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Date: 14 May 2007 10:07:35
From: Bullseye
Subject: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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Venus is sometimes so bright before even twilight that you can confuse it with a plane's lights here in the city. And it's supposed to look like another Earth, you know with clouds and an ocean visible. Why can't you see these features through a telescope? I know it's supposed to have a lot of clouds, but from the up-close pictures of the planet I've seen you're supposed to see some blue ocean, much like Earth. Are the white clouds just so abundant that the sun causes a glare to the observer and you can't observe any features?
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Date: 18 May 2007 21:59:01
From: Sam Wormley
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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Bullseye wrote: > Venus is sometimes so bright before even twilight that you can confuse > it with a plane's lights here in the city. And it's supposed to look > like another Earth, you know with clouds and an ocean visible. Bulls..., you should do some self education. http://images.google.com/images?q=Venus Magellan to Venus http://www2.jpl.nasa.gov/magellan/ http://www2.jpl.nasa.gov/magellan/anim.html > Why can't you see these features through a telescope? I know it's supposed > to have a lot of clouds, but from the up-close pictures of the planet > I've seen you're supposed to see some blue ocean, much like Earth. Are > the white clouds just so abundant that the sun causes a glare to the > observer and you can't observe any features? I suspect you are just trolling and probably belong in my killfile.
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Date: 16 May 2007 20:15:25
From: Phoon Hencman
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On 2007-05-14 06:07:35 -0400, Bullseye <bulls@ei.com > said: > Venus is sometimes so bright before even twilight that you can confuse > it with a plane's lights here in the city. And it's supposed to look > like another Earth, you know with clouds and an ocean visible. How long have you been on Earth? > Why > can't you see these features through a telescope? I know it's supposed > to have a lot of clouds, but from the up-close pictures of the planet > I've seen you're supposed to see some blue ocean, much like Earth. See above question... > Are > the white clouds just so abundant that the sun causes a glare to the > observer and you can't observe any features? I give up. Got Google?
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Date: 16 May 2007 18:10:55
From: Starlord
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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In the B-17's in WWII the tail gunners used to try to shot it down. -- The Lone Sidewalk Astronomer of Rosamond Telescope Buyers FAQ http://home.inreach.com/starlord Sidewalk Astronomy www.sidewalkastronomy.info AD World http://www.adworld.netfirms.com/
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Date: 15 May 2007 11:08:26
From: thad@thadlabs.com
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On May 15, 9:36 am, Bullseye <b...@ei.com > wrote: > On Tue, 15 May 2007 08:29:37 -0700, "Starlord" > > <starl...@sidewalkastronomy.info> wrote: > >I am not a beliver in any form of any so called god, I am a beliver and > >follower of the Big Bang. > > hmm, this thread might go on for more than 100 posts now. The Big Bang > in my opinion is still a primitive explanation of the creation of the > universe. We will find out more and more in the future. The Big Bang > doesn't explain everything and it also doesn't say there is no god. > That is if you view a god as some sort of creator, or "force" if you > will. Well that's my opinion. Kinda begs the question: who dropped trou and lit the fart we call the Big Bang? :-) Seriously, the real mysteries are: why is there anything, and in what is everything contained? Our perceptions don't permit understanding infinity and eternity, and unboundedness is mind-boggling.
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Date: 15 May 2007 22:15:40
From: Bullseye
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On 15 May 2007 11:08:26 -0700, "thad@thadlabs.com" <thad@thadlabs.com > wrote: >On May 15, 9:36 am, Bullseye <b...@ei.com> wrote: >> On Tue, 15 May 2007 08:29:37 -0700, "Starlord" >> >> <starl...@sidewalkastronomy.info> wrote: >> >I am not a beliver in any form of any so called god, I am a beliver and >> >follower of the Big Bang. >> >> hmm, this thread might go on for more than 100 posts now. The Big Bang >> in my opinion is still a primitive explanation of the creation of the >> universe. We will find out more and more in the future. The Big Bang >> doesn't explain everything and it also doesn't say there is no god. >> That is if you view a god as some sort of creator, or "force" if you >> will. Well that's my opinion. > >Kinda begs the question: who dropped trou and lit the fart we call the >Big Bang? :-) > >Seriously, the real mysteries are: why is there anything, and in what >is >everything contained? Our perceptions don't permit understanding >infinity and eternity, and unboundedness is mind-boggling. Well Stephen Hawking apparently knows what infinity and unboundedness is but can't explain it. Or at least in any comprehensible manner. And he makes it seem as if he's got god all figured out with a simple Big Bang theory which he doesn't.
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Date: 14 May 2007 09:51:05
From: AustinMN
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On May 14, 11:05 am, "MTA" <M...@nospan.com > wrote: > WOW..did you ever get sucked in by a troll! New ID, two hole posts, and both of them wrong. Great track record you have there, Empty-A. Austin
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Date: 15 May 2007 02:16:06
From: Bullseye
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On 14 May 2007 09:51:05 -0700, AustinMN <tacooper260@hotmail.com > wrote: >On May 14, 11:05 am, "MTA" <M...@nospan.com> wrote: >> WOW..did you ever get sucked in by a troll! > >New ID, two hole posts, and both of them wrong. Great track record >you have there, Empty-A. > >Austin Yeah he is the troll. Funny seeing a troll calling someone else a troll.
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Date: 14 May 2007 16:05:32
From: MTA
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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Troll question no doubt. "Bullseye" <bulls@ei.com > wrote in message news:rkcg43149e1dvj4qp72q36na6riqv4hnhv@4ax.com... > Venus is sometimes so bright before even twilight that you can confuse > it with a plane's lights here in the city. And it's supposed to look > like another Earth, you know with clouds and an ocean visible. Why > can't you see these features through a telescope? I know it's supposed > to have a lot of clouds, but from the up-close pictures of the planet > I've seen you're supposed to see some blue ocean, much like Earth. Are > the white clouds just so abundant that the sun causes a glare to the > observer and you can't observe any features?
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Date: 14 May 2007 06:51:08
From: Starlord
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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First of all the sat's that have returned photos do NOT show any ocean and we know that the surface of venus is around 900F and that there is no viggie life and that there are no oceans and the clound cover on venus is worst than the worst fogbank we've even seen, and the cloused are not of water they are of acid. -- The Lone Sidewalk Astronomer of Rosamond Telescope Buyers FAQ http://home.inreach.com/starlord Sidewalk Astronomy www.sidewalkastronomy.info AD World http://www.adworld.netfirms.com/
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Date: 14 May 2007 16:05:17
From: MTA
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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WOW..did you ever get sucked in by a troll! "Starlord" <starlord@sidewalkastronomy.info > wrote in message news:c9KdnQ878qtY9tXbnZ2dnUVZ_uzinZ2d@inreach.com... > First of all the sat's that have returned photos do NOT show any ocean and > we know that the surface of venus is around 900F and that there is no > viggie life and that there are no oceans and the clound cover on venus is > worst than the worst fogbank we've even seen, and the cloused are not of > water they are of acid. > > > -- > > The Lone Sidewalk Astronomer of Rosamond > Telescope Buyers FAQ > http://home.inreach.com/starlord > Sidewalk Astronomy > www.sidewalkastronomy.info > AD World > http://www.adworld.netfirms.com/ > > >
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Date: 14 May 2007 13:57:03
From: Chris L Peterson
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On Mon, 14 May 2007 10:07:35 GMT, Bullseye <bulls@ei.com > wrote: >Venus is sometimes so bright before even twilight that you can confuse >it with a plane's lights here in the city. And it's supposed to look >like another Earth, you know with clouds and an ocean visible. Why >can't you see these features through a telescope? I know it's supposed >to have a lot of clouds, but from the up-close pictures of the planet >I've seen you're supposed to see some blue ocean, much like Earth. Are >the white clouds just so abundant that the sun causes a glare to the >observer and you can't observe any features? Uh... there are no oceans on Venus. Nothing but rock. And yes, the clouds are much too thick to allow you to see the surface in visible light. Imaging the surface requires radar. When imaged in UV, some structure is visible in the clouds themselves. A few very experienced observers have reported subtle detail, but don't expect it. The attraction in viewing Venus lies in its phases, and significant size variation. The fact that these change quite quickly makes it an easy and interesting object to follow. _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com
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Date: 16 May 2007 13:28:45
From: oriel36
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On May 16, 10:51 am, Bullseye <b...@ei.com > wrote: > On Tue, 15 May 2007 18:59:52 +0000 (UTC), Andrew Smallshaw > > <andr...@sdf.lonestar.org> wrote: > >There > >are scientific arguments against the existence of God (which I > >deliberately am not bringing up as it's OT) but these will never > >be proof to those who accept their faith as axiomatic. > > These can be arguments, but quite silly as man cannot be so arrogant > to actually think they have enough scientific knowledge to say that. > As I said it will take a long time for science to get nearer to any > explanations. You could say science could even hit a wall for hundreds > or thousands of years once so much has been discovered. The rest might > prove too complex for simple minded humans to figure out. That's just > a theory of course. But we can be like chimps figuring out how to get > to a banana placed in a hard to get place. They're a far cry from > figuring out the universe. > > >> Science can also be silly sometimes. They explain certain occurences > >> on earth as "nature" or "mother nature", but using nature as a noun is > >> not scientific since scientists in no shape or form have ever detected > >> what specifically and literally "nature" is. Scientists can be > >> arrogant in the ways they seem to think they can explain everything. > > >This is actually science in action: Saying we just don't know > >about that and maybe we should find out is at the very heart of > >the discipline. Science, unlike faith, owes its very existence to > >the fact that we _don't_ have all the answers. > > No, I always hear "nature" has done this in documentaries and it > bothers me since scientists just throw that word out to describe all > the stuff they can't explain that goes on on Earth. They never say we > don't know exactly what "nature" is, it is something we haven't been > able to figure out yet, they just throw it out automatically so that > it explains all events on Earth. You are among those who have lost their intutive intelligence to recognise that creation is a fountain and not a cistern.All faith relies on the ability to appreciate the Eternal in temporal existence and most of all that love is the center of all things and not transitory ideas.The pre-Christian answer in Job amounts to beholding the vastness of creation once the shallow surface artifices are stripped away,the limitations are exceeded and we find ourselves participators in creation rather than commentators. http://www.usccb.org/nab/bible/job/job38.htm These anti-Christian and anti-intutive creatures,using a mixture of astrology and photography close the Universe in a celestial sphere bubble and would rob others of the experiences which the great Western astronomers fought so hard to realise.The empirical or 'scientific method' agenda was always going to be anti-faith insofar as it tries to assemble facts to conform with what it sees but that sight has proven unreliable as I have shown again and again. The author of Job knew the constellations - "Have you fitted a curb to the Pleiades, or loosened the bonds of Orion? " but he fits it into the swirling dynamic of creation and the joys as well as the pitilessness, carelessness, strengths, weaknesses, abilities that are often found in the form of man.There is no pretension in creation and it does not suffer a civilisation to survive that attempts to construct creation out of its component parts ,insofar as the foundations for constructing visions of the universe are based on the incorrect relationship between the axial and orbital cycles,you can imagine that what exists now are conceptual monsters. Copernicus,a Christian,was well aware of this - " although they have extracted from them the apparent motions, with numerical agreement, nevertheless . . . . They are just like someone including in a picture hands, feet, head, and other limbs from different places, well painted indeed, but not modeled from the same body, and not in the least matching each other, so that a monster would be produced from them rather than a man. Thus in the process of their demonstrations, which they call their system, they are found either to have missed out something essential, or to have brought in something inappropriate and wholly irrelevant, which would not have happened to them if they had followed proper principles. For if the hypotheses which they assumed had not been fallacies, everything which follows from them could be independently verified." De revolutionibus, 1543 Many ideologies have appeared that never made room for what Dante knew -" The Love which moves the sun and the other stars." notwithstanding that this is at the core of all Christian beliefs and especially in the life of Christ. What do you want proven Bullseye ?,you can go out yourself and discover that love is central to existence,that you are an astronomer because the motions of the Earth make your existence possible,that there is no special knowledge required to appreciate nature but just a respectful regard for physical considerations.The works of the great astronomers are found in this direction but the works of men who have turned our heritage into a celestial sphere cistern can only live off a pseudo-authority where investigation is no longer a facet of existence but a cruel tyrant built on self congratulation and pretension. If the doors of perception were cleansed everything would appear to man as it is: Infinite. --William Blake
