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  4. If there was one Big Bang event, why not multiple big bangs?
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If there was one Big Bang event, why not multiple big bangs?

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Offline Just thinking

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Re: If there was one Big Bang event, why not multiple big bangs?
« Reply #640 on: 16/09/2021 19:11:33 »
Quote from: Bogie_smiles on 16/09/2021 18:54:51
Do brainwaves that are emitted as we think, contemplate and converse, get broadcast out into space and expand forever, perhaps to be intercepted, recorded, archived, and understood by some aspect of nature whereby they are accumulated in some way we don't know about? I'm not serious and that is not a question I am throwing out to the community; it is just personal brainstorming, looking for a thought path that could lead to hope that the unimaginable is true, that knowledge is accumulated by nature.
I believe it is very possible that our brain waves are received by the universe and recorded. There is a book that tells how someone is all knowing and knows more about us than we know about ourselves. I have a post that suggests that the universe is a brain.
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Re: If there was one Big Bang event, why not multiple big bangs?
« Reply #641 on: 17/09/2021 00:06:04 »
Quote from: Bogie_smiles on 16/09/2021 18:54:51

Do brainwaves that are emitted as we think, contemplate and converse, get broadcast out into space and expand forever, perhaps to be intercepted, recorded, archived, and understood by some aspect of nature whereby they are accumulated in some way we don't know about? I'm not serious and that is not a question I am throwing out to the community; it is just personal brainstorming, looking for a thought path that could lead to hope that the unimaginable is true, that knowledge is accumulated by nature.


Sorry for pressing the "post button" on this one, lol.



I don't really think that a brainwave gets very far out of our head before it's energy is usurped by encountering a myriad of energy waves from various origins. Gravitational wave energy is everywhere, coming and going, intersecting with each other, and contributing to the local wave energy density; don't you think?




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Re: If there was one Big Bang event, why not multiple big bangs?
« Reply #642 on: 17/09/2021 02:40:07 »
Quote from: Just thinking on 16/09/2021 19:11:33

I believe it is very possible that our brain waves are received by the universe and recorded. There is a book that tells how someone is all knowing and knows more about us than we know about ourselves. I have a post that suggests that the universe is a brain.
The sum of what we know is dwarfed by what we don't know, but that doesn't stop me/us from expounding on the possibilities.


Does the universe act like a brain? An argument can be made for that, but if true, it would be a pretty big entity (infinite and eternal) that would have to be connected and coordinated at a foundational level everywhere throughout the universe. The only physical "connecting tissue" I can think of that is everywhere throughout the universe is gravitational wave energy.


It would be my belief that the concept only works if matter is composed of gravitational wave energy and absorbs and emits gravitational waves continually. That would make "motion" the result of an imbalance in the gravitational wave energy density between separated objects, according to my model.




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Re: If there was one Big Bang event, why not multiple big bangs?
« Reply #643 on: 20/09/2021 14:49:35 »
Consider a speck of detritus in deep space, and since it is a tiny bit of matter, it emits gravitational waves. But to maintain its mass, it must also absorb incoming gravitational waves. In deep space those waves are weaker and far between, so does the bit of matter eventually "evaporate" due to the dearth of incoming?




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Re: If there was one Big Bang event, why not multiple big bangs?
« Reply #644 on: 20/09/2021 15:40:10 »
Quote from: Bogie_smiles on 20/09/2021 14:49:35
Consider a speck of detritus in deep space, and since it is a tiny bit of matter, it emits gravitational waves. But to maintain its mass, it must also absorb incoming gravitational waves. In deep space those waves are weaker and far between, so does the bit of matter eventually "evaporate" due to the dearth of incoming?
If we consider the known universe is swamped by radiation and gravitational waves this would allow for an open circuit if this is the case then the energy from all the stars can be interconnected. You may have heard of the spooky particle in quantum physics where one particle can instantly have a reaction with another. I have a feeling that this strange phenomena or something like it that has not been discovered as yet is the key to understanding the conscious universe.
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Re: If there was one Big Bang event, why not multiple big bangs?
« Reply #645 on: 23/09/2021 00:46:34 »
Quote from: Just thinking on 20/09/2021 15:40:10
If we consider the known universe is swamped by radiation and gravitational waves this would allow for an open circuit if this is the case then the energy from all the stars can be interconnected. You may have heard of the spooky particle in quantum physics where one particle can instantly have a reaction with another. I have a feeling that this strange phenomena or something like it that has not been discovered as yet is the key to understanding the conscious universe.
I'm on board with you on wondering about the source of consciousness. I would say that even starting from a lifeless environment, given hospitable conditions, life can spring from lifeless surroundings, and the natural biology of life can support evolution to the heights that we can see for ourselves, and presumably beyond. If that isn't spooky, I don't know what is, lol.




