we have a science about it,
combines the best of both the idealistic
and the analytic traditions.
Great. Now derive the Theory of Everything,
without using empirical input of course,
If you're so smart, poor halfbrain, derive
it yourself - using whatever you want.
Ross Finlayson
2025-03-02 16:04:25 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the universe
;)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,
Jan
In his own little world
That is not an answer.
(except perhaps in your little world)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Us stronger mathematical platonists have
a bit more thorough grounding where
we're all right.
And not "not even wrong".
Platonism has no relation with reality.
If it has, it is no longer Platonism,
JJ locuta! Causa finita!
"Amicus Plato, finito"
A strong mathematical platonism, that the
objects of mathematics are quite real,
and a stronger logicist positivism,
that we have a science about it,
combines the best of both the idealistic
and the analytic traditions.
Great. Now derive the Theory of Everything,
without using empirical input of course,
Jan
Well, perhaps you might enjoy these hundred or so
hours of podcasts sort of doing that.

https://www.youtube.com/@rossfinlayson

Once it gets established that mathematics
from axiomless theory results axiomless geometry,
then a continuum results simply enough
three space dimensions naturally, and as
of after "time" what makes a theory of
sum-of-histories sum-of-potentials least-action least-gradient,
theory, about energy and entelechy
in attenuation and dissipation
about oscillation and restitution,
it's a continuum mechanics.

Of course, arriving at the premier theories of the day, ....
J. J. Lodder
2025-03-02 18:46:03 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by Maciej Wozniak
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift
distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every
direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
He doesn't understand yet the relatitivity of the centre of the
universe
;)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by Ross Finlayson
Post by J. J. Lodder
Post by guido wugi
(even at big bang an infinite universe is still a possibility)
Here is Piet Hein's take on it
THE CENTRAL POINT
A philosophistry
I am the Universe's Centre.
No subtle sceptics can confound me;
for how can other viewpoints enter,
when all the rest is all around me?
Hard to argue with that,
Jan
"I know a girl called Trampoline, ...".
"When I was three /
I thought the world revolved around me /
I was wrong."
Infant
Piet Hein is never wrong,
Jan
In his own little world
That is not an answer.
(except perhaps in your little world)
Post by Ross Finlayson
Us stronger mathematical platonists have
a bit more thorough grounding where
we're all right.
And not "not even wrong".
Platonism has no relation with reality.
If it has, it is no longer Platonism,
JJ locuta! Causa finita!
"Amicus Plato, finito"
A strong mathematical platonism, that the
objects of mathematics are quite real,
and a stronger logicist positivism,
that we have a science about it,
combines the best of both the idealistic
and the analytic traditions.
Great. Now derive the Theory of Everything,
without using empirical input of course,
Jan
Well, perhaps you might enjoy these hundred or so
hours of podcasts sort of doing that.
Hundreds of hours of podcasts are never to be enjoyed.
Post by Ross Finlayson
Once it gets established that mathematics
from axiomless theory results axiomless geometry,
'axiomless geometry' is a contradiction in terms,

Jan
LaurenceClarkCrossen
2025-02-24 00:15:09 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
Willfully misconstruing to insult is childish. The velocity-distance
relationship places us at the exact center of both the actual entire
universe, and the observable universe.
guido wugi
2025-02-24 15:48:19 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation fails to explain the redshift distance
relation because the latter is exactly the same in every direction so
the former would place us at exactly the center of the universe.
Do you still not understand that we are in the exact centre of
the observable universe?
Willfully misconstruing to insult is childish. The velocity-distance
relationship places us at the exact center of both the actual entire
universe, and the observable universe.
Imagine this balloon
as a
uniform sphere.
Pick any point on it, and you're in "the" (any) centre of the sphere.
- All points experience the same expansion law resp. velocity-distance
relationship.
- No point is characteristic WRT the sphere's 'big bang' state.
--
guido wugi
Paul.B.Andersen
2025-02-23 13:41:29 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
For fun we could be logical and face the fact that a velocity-distance
relationship necessarily places us exactly at the center of the universe
making it obviously absurd nonsense.
Don't you understand that we obviously are in the exact centre
of the observable universe ? :-D
--
Paul