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Date: 16 May 2007 21:20:09
From: Bullseye
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On 16 May 2007 13:28:45 -0700, oriel36 <kelleher.gerald@gmail.com > wrote: >You are among those who have lost their intutive intelligence to >recognise that creation is a fountain and not a cistern.All faith >relies on the ability to appreciate the Eternal in temporal existence >and most of all that love is the center of all things and not >transitory ideas.The pre-Christian answer in Job amounts to >beholding the vastness of creation once the shallow surface artifices >are stripped away,the limitations are exceeded and we find ourselves >participators in creation rather than commentators. > >http://www.usccb.org/nab/bible/job/job38.htm > >These anti-Christian and anti-intutive creatures,using a mixture of >astrology and photography close the Universe in a celestial sphere >bubble and would rob others of the experiences which the great Western >astronomers fought so hard to realise.The empirical or 'scientific >method' agenda was always going to be anti-faith insofar as it tries >to assemble facts to conform with what it sees but that sight has >proven unreliable as I have shown again and again. > >The author of Job knew the constellations - "Have you fitted a curb to >the Pleiades, or loosened the bonds of Orion? " but he fits it into >the swirling dynamic of creation and the joys as well as the >pitilessness, carelessness, strengths, weaknesses, abilities that are >often found in the form of man.There is no pretension in creation and >it does not suffer a civilisation to survive that attempts to >construct creation out of its component parts ,insofar as the >foundations for constructing visions of the universe are based on the >incorrect relationship between the axial and orbital cycles,you can >imagine that what exists now are conceptual monsters. Copernicus,a >Christian,was well aware of this - > >" although they have extracted from them the apparent motions, with >numerical agreement, nevertheless . . . . They are just like someone >including in a picture hands, feet, head, and other limbs from >different places, well painted indeed, but not modeled from the same >body, and not in the least matching each other, so that a monster >would be produced from them rather than a man. Thus in the process of >their demonstrations, which they call their system, they are found >either to have missed out something essential, or to have brought in >something inappropriate and wholly irrelevant, which would not have >happened to them if they had followed proper principles. For if the >hypotheses which they assumed had not been fallacies, everything which >follows from them could be independently verified." De revolutionibus, >1543 > >Many ideologies have appeared that never made room for what Dante knew >-" The Love which moves the sun and the other stars." notwithstanding >that this is at the core of all Christian beliefs and especially in >the life of Christ. > >What do you want proven Bullseye ?,you can go out yourself and >discover that love is central to existence,that you are an astronomer >because the motions of the Earth make your existence possible,that >there is no special knowledge required to appreciate nature but just a >respectful regard for physical considerations.The works of the great >astronomers are found in this direction but the works of men who have >turned our heritage into a celestial sphere cistern can only live off >a pseudo-authority where investigation is no longer a facet of >existence but a cruel tyrant built on self congratulation and >pretension. > >If the doors of perception were cleansed everything would appear to >man as it is: Infinite. --William Blake Please come back and post when you are not on crack.
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Date: 14 May 2007 16:07:01
From: Bullseye
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On Mon, 14 May 2007 13:57:03 GMT, Chris L Peterson <clp@alumni.caltech.edu > wrote: >On Mon, 14 May 2007 10:07:35 GMT, Bullseye <bulls@ei.com> wrote: > >>Venus is sometimes so bright before even twilight that you can confuse >>it with a plane's lights here in the city. And it's supposed to look >>like another Earth, you know with clouds and an ocean visible. Why >>can't you see these features through a telescope? I know it's supposed >>to have a lot of clouds, but from the up-close pictures of the planet >>I've seen you're supposed to see some blue ocean, much like Earth. Are >>the white clouds just so abundant that the sun causes a glare to the >>observer and you can't observe any features? > >Uh... there are no oceans on Venus. Nothing but rock. And yes, the >clouds are much too thick to allow you to see the surface in visible >light. Imaging the surface requires radar. When imaged in UV, some >structure is visible in the clouds themselves. A few very experienced >observers have reported subtle detail, but don't expect it. > >The attraction in viewing Venus lies in its phases, and significant size >variation. The fact that these change quite quickly makes it an easy and >interesting object to follow. > >_________________________________________________ > >Chris L Peterson >Cloudbait Observatory >http://www.cloudbait.com Right I've already admitted I was wrong about Venus. Looking back it's really silly that I said there were oceans in Venus as I know oceans would mean life. I just have the pictures stuck in my head of what I used to see in science textbooks and I swear they showed Venus as resembling Earth. Must be one of those false memories where you swear you remember something when you were little that could not of possibly happened. Like I remember when I was little I had memories of my parents wedding night and seeing my mother in a wedding dress- but I was born 7 years later so it couldn't of possibly happened :o !!
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Date: 14 May 2007 16:23:58
From: Chris L Peterson
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On Mon, 14 May 2007 16:07:01 GMT, Bullseye <bulls@ei.com > wrote: >Right I've already admitted I was wrong about Venus. Looking back it's >really silly that I said there were oceans in Venus as I know oceans >would mean life. I just have the pictures stuck in my head of what I >used to see in science textbooks and I swear they showed Venus as >resembling Earth. I recall such images as well. Certainly some of the science books I read as a kid in the 1960s suggested that Venus was some sort of tropical jungle world under the clouds. We first started getting a good handle on Venus's properties in the 1960s, so it isn't surprising that books from the time would be full of errors (especially children's books). Also, there was plenty of science fiction from that era that treated Venus as a hot, tropical world. _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com
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Date: 15 May 2007 14:07:14
From: Trane Francks
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On 2007-05-15 01:23 +0900, Chris L Peterson wrote: > Also, there was plenty of science fiction from that era that treated > Venus as a hot, tropical world. They at least got that part right. trane -- ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////// // Trane Francks trane@gol.com Tokyo, Japan // Practice random kindness and senseless acts of beauty.
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Date: 17 May 2007 10:45:56
From: oriel36
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On May 17, 3:23 pm, b...@isi.edu (Brian Tung) wrote: > Bullseye wrote: > > Of course since there is no proof in the scientific world yet. > > I don't think I conveyed my point properly; no one in the scientific > world is *looking* for proof. It's not a scientific question, whether > there's a god or not. Science is about looking for relationships of > natural phenomena with each other, and with mathematics. Questions of > religion and philosophy, it leaves to religion and philosophy. > > -- > Brian Tung <b...@isi.edu> > The Astronomy Corner athttp://astro.isi.edu/ > Unofficial C5+ Home Page athttp://astro.isi.edu/c5plus/ > The PleiadAtlas Home Page athttp://astro.isi.edu/pleiadatlas/ > My Own Personal FAQ (SAA) athttp://astro.isi.edu/reference/faq.html You are too stupid to comment on astronomy let alone matters of faith and that is the proper way religious people should approach you. You can wax lyrical about god ,science, and religion when you comprehend basic astronomical principles but you have not shown the intelligence to do even that.Unfortunate creatures like Bulleye know no better but if you expect that they represent the intellectual and intutive standard for Christians you can forget it. Bulleye and those like him are your best friend for they recognise that a division exists when that is an illusion.The great astronomers were men of faith which stands to reason insofar as the same intutive intelligence that recognises God in creation plays the same role in striving to understand the consequence of the astronomical cycles and especially those of the Earth.
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Date: 17 May 2007 04:02:34
From: oriel36
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On May 16, 10:20 pm, Bullseye <b...@ei.com > wrote: > On 16 May 2007 13:28:45 -0700, oriel36 <kelleher.ger...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > > > > > >You are among those who have lost their intutive intelligence to > >recognise that creation is a fountain and not a cistern.All faith > >relies on the ability to appreciate the Eternal in temporal existence > >and most of all that love is the center of all things and not > >transitory ideas.The pre-Christian answer in Job amounts to > >beholding the vastness of creation once the shallow surface artifices > >are stripped away,the limitations are exceeded and we find ourselves > >participators in creation rather than commentators. > > >http://www.usccb.org/nab/bible/job/job38.htm > > >These anti-Christian and anti-intutive creatures,using a mixture of > >astrology and photography close the Universe in a celestial sphere > >bubble and would rob others of the experiences which the great Western > >astronomers fought so hard to realise.The empirical or 'scientific > >method' agenda was always going to be anti-faith insofar as it tries > >to assemble facts to conform with what it sees but that sight has > >proven unreliable as I have shown again and again. > > >The author of Job knew the constellations - "Have you fitted a curb to > >the Pleiades, or loosened the bonds of Orion? " but he fits it into > >the swirling dynamic of creation and the joys as well as the > >pitilessness, carelessness, strengths, weaknesses, abilities that are > >often found in the form of man.There is no pretension in creation and > >it does not suffer a civilisation to survive that attempts to > >construct creation out of its component parts ,insofar as the > >foundations for constructing visions of the universe are based on the > >incorrect relationship between the axial and orbital cycles,you can > >imagine that what exists now are conceptual monsters. Copernicus,a > >Christian,was well aware of this - > > >" although they have extracted from them the apparent motions, with > >numerical agreement, nevertheless . . . . They are just like someone > >including in a picture hands, feet, head, and other limbs from > >different places, well painted indeed, but not modeled from the same > >body, and not in the least matching each other, so that a monster > >would be produced from them rather than a man. Thus in the process of > >their demonstrations, which they call their system, they are found > >either to have missed out something essential, or to have brought in > >something inappropriate and wholly irrelevant, which would not have > >happened to them if they had followed proper principles. For if the > >hypotheses which they assumed had not been fallacies, everything which > >follows from them could be independently verified." De revolutionibus, > >1543 > > >Many ideologies have appeared that never made room for what Dante knew > >-" The Love which moves the sun and the other stars." notwithstanding > >that this is at the core of all Christian beliefs and especially in > >the life of Christ. > > >What do you want proven Bullseye ?,you can go out yourself and > >discover that love is central to existence,that you are an astronomer > >because the motions of the Earth make your existence possible,that > >there is no special knowledge required to appreciate nature but just a > >respectful regard for physical considerations.The works of the great > >astronomers are found in this direction but the works of men who have > >turned our heritage into a celestial sphere cistern can only live off > >a pseudo-authority where investigation is no longer a facet of > >existence but a cruel tyrant built on self congratulation and > >pretension. > > >If the doors of perception were cleansed everything would appear to > >man as it is: Infinite. --William Blake > > Please come back and post when you are not on crack.- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text - These fools here believe that being 'religious' is a byword for ignorance and they have no reason to believe otherwise judging by your response. If all you can manage is a great bearded gentlemen in the sky then good for you,it is acceptable as a religious belief for those who direct their energies to more basic human endeavors but for those who ascend to astronomical affairs and how existence is a direct result of the cyclical motions of the Earth and the structure into which those motions occur,the same intutive intelligence which loves Christian faith is employed in trying to discern accurate astronomical working principles based on physical considerations.In short,you cannot be an astronomer and be anti-Christian or indeed any faith where the Eternal and temporal mesh. The only enemy Christianity has in mediocrity and these astrologers here have reduced the vibrant astronomical discipline of Copernicus,Kepler and Huygens to an exercise in magnification all imposed on an astrological framework.Should you doubt that the great Christians prefered a non believer to a mediocre one then be under no doubt - " I know what you have done, and that you are neither cold not hot (as a church). I could wish that you were either cold or hot! but since you are lukewarm and neither hot nor cold, I intend to spit you out of my mouth! While you say, 'I am rich, I have prospered, and there is nothing that I need', you have no eyes to see that you are wretched, pitiable, poverty-stricken, blind and naked (in God's sight). My advice to you is to buy from me that gold which is purified in the furnace so that you may be rich, and white garments to wear so that you may hide the shame of your nakedness, and salve to put on your eyes to make you see. All those whom I love I correct and discipline" Johanine Revelation So,stop your whining to these numbskulls who have no feel for astronomy never mind matters of faith.
