@ue_research---development, on Jan 18 2008, 09:09 PM, said in you want to see:
I'm glad to see that you've physically been in space to test that and understand all properties of the universe such that you can make that assumption as an authoritative argument. How do you know those scientists aren't all lying to you? It's a conspiracy, like fluorinated water and polio vaccines, to undermine the sovereignty of the United States and set up a one-world government. Better put on your tinfoil hat, you never know what types of mind-control rays they've developed since NASA faked the moon landings.
Just don't make assertions you can't back up, and things will be fine. It's perfectly fine if you don't know anything- as long as you keep your hands off your keyboard, nobody will ever know! Seriously, now, do you really believe you know more than every single scientist who's done an experiment on thermodynamics? Or are they all conspiring to hide the truth from you? The burden of proof is on you. You give me proof that either all those scientists I mentioned are incompetent and you know better than them, or that you have evidence that they're hiding the truth in a massive conspiracy. Then let's talk.
Any experiment only applies to the area tested, as well as the fact that any experiment is inherently flawed via the limitations of the human mind and limitations on the time at which the human mind exists in reference to the history of the universe.
Thus, you can't extrapolate a give "law" or quality of life here on earth to the rest of the universe because no one has ever been beyond the moon. Therefore, no human can account for things that exist outside the biosphere or at least the primary gravitational pull of this planet.
What a pompous race we have become to actually think we have a monopoly on the properties of the universe. There is no reason to assume the properties that exist near Earth are indeed uniform or exclusive throughout the universe. Einstein's theorems and indeed all human thought are limited to the very mind and environment in which they were conceived. How can you argue that something is absolutely true, if you are indeed incapable of accounting for all effects and properties of the universe?
This post has been edited by Swithich : 19 January 2008 - 03:16 AM