Selah
New Member
You should read the whole thread again, while you may find some elements of physics a good part of it deals in metaphysics with God coming up a few times together with "energies", circle of life and consciousness. That's perfectly fine with me but it has nothing to do with science, as long as you keep that in mind go ahead.
While my English skills may be lacking you have to incorporate a semantic component to our "intelligent" discussion. Before having this conversation we should pin down common referents, otherwise communication is void. The ambiguity you speak of is not only there because of my choice of words, it's inherent to the language we use. We don't hear what the other person is saying, we hear his words and we interpret them through our own references and associative memory. This is exacerbated by the structural differences that exists between our languages and cultures. There is much more to it but this is off-topic as this deals with General Semantics. I'm not denying my poor choice of words here, but I think I took the time to explain what I actually meant.
We seem to struggle more with language than the actual content of our discussion. What you're saying is that we have a big problem if our assumption is not absolute, and afterwards you're saying: "Any good scientist understands from the start that it still is an assumption." So it needs to be absolute, otherwise it compromises our position, but it is not absolute as this would contradict the scientific method. The speed of light IN A VACUUM appears to be a constant. You should take a moment to google your assumption, there are more elements that needs to be taken into consideration before making assumptions about the "absolute " nature of the speed of light or the notion of it being a constant.
I already admitted I had been too quick to be so judgemental about you. However while my first post was ambiguous as you said I never claimed a single-point expansion, I already elaborated on that. Regarding the speed of light, I'm still upholding my view. There are no absolutes in science, the same can be said about the speed of light.
While my English skills may be lacking you have to incorporate a semantic component to our "intelligent" discussion. Before having this conversation we should pin down common referents, otherwise communication is void. The ambiguity you speak of is not only there because of my choice of words, it's inherent to the language we use. We don't hear what the other person is saying, we hear his words and we interpret them through our own references and associative memory. This is exacerbated by the structural differences that exists between our languages and cultures. There is much more to it but this is off-topic as this deals with General Semantics. I'm not denying my poor choice of words here, but I think I took the time to explain what I actually meant.
We seem to struggle more with language than the actual content of our discussion. What you're saying is that we have a big problem if our assumption is not absolute, and afterwards you're saying: "Any good scientist understands from the start that it still is an assumption." So it needs to be absolute, otherwise it compromises our position, but it is not absolute as this would contradict the scientific method. The speed of light IN A VACUUM appears to be a constant. You should take a moment to google your assumption, there are more elements that needs to be taken into consideration before making assumptions about the "absolute " nature of the speed of light or the notion of it being a constant.
I already admitted I had been too quick to be so judgemental about you. However while my first post was ambiguous as you said I never claimed a single-point expansion, I already elaborated on that. Regarding the speed of light, I'm still upholding my view. There are no absolutes in science, the same can be said about the speed of light.