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Date: 17 May 2007 11:24:46
From: Bullseye
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On 17 May 2007 04:02:34 -0700, oriel36 <kelleher.gerald@gmail.com > wrote: >On May 16, 10:20 pm, Bullseye <b...@ei.com> wrote: >> On 16 May 2007 13:28:45 -0700, oriel36 <kelleher.ger...@gmail.com> >> wrote: >> >> >> >> >> >> >You are among those who have lost their intutive intelligence to >> >recognise that creation is a fountain and not a cistern.All faith >> >relies on the ability to appreciate the Eternal in temporal existence >> >and most of all that love is the center of all things and not >> >transitory ideas.The pre-Christian answer in Job amounts to >> >beholding the vastness of creation once the shallow surface artifices >> >are stripped away,the limitations are exceeded and we find ourselves >> >participators in creation rather than commentators. >> >> >http://www.usccb.org/nab/bible/job/job38.htm >> >> >These anti-Christian and anti-intutive creatures,using a mixture of >> >astrology and photography close the Universe in a celestial sphere >> >bubble and would rob others of the experiences which the great Western >> >astronomers fought so hard to realise.The empirical or 'scientific >> >method' agenda was always going to be anti-faith insofar as it tries >> >to assemble facts to conform with what it sees but that sight has >> >proven unreliable as I have shown again and again. >> >> >The author of Job knew the constellations - "Have you fitted a curb to >> >the Pleiades, or loosened the bonds of Orion? " but he fits it into >> >the swirling dynamic of creation and the joys as well as the >> >pitilessness, carelessness, strengths, weaknesses, abilities that are >> >often found in the form of man.There is no pretension in creation and >> >it does not suffer a civilisation to survive that attempts to >> >construct creation out of its component parts ,insofar as the >> >foundations for constructing visions of the universe are based on the >> >incorrect relationship between the axial and orbital cycles,you can >> >imagine that what exists now are conceptual monsters. Copernicus,a >> >Christian,was well aware of this - >> >> >" although they have extracted from them the apparent motions, with >> >numerical agreement, nevertheless . . . . They are just like someone >> >including in a picture hands, feet, head, and other limbs from >> >different places, well painted indeed, but not modeled from the same >> >body, and not in the least matching each other, so that a monster >> >would be produced from them rather than a man. Thus in the process of >> >their demonstrations, which they call their system, they are found >> >either to have missed out something essential, or to have brought in >> >something inappropriate and wholly irrelevant, which would not have >> >happened to them if they had followed proper principles. For if the >> >hypotheses which they assumed had not been fallacies, everything which >> >follows from them could be independently verified." De revolutionibus, >> >1543 >> >> >Many ideologies have appeared that never made room for what Dante knew >> >-" The Love which moves the sun and the other stars." notwithstanding >> >that this is at the core of all Christian beliefs and especially in >> >the life of Christ. >> >> >What do you want proven Bullseye ?,you can go out yourself and >> >discover that love is central to existence,that you are an astronomer >> >because the motions of the Earth make your existence possible,that >> >there is no special knowledge required to appreciate nature but just a >> >respectful regard for physical considerations.The works of the great >> >astronomers are found in this direction but the works of men who have >> >turned our heritage into a celestial sphere cistern can only live off >> >a pseudo-authority where investigation is no longer a facet of >> >existence but a cruel tyrant built on self congratulation and >> >pretension. >> >> >If the doors of perception were cleansed everything would appear to >> >man as it is: Infinite. --William Blake >> >> Please come back and post when you are not on crack.- Hide quoted text - >> >> - Show quoted text - > >These fools here believe that being 'religious' is a byword for >ignorance and they have no reason to believe otherwise judging by your >response. > >If all you can manage is a great bearded gentlemen in the sky then >good for you,it is acceptable as a religious belief for those who >direct their energies to more basic human endeavors but for those who >ascend to astronomical affairs and how existence is a direct result of >the cyclical motions of the Earth and the structure into which those >motions occur,the same intutive intelligence which loves Christian >faith is employed in trying to discern accurate astronomical working >principles based on physical considerations.In short,you cannot be an >astronomer and be anti-Christian or indeed any faith where the Eternal >and temporal mesh. > >The only enemy Christianity has in mediocrity and these astrologers >here have reduced the vibrant astronomical discipline of >Copernicus,Kepler and Huygens to an exercise in magnification all >imposed on an astrological framework.Should you doubt that the great >Christians prefered a non believer to a mediocre one then be under no >doubt - > >" I know what you have done, and that you are neither cold not hot (as >a church). I could wish that you were either cold or hot! but since >you are lukewarm and neither hot nor cold, I intend to spit you out of >my mouth! While you say, 'I am rich, I have prospered, and there is >nothing that I need', you have no eyes to see that you are wretched, >pitiable, poverty-stricken, blind and naked (in God's sight). My >advice to you is to buy from me that gold which is purified in the >furnace so that you may be rich, and white garments to wear so that >you may hide the shame of your nakedness, and salve to put on your >eyes to make you see. All those whom I love I correct and discipline" >Johanine Revelation > > >So,stop your whining to these numbskulls who have no feel for >astronomy never mind matters of faith. > hmm seems at least the crack is wearing off a bit :)
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Date:
From: Martin Brown
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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Date: 17 May 2007 09:41:15
From: Bullseye
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On 17 May 2007 01:34:34 -0700, Martin Brown <
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Date: 17 May 2007 12:29:45
From: Pat O'Connell
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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Bullseye wrote: > On 17 May 2007 01:34:34 -0700, Martin Brown > <
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Date: 17 May 2007 21:46:33
From: Bullseye
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On Thu, 17 May 2007 12:29:45 -0600, Pat O'Connell <gypkap@comcast.net > wrote: >True--and since there's no evidence in those events of any deity mucking >about here, there's no evidence of said deity. Just lots of books >proposing the existence of lots of deities, and people proposing that >the rest of us give money to the proponents of the religions based on >those books. Religion is profitable. I don't know if you've read my other posts but I've said I believe in a "creator" and an not so much in religions. Watching events on Earth can give you "plausible evidence". You can't expect scientific evidence because you have to trust your human observation, and the intelligence you've developed over tens of thousands of years. Science can't compete with such a thing when it comes to these matters. Plausible evidence is also accepted by scientists for theories such as the theory of relativity. It can't be proved with instruments but it is widely accepted because physics and mathematics allow it and evidence suggests "chances" are very high it is correct.
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Date: 17 May 2007 01:09:44
From: Chris.B
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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If god still existed she would not allow religions to exist. God was killed by the Big Bang. She lit the blue touchpaper but forgot the part about retiring immediately. It amounted to the same thing. Shame there was nobody around to pick up the insurance pay-out. We are all still suffering from the fallout of her not leaving a will. Her children were standing further away but were blinded by the flash. So now we just grope around making up endless stories trying to explain her death. We are stardust, we are golden, We are billion year old carbon, ... And we got to get ourselves back to the garden. ;-)
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Date: 14 May 2007 22:50:22
From: Starlord
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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It's a HOT DRY world and any rain is pure acid. -- The Lone Sidewalk Astronomer of Rosamond Telescope Buyers FAQ http://home.inreach.com/starlord Sidewalk Astronomy www.sidewalkastronomy.info AD World http://www.adworld.netfirms.com/
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Date: 15 May 2007 14:25:10
From: Bullseye
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On Mon, 14 May 2007 22:50:22 -0700, "Starlord" <starlord@sidewalkastronomy.info > wrote: >It's a HOT DRY world and any rain is pure acid. Not a good place to go on vacation huh. Don't you just wish god gave us more planets to observe? There's good objects to observe miles from the city but in and around the city there's really only 3 good planets and the moon to observe. He could've made a few more :)
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Date: 17 May 2007 10:01:47
From: oriel36
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On May 17, 12:24 pm, Bullseye <b...@ei.com > wrote: > On 17 May 2007 04:02:34 -0700, oriel36 <kelleher.ger...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > > > > > >On May 16, 10:20 pm, Bullseye <b...@ei.com> wrote: > >> On 16 May 2007 13:28:45 -0700, oriel36 <kelleher.ger...@gmail.com> > >> wrote: > > >> >You are among those who have lost their intutive intelligence to > >> >recognise that creation is a fountain and not a cistern.All faith > >> >relies on the ability to appreciate the Eternal in temporal existence > >> >and most of all that love is the center of all things and not > >> >transitory ideas.The pre-Christian answer in Job amounts to > >> >beholding the vastness of creation once the shallow surface artifices > >> >are stripped away,the limitations are exceeded and we find ourselves > >> >participators in creation rather than commentators. > > >> >http://www.usccb.org/nab/bible/job/job38.htm > > >> >These anti-Christian and anti-intutive creatures,using a mixture of > >> >astrology and photography close the Universe in a celestial sphere > >> >bubble and would rob others of the experiences which the great Western > >> >astronomers fought so hard to realise.The empirical or 'scientific > >> >method' agenda was always going to be anti-faith insofar as it tries > >> >to assemble facts to conform with what it sees but that sight has > >> >proven unreliable as I have shown again and again. > > >> >The author of Job knew the constellations - "Have you fitted a curb to > >> >the Pleiades, or loosened the bonds of Orion? " but he fits it into > >> >the swirling dynamic of creation and the joys as well as the > >> >pitilessness, carelessness, strengths, weaknesses, abilities that are > >> >often found in the form of man.There is no pretension in creation and > >> >it does not suffer a civilisation to survive that attempts to > >> >construct creation out of its component parts ,insofar as the > >> >foundations for constructing visions of the universe are based on the > >> >incorrect relationship between the axial and orbital cycles,you can > >> >imagine that what exists now are conceptual monsters. Copernicus,a > >> >Christian,was well aware of this - > > >> >" although they have extracted from them the apparent motions, with > >> >numerical agreement, nevertheless . . . . They are just like someone > >> >including in a picture hands, feet, head, and other limbs from > >> >different places, well painted indeed, but not modeled from the same > >> >body, and not in the least matching each other, so that a monster > >> >would be produced from them rather than a man. Thus in the process of > >> >their demonstrations, which they call their system, they are found > >> >either to have missed out something essential, or to have brought in > >> >something inappropriate and wholly irrelevant, which would not have > >> >happened to them if they had followed proper principles. For if the > >> >hypotheses which they assumed had not been fallacies, everything which > >> >follows from them could be independently verified." De revolutionibus, > >> >1543 > > >> >Many ideologies have appeared that never made room for what Dante knew > >> >-" The Love which moves the sun and the other stars." notwithstanding > >> >that this is at the core of all Christian beliefs and especially in > >> >the life of Christ. > > >> >What do you want proven Bullseye ?,you can go out yourself and > >> >discover that love is central to existence,that you are an astronomer > >> >because the motions of the Earth make your existence possible,that > >> >there is no special knowledge required to appreciate nature but just a > >> >respectful regard for physical considerations.The works of the great > >> >astronomers are found in this direction but the works of men who have > >> >turned our heritage into a celestial sphere cistern can only live off > >> >a pseudo-authority where investigation is no longer a facet of > >> >existence but a cruel tyrant built on self congratulation and > >> >pretension. > > >> >If the doors of perception were cleansed everything would appear to > >> >man as it is: Infinite. --William Blake > > >> Please come back and post when you are not on crack.