https://paulba.no/
Chris M. Thomasson
2025-02-24 00:45:35 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
For fun we could be logical and face the fact that a velocity-distance
relationship necessarily places us exactly at the center of the universe
making it obviously absurd nonsense.
Don't you understand that we obviously are in the exact centre
of the observable universe ? :-D
If we observe the universe from our planet, then from our points of
view, we are a source point for all of our observations. Fair enough?
LaurenceClarkCrossen
2025-02-21 23:28:06 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Chris M. Thomasson
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation requires the furthest galaxies to recede
the fastest, making this Big Bang universe anisotropic.
The CMBR is isotropic.
Therefore, the CMBR disproves the Big Bang.
For fun, think if the "big bang" was nothing more than a very large
local explosion? Two super massive black holes finally merging into one,
kaaabooom! could be a candidate, perhaps?
If the universe is spherical the surface has no center so we cannot be
on it. We have to be in the center of that sphere because the red-shift
is exactly the same in every direction.
Chris M. Thomasson
2025-02-22 20:29:30 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
Post by Chris M. Thomasson
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation requires the furthest galaxies to recede
the fastest, making this Big Bang universe anisotropic.
The CMBR is isotropic.
Therefore, the CMBR disproves the Big Bang.
For fun, think if the "big bang" was nothing more than a very large
local explosion? Two super massive black holes finally merging into one,
kaaabooom! could be a candidate, perhaps?
If the universe is spherical the surface has no center so we cannot be
on it. We have to be in the center of that sphere because the red-shift
is exactly the same in every direction.
What about the great attractor?
LaurenceClarkCrossen
2025-02-22 21:39:46 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Chris M. Thomasson
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
Post by Chris M. Thomasson
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation requires the furthest galaxies to recede
the fastest, making this Big Bang universe anisotropic.
The CMBR is isotropic.
Therefore, the CMBR disproves the Big Bang.
For fun, think if the "big bang" was nothing more than a very large
local explosion? Two super massive black holes finally merging into one,
kaaabooom! could be a candidate, perhaps?
If the universe is spherical the surface has no center so we cannot be
on it. We have to be in the center of that sphere because the red-shift
is exactly the same in every direction.
What about the great attractor?
According to the Big Bang velocity-distance relation it is the same so
there would be a sprinkling of great attractors. If there is not, then
that contradicts the Big Bang Baloney. "From 1989 until 1993, COBE
satellite Explorer 66 investigated the cosmic microwave background [18].
Astrophysicists expected to see evidence of directional dependency
(anisotropy) that could be
traced back to the site of the alleged big bang. That was not what they
saw, however. Instead, Explorer 66 measured an isotropic blackbody
spectrum with little variation across the sky." - "Something is
Seriously Wrong with Cosmology" - David Rowland.
Paul.B.Andersen
2025-02-23 13:49:46 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
If the universe is spherical the surface has no center so we cannot be
on it. We have to be in the center of that sphere because the red-shift
is exactly the same in every direction.
Will you never learn that the observable universe is spherical
and we are in the exact centre? :-D
--
Paul