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Re: If there was one Big Bang event, why not multiple big bangs?
« Reply #646 on: 23/09/2021 14:59:04 »
I will say that the tiniest one cell protozoa seem to be able to spring from almost nowhere, nothing. As a kid, I put some weeds and grass from a nearby roadside ditch that floods when it rains, in a jar of water and hid it in my closet. My Mom (Edith Smiles) ;D  found it when it began smelling, lol. I examined a few drops of water from the jar and it was teaming with life, so even tiny protozoa have a cycle from parent to child that almost seems spontaneous, but that has a microscopic heritage.




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Re: If there was one Big Bang event, why not multiple big bangs?
« Reply #647 on: 23/09/2021 15:52:00 »
One thing that I noticed when watching the paramecium swimming around in the water under the glass was that when they bumped into something, they would back off and change direction. You could see the little cilia along the cell wall fluttering and propelling them along. They showed some instinct, which might be the early signs of intelligence, but clearly there was some rudimentary consciousness going on there.




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Re: If there was one Big Bang event, why not multiple big bangs?
« Reply #648 on: 24/09/2021 23:36:56 »
Quote from: Bogie_smiles on 23/09/2021 15:52:00
One thing that I noticed when watching the paramecium swimming around in the water under the glass was that when they bumped into something, they would back off and change direction. You could see the little cilia along the cell wall fluttering and propelling them along. They showed some instinct, which might be the early signs of intelligence, but clearly there was some rudimentary consciousness going on there.

I am quite interested in the micro world to I am looking for what is called a water bear to view and sperm is quite good to see if you have a male donor at hand a dog will do or even one's self. You do need a microscope of course with at least 200x magnification.
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Re: If there was one Big Bang event, why not multiple big bangs?
« Reply #649 on: 01/10/2021 17:07:45 »
Quote from: Just thinking on 24/09/2021 23:36:56
I am quite interested in the micro world to I am looking for what is called a water bear to view and sperm is quite good to see if you have a male donor at hand a dog will do or even one's self. You do need a microscope of course with at least 200x magnification.
There is no end to the amazing things in the micro world. But even in the macro world I am always discovering new and interesting things as I observe Nature on my walks. Recently I saw a team of ants dragging a dead grasshopper across the drive. I figure they would run into trouble fitting it in when they get it home, lol.




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Re: If there was one Big Bang event, why not multiple big bangs?
« Reply #650 on: 03/10/2021 18:05:11 »
Quote from: Bogie_smiles on 01/10/2021 17:07:45
... I figure they would run into trouble fitting it in when they get it home, lol.
I guess they will feed off of it, and cut it into pieces and store it below, yum.
imgres
(click "imgres" for images from the web)

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Re: If there was one Big Bang event, why not multiple big bangs?
« Reply #651 on: 04/10/2021 17:06:02 »
What I find more entertaining than the ants are the squirrels that don't abide by the rule that the seed I put in the bird feeders is for the birds. From dawn to dusk, as long as I keep seed in the feeders, there is a steady stream of birds and squirrels at the feeders hanging outside my windows. And there is constant competition among the four or five squirrels that are almost always hanging around there. They love to cling to the feeders by their hind legs and eat until they get knocked off their perch by other squirrels or incoming birds.


My bet is that this activity is universal, meaning that in a universe full of hospitable planets, of which some percentage are teaming with life, there are squirrels, or their living equivalents, jostling for the available food, all of the time in our multiple Big Bang universe.




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Re: If there was one Big Bang event, why not multiple big bangs?
« Reply #652 on: 04/10/2021 17:23:01 »
Quote from: Bogie_smiles on 04/10/2021 17:06:02
What I find more entertaining than the ants are the squirrels that don't abide by the rule that the seed I put in the bird feeders is for the birds. From dawn to dusk, as long as I keep seed in the feeders, there is a steady stream of birds and squirrels at the feeders hanging outside my windows. And there is constant competition among the four of five squirrels that are almost always hanging around there. They love to cling to the feeders by their hind legs and eat until they get knocked off their perch by other squirrels or incoming birds.