- Hide quoted text - > > >> - Show quoted text - > > >These fools here believe that being 'religious' is a byword for > >ignorance and they have no reason to believe otherwise judging by your > >response. > > >If all you can manage is a great bearded gentlemen in the sky then > >good for you,it is acceptable as a religious belief for those who > >direct their energies to more basic human endeavors but for those who > >ascend to astronomical affairs and how existence is a direct result of > >the cyclical motions of the Earth and the structure into which those > >motions occur,the same intutive intelligence which loves Christian > >faith is employed in trying to discern accurate astronomical working > >principles based on physical considerations.In short,you cannot be an > >astronomer and be anti-Christian or indeed any faith where the Eternal > >and temporal mesh. > > >The only enemy Christianity has in mediocrity and these astrologers > >here have reduced the vibrant astronomical discipline of > >Copernicus,Kepler and Huygens to an exercise in magnification all > >imposed on an astrological framework.Should you doubt that the great > >Christians prefered a non believer to a mediocre one then be under no > >doubt - > > >" I know what you have done, and that you are neither cold not hot (as > >a church). I could wish that you were either cold or hot! but since > >you are lukewarm and neither hot nor cold, I intend to spit you out of > >my mouth! While you say, 'I am rich, I have prospered, and there is > >nothing that I need', you have no eyes to see that you are wretched, > >pitiable, poverty-stricken, blind and naked (in God's sight). My > >advice to you is to buy from me that gold which is purified in the > >furnace so that you may be rich, and white garments to wear so that > >you may hide the shame of your nakedness, and salve to put on your > >eyes to make you see. All those whom I love I correct and discipline" > >Johanine Revelation > > >So,stop your whining to these numbskulls who have no feel for > >astronomy never mind matters of faith. > > hmm seems at least the crack is wearing off a bit :)- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text - Judging from your replies no wonder these fools sound like 'authorities' and judge people of faith even though they are not fit to speak on either astronomy or matters of faith. If your faith was strong enough you would not have to sound like an idiot but as you put yourself in a situation where you accept a division between matters of natural investigation and matters faith you deserve to be squashed like a bug here.Worse still,you make matters of faith in a God a byword for ignorance instead of the great inspirational force it actually is.
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Date: 17 May 2007 21:50:11
From: Bullseye
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On 17 May 2007 10:01:47 -0700, oriel36 <kelleher.gerald@gmail.com > wrote: >Judging from your replies no wonder these fools sound like >'authorities' and judge people of faith even though they are not fit >to speak on either astronomy or matters of faith. > >If your faith was strong enough you would not have to sound like an >idiot but as you put yourself in a situation where you accept a >division between matters of natural investigation and matters faith >you deserve to be squashed like a bug here.Worse still,you make >matters of faith in a God a byword for ignorance instead of the great >inspirational force it actually is. You should just go listen to George Michael's "You've gotta have faith" and let whatever drugs you're on wear off.
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Date: 17 May 2007 15:34:11
From: Jan Owen
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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"Bullseye" <bulls@ei.com > wrote in message news:9gjp43lsogl12reprtdostab42fmmdc5o1@4ax.com... > On 17 May 2007 10:01:47 -0700, oriel36 <kelleher.gerald@gmail.com> > wrote: > >>Judging from your replies no wonder these fools sound like >>'authorities' and judge people of faith even though they are not fit >>to speak on either astronomy or matters of faith. >> >>If your faith was strong enough you would not have to sound like an >>idiot but as you put yourself in a situation where you accept a >>division between matters of natural investigation and matters faith >>you deserve to be squashed like a bug here.Worse still,you make >>matters of faith in a God a byword for ignorance instead of the great >>inspirational force it actually is. > > > You should just go listen to George Michael's "You've gotta have > faith" and let whatever drugs you're on wear off. Actually, you should take your religious discussion elsewhere. This is an ASTRONOMY newsgroup... -- Jan Owen To reach me directly, remove the Z, if one appears in my e-mail address... Latitude: 33.6 Longitude: -112.3 http://community.webshots.com/user/janowen21
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Date: 18 May 2007 16:34:28
From: Bullseye
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On Thu, 17 May 2007 15:34:11 -0700, "Jan Owen" <janowen1@cox.net > wrote: >"Bullseye" <bulls@ei.com> wrote in message >news:9gjp43lsogl12reprtdostab42fmmdc5o1@4ax.com... >> On 17 May 2007 10:01:47 -0700, oriel36 <kelleher.gerald@gmail.com> >> wrote: >> >>>Judging from your replies no wonder these fools sound like >>>'authorities' and judge people of faith even though they are not fit >>>to speak on either astronomy or matters of faith. >>> >>>If your faith was strong enough you would not have to sound like an >>>idiot but as you put yourself in a situation where you accept a >>>division between matters of natural investigation and matters faith >>>you deserve to be squashed like a bug here.Worse still,you make >>>matters of faith in a God a byword for ignorance instead of the great >>>inspirational force it actually is. >> >> >> You should just go listen to George Michael's "You've gotta have >> faith" and let whatever drugs you're on wear off. > >Actually, you should take your religious discussion elsewhere. This is an >ASTRONOMY newsgroup... This ain't no religious discussion my friend. Alot of people here turn to space and "what's out there" for god. The physicts and scientists. Now I understand alot of people here just want to discuss astronomical objects, but there are some who will turn the discussion into a god discussion. I was the OP of the thread "Venus, why not a good planet to view". Somewhere along the line though someone turned the discussion into a discussion about god, not me. I jokingly just started off by saying "I wish god had made more planets to view" or something like that.
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Date: 15 May 2007 08:29:37
From: Starlord
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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I am not a beliver in any form of any so called god, I am a beliver and follower of the Big Bang. -- The Lone Sidewalk Astronomer of Rosamond Telescope Buyers FAQ http://home.inreach.com/starlord Sidewalk Astronomy www.sidewalkastronomy.info AD World http://www.adworld.netfirms.com/ "Bullseye" <bulls@ei.com > wrote in message news:4igj4319na1abb7f3cctl58n6ql25hpoio@4ax.com... > On Mon, 14 May 2007 22:50:22 -0700, "Starlord" > <starlord@sidewalkastronomy.info> wrote: >
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Date: 15 May 2007 16:36:05
From: Bullseye
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On Tue, 15 May 2007 08:29:37 -0700, "Starlord" <starlord@sidewalkastronomy.info > wrote: >I am not a beliver in any form of any so called god, I am a beliver and >follower of the Big Bang. hmm, this thread might go on for more than 100 posts now. The Big Bang in my opinion is still a primitive explanation of the creation of the universe. We will find out more and more in the future. The Big Bang doesn't explain everything and it also doesn't say there is no god. That is if you view a god as some sort of creator, or "force" if you will. Well that's my opinion.
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Date: 20 May 2007 03:47:28
From: oriel36
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On May 19, 8:05 pm, Andrew Smallshaw <andr...@sdf.lonestar.org > wrote: > On 2007-05-19, oriel36 <kelleher.ger...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > Funny,funny funny. > > > A branch of physics indeed !!. > > > The funny part is that Newton never realised that there is a > > celestial sphere framework at the core of Flamsteed's astrological > > 'proof' for axial rotation so while physicists may glory that > > 'astronomy' is a branch of physics the truth is that astrology is a > > vital part of physics and its 'predictions'. > > Yes, you are of course correct. It must be wonderful always being > right despite whatever source I care to refer to directly contradicting > you. I envy you. > > <plonk> > > -- > Andrew Smallshaw > andr...@sdf.lonestar.org Sure enough,your reference reduces astronomy to a branch of physics (which is actually the late 17th century empirical cult ) - http://wordnet.princeton.edu/ When it comes to breaking this cult,specifically the empirical robbing of astronomical methods and insights and transfering them to 'experimental 'endeavors,there really is no competition.Contemporary imaging makes understanding of our planetary motions so easy nowadays that only the severely indoctrinated would dare challenge the validity of the original Copernican reasoning and although empirical science successfully tried to do just that for the last 3 centuries,ultimately we see our motion around the Sun allong with the other planets from an orbitally moving Earth. " For to the earth planetary motions appear sometimes direct, sometimes stationary, nay, and sometimes retrograde. But from the sun they are always seen direct," Newton The severly indoctrinated will not see anything wrong with that statement but modern imaging shows just how wrong that person can got it. Against the background stars,the plotted positions of the planets appear to stop ,go backwards and then go forwards again - http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/image/0112/jupsatloop_tezel.jpg When you perceive the orbital motion of the Earth overtaking these planets then the apparent retrogrades disappear - http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/image/0112/JuSa2000_tezel.gif That is not so hard is it ?.No hypothetical observer on the Sun and a healthy appreciation for what retrogrades are and how their resolution leads to appreciating the fact that once you explain the orbital motion of the Earth this way,it leaves axial rotation to explain the daily cycle. With contemporary imaging and time lapse footage is it not gorgeous enough for you ?