https://paulba.no/
LaurenceClarkCrossen
2025-02-23 20:59:25 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
If the universe is spherical the surface has no center so we cannot be
on it. We have to be in the center of that sphere because the red-shift
is exactly the same in every direction.
Will you never learn that the observable universe is spherical
and we are in the exact centre? :-D
That's very cheeky, Paul, but you're still ending your comments with a
"duh." Will you never learn that the velocity-distance relation places
us at the center of the actual universe, and you can't deny that by
claiming the universe is a sphere and the surface of a sphere has no
center?
Paul.B.Andersen
2025-02-24 10:32:42 UTC
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Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
If the universe is spherical the surface has no center so we cannot be
on it. We have to be in the center of that sphere because the red-shift
is exactly the same in every direction.
Will you never learn that the observable universe is spherical
and we are in the exact centre? :-D
That's very cheeky, Paul, but you're still ending your comments with a
"duh." Will you never learn that the velocity-distance relation places
us at the center of the actual universe, and you can't deny that by
claiming the universe is a sphere and the surface of a sphere has no
center?
You miss the point completely!

We are _obviously_ in the centre of _our_ observable universe
because the most distant light sources we can see are as far away as
the light can reach us now, which is ~46 billion light years away
in all directions.

The point is that if there are observers on a planet - say 5 billion
light years away - they will also be in the centre of their observable
universe. We see them 5 billions year ago, and at that time they would
see us 5 billion years before that, which is 10 billion years ago.
They will see a very different universe than we see.

Point being, every point in the universe is in the centre of their
visible universe.

And since the red shift is caused by expansion of the universe,
it is obvious that the red shift increases with the distance
in all direction.

An observer 5 billion ly away will observe _exactly_ the same.

Do you really not understand that?

An 2D analogy of a 3D problem:
Put a lot of dots on a baloon. Blow it up. Think!
--
Paul

https://paulba.no/
Maciej Wozniak
2025-02-24 10:37:42 UTC
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Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
If the universe is spherical the surface has no center so we cannot be
on it. We have to be in the center of that sphere because the red-shift
is exactly the same in every direction.
Will you never learn that the observable universe is spherical
and we are in the exact centre? :-D
That's very cheeky, Paul, but you're still ending your comments with a
"duh." Will you never learn that the velocity-distance relation places
us at the center of the actual universe, and you can't deny that by
claiming the universe is a sphere and the surface of a sphere has no
center?
You miss the point completely!
We are _obviously_ in the centre of _our_ observable universe
because the most distant light sources we can see are as far away as
the light can reach us now, which is ~46 billion light years away
in all directions.
The point is that if there are observers on a planet - say 5 billion
light years away - they will also be in the centre of their observable
universe.
The point is that Paul has a DK syndrome and
thus he knows everything with no possibility
of a mistake, as expected from a DK idiot.
Thomas Heger
2025-02-22 08:58:30 UTC
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Post by Chris M. Thomasson
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation requires the furthest galaxies to recede
the fastest, making this Big Bang universe anisotropic.
The CMBR is isotropic.
Therefore, the CMBR disproves the Big Bang.
For fun, think if the "big bang" was nothing more than a very large
local explosion? Two super massive black holes finally merging into one,
kaaabooom! could be a candidate, perhaps?
The 'big bang' was 'the other side' (of a large black hole).


TH
Chris M. Thomasson
2025-02-22 20:28:55 UTC
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Post by Thomas Heger
Post by Chris M. Thomasson
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation requires the furthest galaxies to recede
the fastest, making this Big Bang universe anisotropic.
The CMBR is isotropic.
Therefore, the CMBR disproves the Big Bang.
For fun, think if the "big bang" was nothing more than a very large
local explosion? Two super massive black holes finally merging into
one, kaaabooom! could be a candidate, perhaps?
The 'big bang' was 'the other side' (of a large black hole).
Sometimes, I think we (are universe) is "contained" in a black hole
residing in our "parent" universe? Fwiw, check out this animation I did
on the normal field in red and its equipotential field in yellow:

