Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Need a GENIUS ***CAN YOU ANSWER THIS FOR ME*****?

First, time is not energy. And time is also relative; it is not a constant. Second, energy and matter are interchangeable (the famous E=MC^2), which is how our Sun creates energy by fusing together hydrogen atoms (and other atoms). Interestingly, on the quantum level matter flashes in and out of existences. Third, life didn't start at zero. Rather, all the conditions must be perfect for life and it takes a long time to develop, which means those perfect conditions must last a long time in the same place in the universe. Answer to last question: Normally, science deals only with testable and measurable theories. Some scientists contend that theories concerning what happened before the "big bang" are not valid, since all existing evidence only traces back to the instant of the big bang. Other scientists contend that it is possible to understand what happened before the big bang, as the results are testable (Look up String Theory). The references to "thermodynamics" is questionable as these laws apply only to theoretical closed systems, and we don't know if the universe is a closed system. The laws of thermodynamics are really mathematical formulas, which are kind of hard to understand. I've found that folks who try to refer to the three laws, never do so with mathematical rigor. I doubt we will get a mathematician or physicist to take up your side of this question, as they would know that real proof is more than logic based on the reading of literal definitions.

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