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Date: 19 May 2007 11:05:41
From: oriel36
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On May 19, 2:34 pm, Andrew Smallshaw <andr...@sdf.lonestar.org > wrote: > On 2007-05-19, oriel36 <kelleher.ger...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > On May 18, 4:40 pm, Andrew Smallshaw <andr...@sdf.lonestar.org> wrote: > > >> QED this group has nothing to do with astrology. In general if > >> you're new to a group it's best to lurk for a while to see what is > >> and is not on topic before spouting forth with your assumptions > >> about what the group is about. You've been shown to be wrong. > >> Now fuck off somewhere where your posts ARE on topic. > > > You genuinely do not know that you are astrologers and that your > > interests are entirely based on a constellational framework.I do not > > object to that but unfortunately the rest of humanitys thinks you are > > astronomers by virtue of magnification but do not realise that you > > actually detest astronomy and especially heliocentric Western > > astronomical methods and insights. > > You at least pretend to not know the difference between the two. > As a reminder: > > From WordNet (r) 2.0 [wn]: > > astronomy > n : the branch of physics that studies celestial bodies and the > universe as a whole [syn: {uranology}] > Funny,funny funny. A branch of physics indeed !!. The funny part is that Newton never realised that there is a celestial sphere framework at the core of Flamsteed's astrological 'proof' for axial rotation so while physicists may glory that 'astronomy' is a branch of physics the truth is that astrology is a vital part of physics and its 'predictions'. Astronomy is the oldest human discipline because humans live by the astronomical cycles,the contemporary version of 'astronomy' amounts to no more than a magnification exercise and nothing like the magnificent and vibrant arena it actually is. > astrology > n : a pseudoscience claiming divination by the positions of the > planets and sun and moon [syn: {star divination}] > > I went through all about the use of the constellations on Tuseday in > <slrnf4jp29.h80.andr...@sdf.lonestar.org>. You actually replied > to that but failed to address any of the points raised. Therefore > it isn't worth continuing that argument. > > > "May 19th wasn't selected by accident. On that night the twins of > > Gemini will appear to stand above the western horizon for Northern > > Hemisphere observers, and the Moon and Venus - just 2=B0 apart - will > > adorn the waist of Gemini's western twin Castor. Saturn gives the > > constellation Leo a bright beige nose all night long, and Jupiter will > > appear late and stay low in the southern sky for those in mid- to > > high- northern latitudes." > > So what? Do you dispute that those objects _were_ visible and easy > to find on that night? That's the only reason it was chosen. I > suspect on past form I own't get a meaningful reply. Prepare to > be plonked when you confirm my suspicion. > > -- > Andrew Smallshaw > andr...@sdf.lonestar.org I have to laugh that 'astronomy' is seen now as a branch of physics but I guess the astrological guys are not going to let you in on a little secret.You probably will get a strong hint from the Sky and Telescope article but then again,maybe not.
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Date: 19 May 2007 19:05:24
From: Andrew Smallshaw
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On 2007-05-19, oriel36 <kelleher.gerald@gmail.com > wrote: > > Funny,funny funny. > > A branch of physics indeed !!. > > The funny part is that Newton never realised that there is a > celestial sphere framework at the core of Flamsteed's astrological > 'proof' for axial rotation so while physicists may glory that > 'astronomy' is a branch of physics the truth is that astrology is a > vital part of physics and its 'predictions'. Yes, you are of course correct. It must be wonderful always being right despite whatever source I care to refer to directly contradicting you. I envy you. <plonk > -- Andrew Smallshaw andrews@sdf.lonestar.org
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Date: 19 May 2007 02:36:25
From: oriel36
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On May 18, 4:40 pm, Andrew Smallshaw <andr...@sdf.lonestar.org > wrote: > On 2007-05-18, oriel36 <kelleher.ger...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > On May 17, 11:34 pm, "Jan Owen" <janow...@cox.net> wrote: > > >> Actually, you should take your religious discussion elsewhere. This i= s an > >> ASTRONOMY newsgroup... > > > This is an ASTROLOGICAL newsgroup,your observations are all framed in > > Wrong. This is an ASTRONOMY newsgroup. From the original RFD that > created this group back in 1994: > > RATIONALE > > A USENET newsgroup solely dedicated to the discussion of topics of > interest to amateur (or "backyard") astronomers does not currently > exist. Such discussions are currently carried out on sci.astro. The > volume of traffic on sci.astro, however, has recently grown to the po= int > where many people believe that a new group dedicated to the discussion > of amateur astronomy would be beneficial. Additionally, many readers= of > sci.astro have expressed frustration at having to wade through the mo= re > technical posts on the sciences of astronomy and cosmology to get to = the > ones dealing with amateur astronomy. > > QED this group has nothing to do with astrology. In general if > you're new to a group it's best to lurk for a while to see what is > and is not on topic before spouting forth with your assumptions > about what the group is about. You've been shown to be wrong. > Now fuck off somewhere where your posts ARE on topic. > You genuinely do not know that you are astrologers and that your interests are entirely based on a constellational framework.I do not object to that but unfortunately the rest of humanitys thinks you are astronomers by virtue of magnification but do not realise that you actually detest astronomy and especially heliocentric Western astronomical methods and insights. "May 19th wasn't selected by accident. On that night the twins of Gemini will appear to stand above the western horizon for Northern Hemisphere observers, and the Moon and Venus - just 2=B0 apart - will adorn the waist of Gemini's western twin Castor. Saturn gives the constellation Leo a bright beige nose all night long, and Jupiter will appear late and stay low in the southern sky for those in mid- to high- northern latitudes." http://skytonight.com/news/International_Sidewalk_Astronomy_Night.html > -- > Andrew Smallshaw > andr...@sdf.lonestar.org
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Date: 19 May 2007 13:34:06
From: Andrew Smallshaw
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On 2007-05-19, oriel36 <kelleher.gerald@gmail.com > wrote: > On May 18, 4:40 pm, Andrew Smallshaw <andr...@sdf.lonestar.org> wrote: >> >> QED this group has nothing to do with astrology. In general if >> you're new to a group it's best to lurk for a while to see what is >> and is not on topic before spouting forth with your assumptions >> about what the group is about. You've been shown to be wrong. >> Now fuck off somewhere where your posts ARE on topic. > > You genuinely do not know that you are astrologers and that your > interests are entirely based on a constellational framework.I do not > object to that but unfortunately the rest of humanitys thinks you are > astronomers by virtue of magnification but do not realise that you > actually detest astronomy and especially heliocentric Western > astronomical methods and insights. You at least pretend to not know the difference between the two. As a reminder: From WordNet (r) 2.0 [wn]: astronomy n : the branch of physics that studies celestial bodies and the universe as a whole [syn: {uranology}] astrology n : a pseudoscience claiming divination by the positions of the planets and sun and moon [syn: {star divination}] I went through all about the use of the constellations on Tuseday in <slrnf4jp29.h80.andrews@sdf.lonestar.org >. You actually replied to that but failed to address any of the points raised. Therefore it isn't worth continuing that argument. > "May 19th wasn't selected by accident. On that night the twins of > Gemini will appear to stand above the western horizon for Northern > Hemisphere observers, and the Moon and Venus - just 2° apart - will > adorn the waist of Gemini's western twin Castor. Saturn gives the > constellation Leo a bright beige nose all night long, and Jupiter will > appear late and stay low in the southern sky for those in mid- to > high- northern latitudes." So what? Do you dispute that those objects _were_ visible and easy to find on that night? That's the only reason it was chosen. I suspect on past form I own't get a meaningful reply. Prepare to be plonked when you confirm my suspicion. -- Andrew Smallshaw andrews@sdf.lonestar.org
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Date: 18 May 2007 03:23:18
From: oriel36
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On May 17, 11:34 pm, "Jan Owen" <janow...@cox.net > wrote: > "Bullseye" <b...@ei.com> wrote in message > > news:9gjp43lsogl12reprtdostab42fmmdc5o1@4ax.com... > > > > > > > On 17 May 2007 10:01:47 -0700, oriel36 <kelleher.ger...@gmail.com> > > wrote: > > >>Judging from your replies no wonder these fools sound like > >>'authorities' and judge people of faith even though they are not fit > >>to speak on either astronomy or matters of faith. > > >>If your faith was strong enough you would not have to sound like an > >>idiot but as you put yourself in a situation where you accept a > >>division between matters of natural investigation and matters faith > >>you deserve to be squashed like a bug here.Worse still,you make > >>matters of faith in a God a byword for ignorance instead of the great > >>inspirational force it actually is. > > > You should just go listen to George Michael's "You've gotta have > > faith" and let whatever drugs you're on wear off. > > Actually, you should take your religious discussion elsewhere. This is an > ASTRONOMY newsgroup... > This is an ASTROLOGICAL newsgroup,your observations are all framed in zodiac terms,your ideas for the Earth's motions are based on celestial sphere terms,you never mention the work of the astronomer who did not require telescopes and your terminology of 'pursuing' and 'bagging' celestial objects highlights that your magnification exercise goes no further than self-congratulation. The excerpt from your magasine says it all in an unapologetic astrological way - "May 19th wasn't selected by accident. On that night the twins of Gemini will appear to stand above the western horizon for Northern Hemisphere observers, and the Moon and Venus - just 2=B0 apart - will adorn the waist of Gemini's western twin Castor. Saturn gives the constellation Leo a bright beige nose all night long, and Jupiter will appear late and stay low in the southern sky for those in mid- to high- northern latitudes." http://skytonight.com/news/International_Sidewalk_Astronomy_Night.html At least you are under no illusions what you actually are even as you all bestow the title of 'astronomers' on yourselves,the truth is that you detest astronomy. > -- > Jan Owen > > To reach me directly, remove the Z, if one appears in my e-mail address... > Latitude: 33.6 > Longitude: -112.3http://community.webshots.com/user/janowen21- Hide quote= d text - > > - Show quoted text -
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Date: 18 May 2007 15:40:30
From: Andrew Smallshaw
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On 2007-05-18, oriel36 <kelleher.gerald@gmail.com > wrote: > On May 17, 11:34 pm, "Jan Owen" <janow...@cox.net> wrote: >> >> Actually, you should take your religious discussion elsewhere. This is an >> ASTRONOMY newsgroup... >> > > This is an ASTROLOGICAL newsgroup,your observations are all framed in Wrong. This is an ASTRONOMY newsgroup. From the original RFD that created this group back in 1994: RATIONALE A USENET newsgroup solely dedicated to the discussion of topics of interest to amateur (or "backyard") astronomers does not currently exist. Such discussions are currently carried out on sci.astro. The volume of traffic on sci.astro, however, has recently grown to the point where many people believe that a new group dedicated to the discussion of amateur astronomy would be beneficial. Additionally, many readers of sci.astro have expressed frustration at having to wade through the more technical posts on the sciences of astronomy and cosmology to get to the ones dealing with amateur astronomy. QED this group has nothing to do with astrology. In general if you're new to a group it's best to lurk for a while to see what is and is not on topic before spouting forth with your assumptions about what the group is about. You've been shown to be wrong. Now fuck off somewhere where your posts ARE on topic. -- Andrew Smallshaw andrews@sdf.lonestar.org
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Date: 18 May 2007 20:08:12
From: Bullseye
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On Fri, 18 May 2007 15:40:30 +0000 (UTC), Andrew Smallshaw <andrews@sdf.lonestar.org > wrote: >Wrong. This is an ASTRONOMY newsgroup. From the original RFD that >created this group back in 1994: > >RATIONALE > > A USENET newsgroup solely dedicated to the discussion of topics of > interest to amateur (or "backyard") astronomers does not currently > exist. Such discussions are currently carried out on sci.astro. The > volume of traffic on sci.astro, however, has recently grown to the point > where many people believe that a new group dedicated to the discussion > of amateur astronomy would be beneficial. Additionally, many readers of > sci.astro have expressed frustration at having to wade through the more > technical posts on the sciences of astronomy and cosmology to get to the > ones dealing with amateur astronomy. > >QED this group has nothing to do with astrology. In general if >you're new to a group it's best to lurk for a while to see what is >and is not on topic before spouting forth with your assumptions >about what the group is about. You've been shown to be wrong. >Now fuck off somewhere where your posts ARE on topic. > >-- >Andrew Smallshaw >andrews@sdf.lonestar.org ............../´¯/)............(\¯`\ ............/....//.............\\...\ .........../....//...............\\....\ ...../´¯/..../´¯\.........../¯`\....\¯`\ .././.../..../..../.