https://www.facebook.com/chris.thomasson.31/videos/1145436857057561

I need to make another one and post it over on youtube. Sorry about the
FB link! ;^o
Thomas Heger
2025-02-23 08:18:58 UTC
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Post by Chris M. Thomasson
Post by Thomas Heger
Post by Chris M. Thomasson
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation requires the furthest galaxies to recede
the fastest, making this Big Bang universe anisotropic.
The CMBR is isotropic.
Therefore, the CMBR disproves the Big Bang.
For fun, think if the "big bang" was nothing more than a very large
local explosion? Two super massive black holes finally merging into
one, kaaabooom! could be a candidate, perhaps?
The 'big bang' was 'the other side' (of a large black hole).
Sometimes, I think we (are universe) is "contained" in a black hole
residing in our "parent" universe? Fwiw, check out this animation I did
https://www.facebook.com/chris.thomasson.31/videos/1145436857057561
I need to make another one and post it over on youtube. Sorry about the
FB link! ;^o
You should write a few words about the content of that animation and
what you're trying to illustrate.

TH
Chris M. Thomasson
2025-02-25 23:24:38 UTC
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Post by Thomas Heger
Post by Chris M. Thomasson
Post by Thomas Heger
Post by Chris M. Thomasson
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation requires the furthest galaxies to recede
the fastest, making this Big Bang universe anisotropic.
The CMBR is isotropic.
Therefore, the CMBR disproves the Big Bang.
For fun, think if the "big bang" was nothing more than a very large
local explosion? Two super massive black holes finally merging into
one, kaaabooom! could be a candidate, perhaps?
The 'big bang' was 'the other side' (of a large black hole).
Sometimes, I think we (are universe) is "contained" in a black hole
residing in our "parent" universe? Fwiw, check out this animation I
https://www.facebook.com/chris.thomasson.31/videos/1145436857057561
I need to make another one and post it over on youtube. Sorry about
the FB link! ;^o
You should write a few words about the content of that animation and
what you're trying to illustrate.
It's one of my experimental n-ary fields. Here is a 3-ary test as a
spherical projection:



be sure to look around.
Paul.B.Andersen
2025-02-23 19:07:29 UTC
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Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation requires the furthest galaxies to recede
the fastest, making this Big Bang universe anisotropic.
The CMBR is isotropic.
The temperature of the CMBR black body radiation is on average 2.7250ā°K,
but fluctuates between 2.7252ā°K and 2.7248ā°K in different directions.

So it is almost isotropic, but not quite.
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
Therefore, the CMBR disproves the Big Bang.
Do you mean that the velocity-distance relation requires
the temperature of the CMBR black body radiation to be
be anisotropic?

Can you explain why? :-D
--
Paul

https://paulba.no/
LaurenceClarkCrossen
2025-02-23 19:58:34 UTC
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You're still saying "duh" at the end of your comments.

It is virtually isotropic and the anisotropy is not consistent with a
velocity-distance relation. Yes, the velocity-distance relation does
require the temperature to be anisotropic, so you are wrong. It requires
it because it would have to be dispersed more further out resulting from
the expansion. How can you quibble with that?

"The radiation was isotropic, i.e., it had very close to the same
temperature all across the sky -- temperature differences of < 0.004 %
on angular scales of 7 degrees (excluding a well-known 0.12 % variation
known as the dipole anisotropy and finer, lower amplitude temperature
variations)"
Paul.B.Andersen
2025-02-24 14:17:53 UTC
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Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
You're still saying "duh" at the end of your comments.
You have the nasty habit of not quoting what you are responding
to, so I have to guess what you are talking about.
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation requires the furthest galaxies to recede
the fastest, making this Big Bang universe anisotropic.
The CMBR is isotropic.
The temperature of the CMBR black body radiation is on average 2.7250ā°K,
but fluctuates between 2.7252ā°K and 2.7248ā°K in different directions.
So it is almost isotropic, but not quite.
Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
Therefore, the CMBR disproves the Big Bang.
Do you mean that the velocity-distance relation requires
the temperature of the CMBR black body radiation to be
be anisotropic?
Can you explain why? :-D
It is virtually isotropic and the anisotropy is not consistent with a
velocity-distance relation. Yes, the velocity-distance relation does
require the temperature to be anisotropic, so you are wrong. It requires
it because it would have to be dispersed more further out resulting from
the expansion. How can you quibble with that?
You repeat your claim, but didn't answer my question:
Can you please explain why the velocity-distance relation
requires the CMBR temperature to be anisotropic?

