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🧵 Untitled Thread

Anonymous No. 16089283

Will the heat death of the Universe really happen? Will the Universe really be permanently dark and empty?

Anonymous No. 16089286

Only way to be sure is to wait until it happens .. or not.

Anonymous No. 16089287

Tell me your story
Where's the alternations and potential examination?
Where's the special moves?
You're not man enough for this

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Anonymous No. 16089288

No. This idea mostly comes from the concept of dark energy, which is bullshit and is the 21st-century equivalent of aether.

Anonymous No. 16089292

>>16089288
You are weak, peasant. WEAK.

Anonymous No. 16089300

>>16089283
unless you are immortal, why does it matter?

Anonymous No. 16089315

>>16089283
black holes start evaporating at 10^40 years
last one will be gone at around 10^100 years

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Anonymous No. 16089322

>>16089286
Stop you, that sort of thinking is anti-science in current year.

Anonymous No. 16089529

>>16089283
The universe is already dark and empty bucko

Anonymous No. 16089538

>>16089283
Whatever creation mechanism spat out the energy at the big bang could happen again eventually. We empirically know it happened, do these mechanisms somehow get turned off?

If physical laws vary with time, then laws that allow for creation of energy can turn on again at some point. If they don't vary with time, then the creation mechanism should still be in play.

Imagine observing life on Earth, chalking it up to "abiogenesis" and then instantly turning around to say "abiogenesis can't happen". Same with energy genesis, it happened, go back far enough (pre big bang even) and it happened from nothing.

Anonymous No. 16090133

>>16089283
No, once everything decomposes into the base elements the field density of these base elements will become too great and new particulates will start forming under these pressures which cascade into higher order elements

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Anonymous No. 16090845

>>16089283

Anonymous No. 16090859

>I'm sooooo super smart!!
>I know everything about the entire universe!!
>no I do not have any useful skills or knowledge
>please listen to me while I roll my eyes back inside my head and start spouting off about how smart I am
no thanks

Anonymous No. 16091370

>>16089283
No, after you die the universe ceases to exist.

Anonymous No. 16091456

>>16091370
If the universe is eternal then you'll be unconscious until you're recreated by pure chance.

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🗑️ Anonymous No. 16091572

>>16089283
Space is fake

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Anonymous No. 16091581

>>16089283
Good news: earth is not a spinning ball in the "universe"

Anonymous No. 16092700

>>16089283
There will nothing left to perceive it,
so no.

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🗑️ Anonymous No. 16092773

>>16089283
Imagine a timeline that has low entropy in the past and high entropy in the future.

The further you go back, the lower entropy is. But that brings up the following mysteries:

1. If the universe started at the big bang, how did an extremely low entropy state with tons of energy arise from nothing?
2. If the big bang was not the absolute beginning, then entropy should decrease infinitely the further you go back in time. However this makes one encounter the idea that you have infinitely low entropy in the past and that an infinity of time has passed before our time. But if the universe is not eternal even before the big bang, then at some point immense amounts of energy would have to have been spawned in an extremely low entropy state.

The notion of an infinity of time having passed before us and the notion of higher and higher energy states up to infinity in the past is not feasible I think, so there has to have been a creation mechanism at some point in the past (doesn't have to be the big bang). Which makes one wonder, does such a mechanism just appear once and then turn off?

Current views on the fate and start of the universe are based on extreme extrapolations of relativity as if it were some source code of the universe. Relativity is not some source code of the universe, it predicts a lot of stuff wrong and is merely an approximation of nature. Relativity is not some sort of God maths that you can predict the universe with by going to the extreme ends with, it breaks down quite quickly.

TLDR: There is an eternal energy creating mechanism in the universe otherwise the big bang and all the energy in it could not have happened.

Anonymous No. 16092797

Imagine a timeline that has low entropy in the past and high entropy in the future.

The further you go back, the lower entropy is. But that brings up the following mysteries:

1. If the universe started at the big bang, how did an extremely low entropy state with tons of energy arise from nothing?
2. If the big bang was not the absolute beginning, then entropy should decrease infinitely the further you go back in time. However this makes one encounter the idea that you have infinitely low entropy in the past and that an infinity of time has passed before our time. But if the universe is not eternal even before the big bang, then at some point immense amounts of energy would have to have been spawned in an extremely low entropy state.

The notion of an infinity of time having passed before us and the notion of higher and higher energy states up to infinity in the past is not feasible I think, so there has to have been a creation mechanism at some point in the past (doesn't have to be the big bang). Which makes one wonder, does such a mechanism just appear once and then turn off?

Current views on the fate and start of the universe are based on extreme extrapolations of relativity as if it were some source code of the universe. Relativity is not some source code of the universe, it predicts a lot of stuff wrong and is merely an approximation of nature. Relativity is not some sort of God maths that you can predict the universe with by going to the extreme ends with, it breaks down quite quickly.

TLDR: There is an eternal energy creating mechanism in the universe otherwise the big bang and all the energy in it could not have happened.

AIFag !Gy8L8Ggb7w No. 16092807

>>16089283
>heat death of the universe
no, junk sciences are junk

Anonymous No. 16093313

>>16089283
I don’t know. Let’s wait and see.

Anonymous No. 16093458

>>16089283
the ingenuity of intelligent life may one day concoct a way to prevent the end of our universe