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Date: 18 May 2007 15:00:11
From: Jan Owen
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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PLONK! -- Jan Owen To reach me directly, remove the Z, if one appears in my e-mail address... Latitude: 33.6 Longitude: -112.3
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Date: 18 May 2007 03:15:53
From: oriel36
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On May 17, 10:50 pm, Bullseye <b...@ei.com > wrote: > On 17 May 2007 10:01:47 -0700, oriel36 <kelleher.ger...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > >Judging from your replies no wonder these fools sound like > >'authorities' and judge people of faith even though they are not fit > >to speak on either astronomy or matters of faith. > > >If your faith was strong enough you would not have to sound like an > >idiot but as you put yourself in a situation where you accept a > >division between matters of natural investigation and matters faith > >you deserve to be squashed like a bug here.Worse still,you make > >matters of faith in a God a byword for ignorance instead of the great > >inspirational force it actually is. > > You should just go listen to George Michael's "You've gotta have > faith" and let whatever drugs you're on wear off. You are these fools best friend but too dumb to know any better.
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Date: 15 May 2007 10:49:14
From: Starlord
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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The Church of Eternity http://home.inreach.com/starlord/church/Eternity.html -- The Lone Sidewalk Astronomer of Rosamond Telescope Buyers FAQ http://home.inreach.com/starlord Sidewalk Astronomy www.sidewalkastronomy.info AD World http://www.adworld.netfirms.com/ "Bullseye" <bulls@ei.com > wrote in message news:i7oj439cm7lng84srlgs7adt6ohk3l8t19@4ax.com... > On Tue, 15 May 2007 08:29:37 -0700, "Starlord" > <starlord@sidewalkastronomy.info> wrote: > >>I am not a beliver in any form of any so called god, I am a beliver and >>follower of the Big Bang. > > > hmm, this thread might go on for more than 100 posts now. The Big Bang > in my opinion is still a primitive explanation of the creation of the > universe. We will find out more and more in the future. The Big Bang > doesn't explain everything and it also doesn't say there is no god. > That is if you view a god as some sort of creator, or "force" if you > will. Well that's my opinion.
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Date: 15 May 2007 10:49:47
From: Pat O'Connell
Subject: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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Bullseye wrote: > On Tue, 15 May 2007 08:29:37 -0700, "Starlord" > <starlord@sidewalkastronomy.info> wrote: > >>I am not a believer in any form of any so called god, I am a believer and >>follower of the Big Bang. > > > hmm, this thread might go on for more than 100 posts now. The Big Bang > in my opinion is still a primitive explanation of the creation of the > universe. We will find out more and more in the future. The Big Bang > doesn't explain everything and it also doesn't say there is no god. > That is if you view a god as some sort of creator, or "force" if you > will. Well that's my opinion. As someone else pointed out in another recent post, the existence of the Universe doesn't require any deity--no belief system is necessary. Apparently universes spring up on a regular basis without magic being required, simply because there's a finite positive probability that they can exist. Take a look at issues of Sky and Telescope or Astronomy magazines in the last couple of years...several articles exist. -- Pat O'Connell [note munged EMail address] Take nothing but pictures, Leave nothing but footprints, Kill nothing but vandals...
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Date: 15 May 2007 18:13:03
From: Bullseye
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On Tue, 15 May 2007 10:49:47 -0600, Pat O'Connell <gypkap@comcast.net > wrote: >Bullseye wrote: >> On Tue, 15 May 2007 08:29:37 -0700, "Starlord" >> <starlord@sidewalkastronomy.info> wrote: >> >>>I am not a believer in any form of any so called god, I am a believer and >>>follower of the Big Bang. >> >> >> hmm, this thread might go on for more than 100 posts now. The Big Bang >> in my opinion is still a primitive explanation of the creation of the >> universe. We will find out more and more in the future. The Big Bang >> doesn't explain everything and it also doesn't say there is no god. >> That is if you view a god as some sort of creator, or "force" if you >> will. Well that's my opinion. > >As someone else pointed out in another recent post, the existence of the >Universe doesn't require any deity--no belief system is necessary. >Apparently universes spring up on a regular basis without magic being >required, simply because there's a finite positive probability that they >can exist. Take a look at issues of Sky and Telescope or Astronomy >magazines in the last couple of years...several articles exist. Now I don't care how much science anyone on this earth thinks they know, no one can prove or disprove the existence of a deity. Not yet anyway. And they may never because science requires material proof or very plausible theories to be accepted. A creator or creator "force" might prove beyond the ability of science to find it. The proof could be in another dimension which we can't access, if other dimensions actually were to exist. A "creator" might have chosen to place itself beyond the ability of science to reach it also. Science can also be silly sometimes. They explain certain occurences on earth as "nature" or "mother nature", but using nature as a noun is not scientific since scientists in no shape or form have ever detected what specifically and literally "nature" is. Scientists can be arrogant in the ways they seem to think they can explain everything.
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Date: 15 May 2007 18:59:52
From: Andrew Smallshaw
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On 2007-05-15, Bullseye <bulls@ei.com > wrote: > > Now I don't care how much science anyone on this earth thinks they > know, no one can prove or disprove the existence of a deity. Not yet > anyway. And they may never because science requires material proof or > very plausible theories to be accepted. A creator or creator "force" > might prove beyond the ability of science to find it. The proof could > be in another dimension which we can't access, if other dimensions > actually were to exist. A "creator" might have chosen to place itself > beyond the ability of science to reach it also. There isn't really anything there that is too controversial, but it isn't science. Nor is it really religion. When it comes down to the bare essentials of "Why am I here?" or "Why is there something instead of nothing?" it becomes a matter of philosophy. IMHO that's a much undervalued discipline (in its own right rather than as an offshoot of faith) but it doesn't really belong in a sci.* group, where hypotheses must be testable. No tests = not science. There are scientific arguments against the existence of God (which I deliberately am not bringing up as it's OT) but these will never be proof to those who accept their faith as axiomatic. > Science can also be silly sometimes. They explain certain occurences > on earth as "nature" or "mother nature", but using nature as a noun is > not scientific since scientists in no shape or form have ever detected > what specifically and literally "nature" is. Scientists can be > arrogant in the ways they seem to think they can explain everything. This is actually science in action: Saying we just don't know about that and maybe we should find out is at the very heart of the discipline. Science, unlike faith, owes its very existence to the fact that we _don't_ have all the answers. -- Andrew Smallshaw andrews@sdf.lonestar.org
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Date: 16 May 2007 09:51:38
From: Bullseye
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On Tue, 15 May 2007 18:59:52 +0000 (UTC), Andrew Smallshaw <andrews@sdf.lonestar.org > wrote: >There >are scientific arguments against the existence of God (which I >deliberately am not bringing up as it's OT) but these will never >be proof to those who accept their faith as axiomatic. These can be arguments, but quite silly as man cannot be so arrogant to actually think they have enough scientific knowledge to say that. As I said it will take a long time for science to get nearer to any explanations. You could say science could even hit a wall for hundreds or thousands of years once so much has been discovered. The rest might prove too complex for simple minded humans to figure out. That's just a theory of course. But we can be like chimps figuring out how to get to a banana placed in a hard to get place. They're a far cry from figuring out the universe. >> Science can also be silly sometimes. They explain certain occurences >> on earth as "nature" or "mother nature", but using nature as a noun is >> not scientific since scientists in no shape or form have ever detected >> what specifically and literally "nature" is. Scientists can be >> arrogant in the ways they seem to think they can explain everything. > >This is actually science in action: Saying we just don't know >about that and maybe we should find out is at the very heart of >the discipline. Science, unlike faith, owes its very existence to >the fact that we _don't_ have all the answers. No, I always hear "nature" has done this in documentaries and it bothers me since scientists just throw that word out to describe all the stuff they can't explain that goes on on Earth. They never say we don't know exactly what "nature" is, it is something we haven't been able to figure out yet, they just throw it out automatically so that it explains all events on Earth.
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Date: 16 May 2007 11:10:18
From: Pat O'Connell
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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Bullseye wrote: > On Tue, 15 May 2007 18:59:52 +0000 (UTC), Andrew Smallshaw > <andrews@sdf.lonestar.org> wrote: > >>There >>are scientific arguments against the existence of God (which I >>deliberately am not bringing up as it's OT) but these will never >>be proof to those who accept their faith as axiomatic. > > These can be arguments, but quite silly as man cannot be so arrogant > to actually think they have enough scientific knowledge to say that. Religious assumptions positing the existence of one or more deities are not in the realm of science, simply because there's no way to prove or disprove their existence using the scientific method. So science ignores such ideas. >>> Science can also be silly sometimes. They explain certain occurrences >>> on earth as "nature" or "mother nature", but using nature as a noun is >>> not scientific since scientists in no shape or form have ever detected >>> what specifically and literally "nature" is. Scientists can be >>> arrogant in the ways they seem to think they can explain everything. >> >>This is actually science in action: Saying we just don't know >>about that and maybe we should find out is at the very heart of >>the discipline. Science, unlike faith, owes its very existence to >>the fact that we _don't_ have all the answers. > > > No, I always hear "nature" has done this in documentaries and it > bothers me. "Get used to disappointment." And read Sam's paragraph again. -- Pat O'Connell [note munged EMail address] Take nothing but pictures, Leave nothing but footprints, Kill nothing but vandals...