It is indeed a weird claim, and:
"It requires it because it would have to be dispersed more further
out resulting from the expansion."
Is no explanation, it's another unfounded claim.

Why would the CMBR temperature have to be dispersed more further
out resulting from the expansion?

The temperature of the CMBR was 3000ā°K when the radiation was
emitted, and the expansion has now cooled it down to 2.725ā°K.
That is the result of the expansion.

Do you claim the velocity-distance relation requires
the CMBR temperature to be anisotropic because the temperature
would have to be dispersed (cooled?) more further out resulting
from the expansion ?

Please explain.

---------------------

I know from where you have got your stupid idea.

In another posting you quoted David Rowland:
Quote begin:
According to the Big Bang velocity-distance relation it is the same so
there would be a sprinkling of great attractors. If there is not, then
that contradicts the Big Bang Baloney. "From 1989 until 1993, COBE
satellite Explorer 66 investigated the cosmic microwave background [18].
Astrophysicists expected to see evidence of directional dependency
(anisotropy) that could be
traced back to the site of the alleged big bang. That was not what they
saw, however. Instead, Explorer 66 measured an isotropic blackbody
spectrum with little variation across the sky." - "Something is
Seriously Wrong with Cosmology" - David Rowland.
Quote end

It's not very smart to repeat claims you do not understand.
Just about everything David Rowland writes is nonsense.

Let's look at some of it:
About COBE:
"Astrophysicists expected to see evidence of directional dependency
(anisotropy) that could be traced back to the site of the alleged
big bang."

It was known from Penzias and Wilson's measurements in 1965
that the CMBR was approximately isotropic at ~3.5ā°K, but since
they measured it only at one frequency, nothing was known about
the spectrum.
https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aso/databank/entries/dp65co.html

When COBE was launched in 1989, astronomers thought the CMBR
was radiation from the BB, which mean that they expected
the CMBR to be isotropic black body radiation.
Which was what COBE found.

Claiming that:
"Astrophysicists expected to see evidence of directional dependency
(anisotropy) that could be traced back to the site of the alleged
big bang."
is incredible stupid nonsense.

So what about the statement:
"According to the Big Bang velocity-distance relation it is the same so
there would be a sprinkling of great attractors."?

A great attractor can only be a part of space where the collecton
of galaxies is denser than average. It will surely be
a sprinkling of great attractors in the univerese, the galaxies
are not evenly distributed. But what has this to do with the
velocity-distance relation?

Something is seriously wrong with David Rowland.
--
Paul

https://paulba.no/
Richard Hachel
2025-02-24 14:31:37 UTC
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Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Why would the CMBR temperature have to be dispersed more further
out resulting from the expansion?
It seems that the universe is expanding. It is swelling.
But it is swelling into what?

R.H.
Maciej Wozniak
2025-02-24 15:05:58 UTC
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Post by Richard Hachel
Post by Paul.B.Andersen
Why would the CMBR temperature have to be dispersed more further
out resulting from the expansion?
It seems that the universe is expanding.
And that Earth is flat and immobile.
Mikko
2025-02-25 15:53:03 UTC
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Post by LaurenceClarkCrossen
The velocity-distance relation requires the furthest galaxies to recede
the fastest, making this Big Bang universe anisotropic.
The CMBR is isotropic.
Therefore, the CMBR disproves the Big Bang.
There is a soution to GR where the universe expands and the universe
is isotropic.

Strictly speaking CMBR is not isotorpic but the dipole anisotropy
can be interpreted as a consqeunce of our own motion and all higher
order anisotropies are very small.
--
Mikko
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