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Originally Posted by aerohead
5) Those with a more specialized knowledge of the universe will be acquainted with warped space-time and more sophisticated geometric representations required to describe reality.
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What goes around comes back around. Plato is a good marker:
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Plato's Model of the Universe and the Dodecahedron
www.faculty.umb.edu › gary_zabel › Courses › Phil 281b › Philosophy of Magic › Arcana › Renaissance › PlatoSolid.htm
to a recent theory the Universe could be a dodecahedron. It is surprising that Plato used a dodecahedron as the quintessence to describe the cosmos! Plato (c. 427 BC - c. 347 BC) also stated that time had a beginning; it came together with the universe in one instant of creation. A polyhedron bounded by a number of congruent polygonal faces, so
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aerohead
3) Are you in possession of a document which supports the assertion that, Voyager was capable of imaging the entire surface of an object this large, from a single observation point?
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[7) Alfven Waves ]
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12) Simulations would be nice to hear about.
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You are in luck, sir! This is from
hubblesite.org/contents/news-releases/2022/news-2022-006
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SUMMARY
FOR THE FIRST TIME, ASTRONOMERS HAVE RETRACED THE HISTORY OF OUR GALACTIC NEIGHBORHOOD, SHOWING EXACTLY HOW THE YOUNG STARS NEAREST TO OUR SOLAR SYSTEM FORMED.
Astronomers at the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian and the Space Telescope Science Institute have reconstructed the evolutionary history of our galactic neighborhood, showing how a chain of events beginning 14 million years ago led to the creation of a vast bubble that's responsible for the formation of all nearby, young stars.
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Rather than the four data streams from the Pioneers and Voyagers, they use multiple newly formed stars and superimpose their hypothesis.