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Date: 16 May 2007 18:28:34
From: Bullseye
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On Wed, 16 May 2007 11:10:18 -0600, Pat O'Connell <gypkap@comcast.net > wrote: >Religious assumptions positing the existence of one or more deities are >not in the realm of science, simply because there's no way to prove or >disprove their existence using the scientific method. So science ignores >such ideas. I'm not talking about religions, I'm talking about the notion that there isn't some sort of creator or force that created the universe, universes, or dimensions, and other things we still may not have imagined. Even scientists must have a hard time believing all their scientific objects and forces just came out of the blue. More scientists believe in the kind of god I have just described but don't believe in the god's described by the various religions that are practiced by people, and the scientists that don't believe in a god are in the minority. Some publish books about there being no god. Probably because they will create interest and sell books. If they really believe in their theories then their scientific kind of thinking is getting the best of them. Or I think they are just simply bad scientists :)
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Date: 16 May 2007 20:42:28
From: Paul Schlyter
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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In article <sbim435d7sbkdr6d9dgcfl5lr3ofgfuqhd@4ax.com >, Bullseye <bulls@ei.com > wrote: > On Wed, 16 May 2007 11:10:18 -0600, Pat O'Connell <gypkap@comcast.net> > wrote: > >> Religious assumptions positing the existence of one or more deities are >> not in the realm of science, simply because there's no way to prove or >> disprove their existence using the scientific method. So science ignores >> such ideas. > > I'm not talking about religions, I'm talking about the notion that > there isn't some sort of creator or force that created the universe, > universes, or dimensions, and other things we still may not have > imagined. Even scientists must have a hard time believing all their > scientific objects and forces just came out of the blue. More > scientists believe in the kind of god I have just described but don't > believe in the god's described by the various religions that are > practiced by people, and the scientists that don't believe in a god > are in the minority. Some publish books about there being no god. > Probably because they will create interest and sell books. If they > really believe in their theories then their scientific kind of > thinking is getting the best of them. Or I think they are just simply > bad scientists :) If you want to invoke some kind of creator to "explain" how the universe came to be, you're really replacing a hard problem - the origin of the universe - with an even harder problem - the origin of your creator. How was God created? Did SuperGod create God. If so, how was SuperGod created? Did HyperGod create SuperGod? If so, how was HyperGod created? Et cetera et cetera ad infinitum -- in the end you must still assume there was "something" which came into being without having been created. And if that "something" can be some SuperHyperGod X levels of deities up, why couldn't that "something" instead be the universe itself? "Explaining" the origin of the universe with God or some other creator does not solve the problem -- it's merely a way to stop asking and stop wondering. -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Paul Schlyter, Grev Turegatan 40, SE-114 38 Stockholm, SWEDEN e-mail: pausch at stockholm dot bostream dot se WWW: http://stjarnhimlen.se/
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Date: 16 May 2007 21:17:31
From: Bullseye
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On Wed, 16 May 2007 20:42:28 GMT, pausch@saaf.se (Paul Schlyter) wrote: >If you want to invoke some kind of creator to "explain" how the >universe came to be, you're really replacing a hard problem - the >origin of the universe - with an even harder problem - the origin of >your creator. How was God created? Did SuperGod create God. If so, >how was SuperGod created? Did HyperGod create SuperGod? If so, how >was HyperGod created? Et cetera et cetera ad infinitum -- in the end >you must still assume there was "something" which came into being >without having been created. And if that "something" can be some >SuperHyperGod X levels of deities up, why couldn't that "something" >instead be the universe itself? > >"Explaining" the origin of the universe with God or some other creator >does not solve the problem -- it's merely a way to stop asking and >stop wondering. I don't have to try to invoke any creator to explain anything. The majority of humankind including scientists believe in a god. I lean more to the kind of god that scientists believe in, that is some sort of unknown creator or "force", as opposed to the religious kind of gods, but that doesn't matter, I'm not putting down religions. You're the one that has to try to invoke a godless universe, and are in the minority. Don't you feel silly believing that the universe just came up on by itself? A god that created a god, that's interesting, but we'll have to get to the first creator before we get to that :) But it just shows you what I said before, we may be like chimps trying to figure out how to get to a banana. The chimp is very far from figuring out anything about the universe. But so far in our evolution our intelligence tells us there obviously has to be a creator. You just have to look in on Earth and see what's happening here to see there's obviously a creator. Of course these are all just opinions :)
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Date: 16 May 2007 11:30:38
From: Brian Tung
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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Bullseye wrote: > I'm not talking about religions, I'm talking about the notion that > there isn't some sort of creator or force that created the universe, > universes, or dimensions, and other things we still may not have > imagined. Even scientists must have a hard time believing all their > scientific objects and forces just came out of the blue. Not all of them, and even for those who do, that disbelief is not in the purview of science; it is in the non-scientific part of the scientists. > More > scientists believe in the kind of god I have just described but don't > believe in the god's described by the various religions that are > practiced by people, and the scientists that don't believe in a god > are in the minority. Can you explain how you know this? I've never been surveyed, for instance. I don't believe in a god. I admire the words of Feynman, who said, "I don't have to know an answer. I'm not frightened by not knowing things, by being lost in a mysterious universe without any purpose, which is the way it really is as far as we can tell, possibly." I don't think one should feel compelled to give an answer to this; I can suspend belief indefinitely. So when challenged by someone, "So how does the whole universe come about, then?" I can simply answer, "I don't know." I don't feel that it's a weakness of science that it doesn't cleave to an answer--any answer--just because people feel intuitively there must be one. > If they > really believe in their theories then their scientific kind of > thinking is getting the best of them. Or I think they are just simply > bad scientists :) You might think that, but there's no good reason to think it a priori. There may be lots of evidence in favor of a theory--in that case, it makes sense to believe it. Ultimately, however, it doesn't matter who believes in a theory, or how many people support it; what matters is how well the available evidence supports it, and what additional evidence we could gather to further confirm or deny it. -- Brian Tung <brian@isi.edu > The Astronomy Corner at http://astro.isi.edu/ Unofficial C5+ Home Page at http://astro.isi.edu/c5plus/ The PleiadAtlas Home Page at http://astro.isi.edu/pleiadatlas/ My Own Personal FAQ (SAA) at http://astro.isi.edu/reference/faq.html
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Date: 16 May 2007 20:16:04
From: Bullseye
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On Wed, 16 May 2007 11:30:38 -0700 (PDT), brian@isi.edu (Brian Tung) wrote: >Bullseye wrote: >> I'm not talking about religions, I'm talking about the notion that >> there isn't some sort of creator or force that created the universe, >> universes, or dimensions, and other things we still may not have >> imagined. Even scientists must have a hard time believing all their >> scientific objects and forces just came out of the blue. > >Not all of them, and even for those who do, that disbelief is not in the >purview of science; it is in the non-scientific part of the scientists. Of course since there is no proof in the scientific world yet. But they look at the universe without scientific proof on their mind and it's hard for them to believe there's no god. That's the part of the brain where common sense lies. It's about observing that there obviously has to be a god. It's human evolution and intelligence that brought about this observation. I think science has to prove rather that there ISN'T a god, because our developed intelligence and ability to observe this is more evolved than science. >> More >> scientists believe in the kind of god I have just described but don't >> believe in the god's described by the various religions that are >> practiced by people, and the scientists that don't believe in a god >> are in the minority. > >Can you explain how you know this? I've never been surveyed, for >instance. I don't believe in a god. I admire the words of Feynman, who >said, "I don't have to know an answer. I'm not frightened by not >knowing things, by being lost in a mysterious universe without any >purpose, which is the way it really is as far as we can tell, possibly." >I don't think one should feel compelled to give an answer to this; I can >suspend belief indefinitely. So when challenged by someone, "So how >does the whole universe come about, then?" I can simply answer, "I don't >know." I don't feel that it's a weakness of science that it doesn't >cleave to an answer--any answer--just because people feel intuitively >there must be one. I read a long time ago somewhere that most scientists believe in a god. That guy Feynman seemed to be just an atheist to me. And it's not just about fear and not knowing. >> If they >> really believe in their theories then their scientific kind of >> thinking is getting the best of them. Or I think they are just simply >> bad scientists :) > >You might think that, but there's no good reason to think it a priori. >There may be lots of evidence in favor of a theory--in that case, it >makes sense to believe it. Ultimately, however, it doesn't matter who >believes in a theory, or how many people support it; what matters is >how well the available evidence supports it, and what additional >evidence we could gather to further confirm or deny it. There is no good evidence or theories that point to there not being a god. The minority of scientists who have their theories just have a one (scientific) tracked mind, while most don't follow those theories and are not blinded by their profession. Just my opinion of course :)
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Date: 17 May 2007 07:23:07
From: Brian Tung
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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Bullseye wrote: > Of course since there is no proof in the scientific world yet. I don't think I conveyed my point properly; no one in the scientific world is *looking* for proof. It's not a scientific question, whether there's a god or not. Science is about looking for relationships of natural phenomena with each other, and with mathematics. Questions of religion and philosophy, it leaves to religion and philosophy. -- Brian Tung <brian@isi.edu > The Astronomy Corner at http://astro.isi.edu/ Unofficial C5+ Home Page at http://astro.isi.edu/c5plus/ The PleiadAtlas Home Page at http://astro.isi.edu/pleiadatlas/ My Own Personal FAQ (SAA) at http://astro.isi.edu/reference/faq.html
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Date: 17 May 2007 14:52:41
From: Bullseye
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On Thu, 17 May 2007 07:23:07 -0700 (PDT), brian@isi.edu (Brian Tung) wrote: >Bullseye wrote: >> Of course since there is no proof in the scientific world yet. > >I don't think I conveyed my point properly; no one in the scientific >world is *looking* for proof. It's not a scientific question, whether >there's a god or not. Science is about looking for relationships of >natural phenomena with each other, and with mathematics. Questions of >religion and philosophy, it leaves to religion and philosophy. Well that's what I just said before, the best thing is to look in on Earth's events to find god, not science. But it's not true that people don't try to prove a god through science. Many scientists try to associate the two. People on this thread for instance have tried associating the two. People try to prove god through science. If you read Stephen Hawking's book on the Big Bang it obviously talks about the Big Bang but also god. I don't think you have to leave god only to religion. Like I said before most scientists believe in some sort of "creator" but are apt to not believe in religions that much.
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Date: 16 May 2007 23:38:25
From: Sam Wormley
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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Bullseye wrote: > On Wed, 16 May 2007 11:30:38 -0700 (PDT), brian@isi.edu (Brian Tung) > wrote: > >> Bullseye wrote: >>> I'm not talking about religions, I'm talking about the notion that >>> there isn't some sort of creator or force that created the universe, >>> universes, or dimensions, and other things we still may not have >>> imagined. Even scientists must have a hard time believing all their >>> scientific objects and forces just came out of the blue. >> Not all of them, and even for those who do, that disbelief is not in the >> purview of science; it is in the non-scientific part of the scientists. > > > Of course since there is no proof in the scientific world yet. But > they look at the universe without scientific proof on their mind and > it's hard for them to believe there's no god. That's the part of the > brain where common sense lies. It's about observing that there > obviously has to be a god. It's human evolution and intelligence that > brought about this observation. I think science has to prove rather > that there ISN'T a god, because our developed intelligence and ability > to observe this is more evolved than science. > > >>> More >>> scientists believe in the kind of god I have just described but don't >>> believe in the god's described by the various religions that are >>> practiced by people, and the scientists that don't believe in a god >>> are in the minority. >> Can you explain how you know this? I've never been surveyed, for >> instance. I don't believe in a god. I admire the words of Feynman, who >> said, "I don't have to know an answer. I'm not frightened by not >> knowing things, by being lost in a mysterious universe without any >> purpose, which is the way it really is as far as we can tell, possibly." >> I don't think one should feel compelled to give an answer to this; I can >> suspend belief indefinitely. So when challenged by someone, "So how >> does the whole universe come about, then?" I can simply answer, "I don't >> know." I don't feel that it's a weakness of science that it doesn't >> cleave to an answer--any answer--just because people feel intuitively >> there must be one. > > > I read a long time ago somewhere that most scientists believe in a > god. That guy Feynman seemed to be just an atheist to me. And it's not > just about fear and not knowing. > > >>> If they >>> really believe in their theories then their scientific kind of >>> thinking is getting the best of them. Or I think they are just simply >>> bad scientists :) >> You might think that, but there's no good reason to think it a priori. >> There may be lots of evidence in favor of a theory--in that case, it >> makes sense to believe it. Ultimately, however, it doesn't matter who >> believes in a theory, or how many people support it; what matters is >> how well the available evidence supports it, and what additional >> evidence we could gather to further confirm or deny it. > > > There is no good evidence or theories that point to there not being a > god. The minority of scientists who have their theories just have a > one (scientific) tracked mind, while most don't follow those theories > and are not blinded by their profession. Just my opinion of course :) Suggestion: read "Breaking the Spell", Dennett.