My bet is that this activity is universal, meaning the in a universe full of hospitable planets, of which some percentage of which are teaming with life, there are squirrels or their living equivalents jostling for the available food all of the time.
Good post. My wife loves taking photos of the birds around our home I take great pleasure in them as well You are very fortunate to have those little squirrels in your aria they must be a wonderful pleasure to watch. I think you are correct about the grasshopper he will have to be dismantled never mind. Keep up the good work and feed the little critters.
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Re: If there was one Big Bang event, why not multiple big bangs?
« Reply #653 on: 08/10/2021 16:13:45 »
As usual, the squirrels and birds are active. The hummingbirds have recently migrated (west to Texas, I hear) and won't be back until Spring. We miss them. But in the mean time, we have the Florida version of the changing of the Seasons. The big Live Oak tree holds it leaves forever, it seems, but there is some noticeable yellowing among the Arrowhead plants that grow along the lake shore. The grass still grows but doesn't need to be mowed quite as often, and it does show some yellowing in the sunny areas. The Spanish Moss that grows from the Oak trees that over hang the lake, accomplish long strands that occasionally touch the water, but it is now a little past its prime for the year. However, the Stag-horn fern that I transplanted to a crotch in the Oak tree is doing well, and stays green all year.

It is now raining cats and dogs in my vicinity on this little blue planet in the Milky Way.




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Re: If there was one Big Bang event, why not multiple big bangs?
« Reply #654 on: 15/10/2021 19:11:04 »
Quote from: Bogie_smiles on 17/09/2021 00:06:04
Quote from: Bogie_smiles on 16/09/2021 18:54:51

Do brainwaves that are emitted as we think, contemplate and converse, get broadcast out into space and expand forever, perhaps to be intercepted, recorded, archived, and understood by some aspect of nature whereby they are accumulated in some way we don't know about? I'm not serious and that is not a question I am throwing out to the community; it is just personal brainstorming, looking for a thought path that could lead to hope that the unimaginable is true, that knowledge is accumulated by nature.


Sorry for pressing the "post button" on this one, lol.



I don't really think that a brainwave gets very far out of our head before it's energy is usurped by encountering a myriad of energy waves from various origins. Gravitational wave energy is everywhere, coming and going, intersecting with each other, and contributing to the local wave energy density; don't you think?




96635,96652,96664,

Interestingly that our image is reflected into a mirror over a distance . Why not brain waves too ?

I am not here to discuss that though as I am more interested in your convergence theory .

Do you consider that when quantum fields converge such as the earths quantum field and perhaps a speculative Higgs field , that the two converged fields become heated elements ?

My simple logic for this is that within the earths atmosphere it is warm , where space is cold.

Space having a singularity field such as the HIggs while within our parameters there is a converged field ?

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Re: If there was one Big Bang event, why not multiple big bangs?
« Reply #655 on: 16/10/2021 01:12:21 »
Quote from: Black hole on 15/10/2021 19:11:04
Interestingly that our image is reflected into a mirror over a distance . Why not brain waves too ?

I am not here to discuss that though as I am more interested in your convergence theory .

Do you consider that when quantum fields converge such as the earths quantum field and perhaps a speculative Higgs field , that the two converged fields become heated elements ?

My simple logic for this is that within the earths atmosphere it is warm , where space is cold.

Space having a singularity field such as the HIggs while within our parameters there is a converged field ?


Yes; I would support you on that speculation, for discussion purposes. But to go any further, we would need some way of detecting fields that are as yet undetectable.

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Re: If there was one Big Bang event, why not multiple big bangs?
« Reply #656 on: 18/10/2021 14:29:22 »
The presence of quantum fields comes to mind. A quantum field is marked by the presence of a source of quantum waves, and encompasses the space from the source of those waves to their expanding spherical presence.
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Re: If there was one Big Bang event, why not multiple big bangs?
« Reply #657 on: 18/10/2021 15:07:24 »
There is a tipoff to the presence of quantum waves, and that is motion. A single tiny quantum wave is almost undetectable, but because matter has both inflowing and out flowing quantum wave activity (Quantum waves are gravitational waves), and quantum waves come directionally, in series, from the distant sources. Motion is the result. Motion is the combination of the net amount of inflowing energy and the magnitude of the directional sources of energy. So the cause of gravity is the imbalance between the directional sources of gravitational wave energy (quantum waves). Objects move in the direction of the net highest directional source of gravitational wave energy.


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Re: If there was one Big Bang event, why not multiple big bangs?
« Reply #658 on: 18/10/2021 16:25:23 »

The key word in that explanation is "net".


The key point is that matter has always existed,


and the key concept is that matter is composed of gravitational wave energy.

102037,
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Re: If there was one Big Bang event, why not multiple big bangs?
« Reply #659 on: 21/10/2021 21:31:35 »
If so, how does wave energy become solid matter? Or is it a better question to ask, "Is matter solid at all, or does it simply seem solid at the macro level? Perhaps matter is an organized blur of wave energy at the micro level, contained spatially by forces that don't allow even the tiniest of waves to ever stop moving?


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