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Originally posted by 0mage
we're manipulating energy.. matter is energy. this stuff is like legos. Toys.
y do i laugh at scientists? ill be straight.. im only laughing at a particular sort of scientist.. the ones that claim there is no spiritual nature..
Originally posted by jiggerj
Originally posted by 0mage
we're manipulating energy.. matter is energy. this stuff is like legos. Toys.
y do i laugh at scientists? ill be straight.. im only laughing at a particular sort of scientist.. the ones that claim there is no spiritual nature..
Decent scientists would never make such a claim. They'd say there is no solid evidence. HA! Did you get that?? No solid evidence on the spirit world. Umphhh, I need a nap.
Thanks for making the best post in the thread which I starred, this is a good perspective!
Originally posted by Pinke
In context the person is describing the percentage of components the universe is made of that we understand. I don't think it applies to the whole thingo. 74% + 22% = 96%. 4% left ...
This seems more philosophical than scientific, but if someone else prefers red and I prefer blue I'm very tolerant to that point of view. But when someone claims that gravity doesn't really exist and you can drop something to show that it does, then we have an OBLIGATION to be intolerant of the type of ignorance that contradicts demonstrable evidence such as that. Remember the very basis of your post is scientific observational evidence, so it's hardly logical to say that we should use the observations of science to deny the observations of science, if that's what is being suggested.
Originally posted by 1questioner
To me, the fact that science admits how much it doesn't know should make everyone begin to act with a little more tolerance to the views and opinions of others. We don't know everything. In fact, we know very little and I for one find that humbling.
Originally posted by Arbitrageur
Thanks for making the best post in the thread which I starred, this is a good perspective!
Originally posted by Pinke
In context the person is describing the percentage of components the universe is made of that we understand. I don't think it applies to the whole thingo. 74% + 22% = 96%. 4% left ...
They aren't saying we understand 4% of the universe, they are saying we understand what 4% of the universe is made of: ordinary matter of the kind that you and I and the Earth are made of.
Obviously we still have much to learn about that 4%, so nobody has claimed we fully understand the 4%. All we are saying is we know it's matter.
This seems more philosophical than scientific, but if someone else prefers red and I prefer blue I'm very tolerant to that point of view. But when someone claims that gravity doesn't really exist and you can drop something to show that it does, then we have an OBLIGATION to be intolerant of the type of ignorance that contradicts demonstrable evidence such as that. Remember the very basis of your post is scientific observational evidence, so it's hardly logical to say that we should use the observations of science to deny the observations of science, if that's what is being suggested.
Originally posted by 1questioner
To me, the fact that science admits how much it doesn't know should make everyone begin to act with a little more tolerance to the views and opinions of others. We don't know everything. In fact, we know very little and I for one find that humbling.
Anomalies and discrepancies
There are some observations that are not adequately accounted for, which may point to the need for better theories of gravity or perhaps be explained in other ways.
Rotation curve of a typical spiral galaxy: predicted (A) and observed (B). The discrepancy between the curves is attributed to dark matter.
Extra fast stars: Stars in galaxies follow a distribution of velocities where stars on the outskirts are moving faster than they should according to the observed distributions of normal matter. Galaxies within galaxy clusters show a similar pattern. Dark matter, which would interact gravitationally but not electromagnetically, would account for the discrepancy. Various modifications to Newtonian dynamics have also been proposed.
Flyby anomaly: Various spacecraft have experienced greater acceleration than expected during gravity assist maneuvers.
Accelerating expansion: The metric expansion of space seems to be speeding up. Dark energy has been proposed to explain this. A recent alternative explanation is that the geometry of space is not homogeneous (due to clusters of galaxies) and that when the data are reinterpreted to take this into account, the expansion is not speeding up after all,[20] however this conclusion is disputed.[21]
Anomalous increase of the astronomical unit: Recent measurements indicate that planetary orbits are widening faster than if this were solely through the sun losing mass by radiating energy.
Extra energetic photons: Photons travelling through galaxy clusters should gain energy and then lose it again on the way out. The accelerating expansion of the universe should stop the photons returning all the energy, but even taking this into account photons from the cosmic microwave background radiation gain twice as much energy as expected. This may indicate that gravity falls off faster than inverse-squared at certain distance scales.[22]
Dark flow: Surveys of galaxy motions have detected a mystery dark flow towards an unseen mass. Such a large mass is too large to have accumulated since the Big Bang using current models and may indicate that gravity falls off slower than inverse-squared at certain distance scales.[22]
Extra massive hydrogen clouds: The spectral lines of the Lyman-alpha forest suggest that hydrogen clouds are more clumped together at certain scales than expected and, like dark flow, may indicate that gravity falls off slower than inverse-squared at certain distance scales
While you're taking a deep breath, I'm pretty impressed by that. I have a hard time hitting a hole in one 100 yards away!
To land, the probe required an accuracy compared to hitting a golf ball from Los Angeles to Scotland and scoring a hole in one.
That quote shows that we've made some observations we don't yet know how to explain. It doesn't show that we don't understand gravity, but instead may show that we have a hard time seeing or otherwise detecting things that are far away, that empty space has properties we fully don't understand which are manifested on cosmological scales, and so on.
Originally posted by 1questioner
What is being suggested is that we know "kind of" what gravity does, but we don't fully understand gravity:
We Only Understand Four Percent of the Universe
As others have pointed out, that's not accurate, because we don't claim to understand the 4%.
Originally posted by DeReK DaRkLy
I think a more accurate statement would be "We only understand four percent of the KNOWN universe..."
But yes, thank goodness many things are still unknown so this gives scientists plenty of things to figure out and understand. Life would be kind of boring if there were no mysteries to solve. So let's not pretend we know more than we do, but at the same time, don't fail to recognize what we do know and can accomplish with our current knowledge.
Originally posted by yourmaker
I don't believe that crap for one second, way to make it seem like we don't know ANYTHING.
i'd say more like 40% if anything, close to half if not passed it already. BS to think we only know 4%, laughable.