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Date: 16 May 2007 13:47:15
From: Pat O'Connell
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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Brian Tung wrote: > Bullseye wrote: >> I'm not talking about religions, I'm talking about the notion that >> there isn't some sort of creator or force that created the universe, >> universes, or dimensions, and other things we still may not have >> imagined. Even scientists must have a hard time believing all their >> scientific objects and forces just came out of the blue. > > Not all of them, and even for those who do, that disbelief is not in the > purview of science; it is in the non-scientific part of the scientists. > >> More >> scientists believe in the kind of god I have just described but don't >> believe in the god's described by the various religions that are >> practiced by people, and the scientists that don't believe in a god >> are in the minority. > > Can you explain how you know this? I've never been surveyed, for > instance. I don't believe in a god. I admire the words of Feynman, who > said, "I don't have to know an answer. I'm not frightened by not > knowing things, by being lost in a mysterious universe without any > purpose, which is the way it really is as far as we can tell, possibly." > I don't think one should feel compelled to give an answer to this; I can > suspend belief indefinitely. So when challenged by someone, "So how > does the whole universe come about, then?" I can simply answer, "I don't > know." I don't feel that it's a weakness of science that it doesn't > cleave to an answer--any answer--just because people feel intuitively > there must be one. > >> If they >> really believe in their theories then their scientific kind of >> thinking is getting the best of them. Or I think they are just simply >> bad scientists :) > > You might think that, but there's no good reason to think it a priori. > There may be lots of evidence in favor of a theory--in that case, it > makes sense to believe it. Ultimately, however, it doesn't matter who > believes in a theory, or how many people support it; what matters is > how well the available evidence supports it, and what additional > evidence we could gather to further confirm or deny it. "Bullseye" is one of those who think that just because it says in "this here book" that the Flying Spaghetti Monster (for instance) exists and created us all, why then it must be true and it must be worshiped. He's not admitting it, but somewhere in his belief system is "that there book." In other words, he/she knows very little about critical thinking and the scientific method, and doesn't care to. -- Pat O'Connell [note munged EMail address] Take nothing but pictures, Leave nothing but footprints, Kill nothing but vandals...
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Date: 15 May 2007 18:20:18
From: Sam Wormley
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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Bullseye wrote: > > Now I don't care how much science anyone on this earth thinks they > know, no one can prove or disprove the existence of a deity. Not yet > anyway. And they may never because science requires material proof or > very plausible theories to be accepted. A creator or creator "force" > might prove beyond the ability of science to find it. The proof could > be in another dimension which we can't access, if other dimensions > actually were to exist. A "creator" might have chosen to place itself > beyond the ability of science to reach it also. It is interesting that you invoke the need for another dimension! > > Science can also be silly sometimes. They explain certain occurences > on earth as "nature" or "mother nature", but using nature as a noun is > not scientific since scientists in no shape or form have ever detected > what specifically and literally "nature" is. Scientists can be > arrogant in the ways they seem to think they can explain everything. Science is a process for finding out how thing work. Suggestion: read "Breaking the Spell", Dennett.
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Date: 16 May 2007 09:38:55
From: Bullseye
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On Tue, 15 May 2007 18:20:18 GMT, Sam Wormley <swormley1@mchsi.com > wrote: > It is interesting that you invoke the need for another dimension! I'm not invoking the need for it, scientists talk about it all the time themselves.
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Date: 16 May 2007 13:16:31
From: Sam Wormley
Subject: Re: Universes, was Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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Bullseye wrote: > On Tue, 15 May 2007 18:20:18 GMT, Sam Wormley <swormley1@mchsi.com> > wrote: > >> It is interesting that you invoke the need for another dimension! > > > I'm not invoking the need for it, scientists talk about it all the > time themselves. But not in term of a deity.
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Date: 14 May 2007 16:40:15
From: Eugene Griessel
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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Chris L Peterson <clp@alumni.caltech.edu > wrote: >On Mon, 14 May 2007 16:07:01 GMT, Bullseye <bulls@ei.com> wrote: > >>Right I've already admitted I was wrong about Venus. Looking back it's >>really silly that I said there were oceans in Venus as I know oceans >>would mean life. I just have the pictures stuck in my head of what I >>used to see in science textbooks and I swear they showed Venus as >>resembling Earth. > >I recall such images as well. Certainly some of the science books I read >as a kid in the 1960s suggested that Venus was some sort of tropical >jungle world under the clouds. We first started getting a good handle on >Venus's properties in the 1960s, so it isn't surprising that books from >the time would be full of errors (especially children's books). > >Also, there was plenty of science fiction from that era that treated >Venus as a hot, tropical world. > I have a Time-Life Science series book from the mid 1960's with a bunch of full page glossy pictures of the imagined scenes on Mars and Venus - sort of carboniferous swamp was the first pic of Venus. One has to read rather carefully to realise this was an "artists imagination" picture. Eugene L Griessel Professional charity - the milk of human blindness.
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Date: 14 May 2007 23:37:53
From: Brian Tung
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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Eugene Griessel wrote: > I have a Time-Life Science series book from the mid 1960's with a > bunch of full page glossy pictures of the imagined scenes on Mars and > Venus - sort of carboniferous swamp was the first pic of Venus. One > has to read rather carefully to realise this was an "artists > imagination" picture. Planets, by Carl Sagan and some other guy? -- Brian Tung <brian@isi.edu > The Astronomy Corner at http://astro.isi.edu/ Unofficial C5+ Home Page at http://astro.isi.edu/c5plus/ The PleiadAtlas Home Page at http://astro.isi.edu/pleiadatlas/ My Own Personal FAQ (SAA) at http://astro.isi.edu/reference/faq.html
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Date: 15 May 2007 06:59:57
From: Eugene Griessel
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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brian@isi.edu (Brian Tung) wrote: >Eugene Griessel wrote: >> I have a Time-Life Science series book from the mid 1960's with a >> bunch of full page glossy pictures of the imagined scenes on Mars and >> Venus - sort of carboniferous swamp was the first pic of Venus. One >> has to read rather carefully to realise this was an "artists >> imagination" picture. > >Planets, by Carl Sagan and some other guy? > Jonathan Norton Leonard - yep that's right. Eugene L Griessel The purpose of meetings is to keep everyone from doing anything.
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Date: 14 May 2007 10:18:43
From: Eugene Griessel
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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Bullseye <bulls@ei.com > wrote: >Venus is sometimes so bright before even twilight that you can confuse >it with a plane's lights here in the city. And it's supposed to look >like another Earth, you know with clouds and an ocean visible. Why >can't you see these features through a telescope? I know it's supposed >to have a lot of clouds, but from the up-close pictures of the planet >I've seen you're supposed to see some blue ocean, much like Earth. Are >the white clouds just so abundant that the sun causes a glare to the >observer and you can't observe any features? An ocean on Venus? Methinks you have been misled. Venus is hot enough that lead on it's surface would be molten. Besides Venus does not have "a lot of clouds" - it's permanently hidden under cloud. Eugene L Griessel If God had wanted us to use the metric system, Jesus would have had 10 disciples.
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Date: 14 May 2007 13:42:57
From: Bullseye
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On Mon, 14 May 2007 10:18:43 GMT, eugene@dynagen..co..za (Eugene Griessel) wrote: >Bullseye <bulls@ei.com> wrote: > >>Venus is sometimes so bright before even twilight that you can confuse >>it with a plane's lights here in the city. And it's supposed to look >>like another Earth, you know with clouds and an ocean visible. Why >>can't you see these features through a telescope? I know it's supposed >>to have a lot of clouds, but from the up-close pictures of the planet >>I've seen you're supposed to see some blue ocean, much like Earth. Are >>the white clouds just so abundant that the sun causes a glare to the >>observer and you can't observe any features? > >An ocean on Venus? Methinks you have been misled. Venus is hot >enough that lead on it's surface would be molten. Besides Venus does >not have "a lot of clouds" - it's permanently hidden under cloud. > >Eugene L Griessel hmm, I've just looked at pictures of Venus and yep it's all covered in clouds. Those sure were some fucked up science books they gave us in grade school. I remember seeing Venus looking like Earth except longer vertically and with many more clouds but not all covered. Now I know why it shines so brightly, it's all white.
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Date: 14 May 2007 23:36:48
From: Brian Tung
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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Bullseye wrote: > hmm, I've just looked at pictures of Venus and yep it's all covered in > clouds. Those sure were some fucked up science books they gave us in > grade school. I remember seeing Venus looking like Earth except longer > vertically and with many more clouds but not all covered. Now I know > why it shines so brightly, it's all white. You have to remember that as recently as maybe the 1950s or early 1960s, we really did not know that much about the surface of Venus, and at that time, it was still plausible that Venus was covered with oceans. These oceans were posited to explain why Venus was cloudy all the time. It was only after Venus was found to be extraordinarily hot that these oceans were essentially disproved. Even if this was known in the 1960s, it probably took a while for it to filter down to grade school textbooks--even in the midst of the space race. -- Brian Tung <brian@isi.edu > The Astronomy Corner at http://astro.isi.edu/ Unofficial C5+ Home Page at http://astro.isi.edu/c5plus/ The PleiadAtlas Home Page at http://astro.isi.edu/pleiadatlas/ My Own Personal FAQ (SAA) at http://astro.isi.edu/reference/faq.html
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Date: 15 May 2007 16:54:21
From: Andrew Smallshaw
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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On 2007-05-15, Brian Tung <brian@isi.edu > wrote: > > You have to remember that as recently as maybe the 1950s or early 1960s, > we really did not know that much about the surface of Venus, and at that > time, it was still plausible that Venus was covered with oceans. These > oceans were posited to explain why Venus was cloudy all the time. It > was only after Venus was found to be extraordinarily hot that these > oceans were essentially disproved. It's easy to forget how far astronomy has come in a comparatively short time. Here in the UK, the BBC has been showing some commemorative programmes to celebrate 50 years of The Sky at Night. In 1957, even mainstream astronomers were still talking about the vegetation on Mars that was clearly visible through a telescope... -- Andrew Smallshaw andrews@sdf.lonestar.org
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Date: 15 May 2007 07:42:17
From: Paul Schlyter
Subject: Re: Venus- why not a good planet to view?
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In article <f2bke0$pol$1@praesepe.isi.edu >, Brian Tung <brian@isi.edu> wrote: >Bullseye wrote: >> hmm, I've just looked at pictures of Venus and yep it's all covered in >> clouds. Those sure were some fucked up science books they gave us in >> grade school. I remember seeing Venus looking like Earth except longer >> vertically and with many more clouds but not all covered. Now I know >> why it shines so brightly, it's all white. > >You have to remember that as recently as maybe the 1950s or early 1960s, >we really did not know that much about the surface of Venus, and at that >time, it was still plausible that Venus was covered with oceans. These >oceans were posited to explain why Venus was cloudy all the time. It >was only after Venus was found to be extraordinarily hot that these >oceans were essentially disproved. This happened in 1962, when Mariner 2 passed by Venus. >Even if this was known in the 1960s, it probably took a while for it to >filter down to grade school textbooks--even in the midst of the space >race. > >-- >Brian Tung <brian@isi.edu> >The Astronomy Corner at http://astro.isi.edu/ > Unofficial C5+ Home Page at http://astro.isi.edu/c5plus/ > The PleiadAtlas Home Page at http://astro.isi.edu/pleiadatlas/ > My Own Personal FAQ (SAA) at http://astro.isi.edu/reference/faq.html -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Paul Schlyter, Grev Turegatan 40, SE-114 38 Stockholm, SWEDEN e-mail: pausch at stockholm dot bostream dot se WWW: http://stjarnhimlen.se/
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