Big Bang Just DISPROVEN?! Joe Rogan & Stephen C. Meyer

Ғылым және технология

Please join my mailing list here 👉 briankeating.com/list to win a meteorite 💥
Have the recent findings of the James Webb Space Telescope disproved the Big Bang, as Eric Lerner claims in his book, the Big Bang Never Happened? Stephen C. Meyer discussed this on The Joe Rogan Experience. They give a shout out to me and my episode which appeared a few weeks later: • Cosmologist Brian Keat... and on Spotify sptfy.com/OL2e
Join this channel to get access to perks:
/ @drbriankeating
📺 Watch my most popular videos:
Neil Turok • Why Neil Turok Believe...
Frank Wilczek • Nobel Prizewinner Fran...
➡️ Follow me on your fav platforms:
✖️ Twitter: / drbriankeating
🔔 KZread: kzread.info...
📝 Join my mailing list: briankeating.com/mailing_list
✍️ Check out my blog: briankeating.com/blog.php
🎙️ Follow my podcast: briankeating.com/podcast
Into the Impossible with Brian Keating is a podcast dedicated to all those who want to explore the universe within and beyond the known.
Make sure to subscribe so you never miss an episode!
#intotheimpossible #briankeating #joerogan
~-~~-~~~-~~-~
Please watch: "Neil DeGrasse Tyson: Plays the Race Card!"
• Neil DeGrasse Tyson Hi...
~-~~-~~~-~~-~

Пікірлер: 6 500

  • @DrBrianKeating
    @DrBrianKeating6 ай бұрын

    Did the Big Bang happen? 💥

  • @atlasnetwork7855

    @atlasnetwork7855

    6 ай бұрын

    Let's see, you've got a theory where you've got redshift that can be caused velocity. But it can also be caused by gravitational redshift, and it's looking more and more like it can be caused by plasma redshift too. Hubble's law is probably correct, and i believe if is, but the attribution of Hubble's Law to universal expansion i think is actually a bit presumptuous. We have a poor understanding of the way light behaves, especially over a huge distances, and we have a poor understanding of what's in the universe between stars. For instance, if Big Bang Proponents are to be believed then the universe is full of dark matter that we can't see and can't detect. We have the crisis in cosmology. Variable stars aren't matching CMB. That means either variable star data we don't understanding or CMB we don't understand. But the elephant in the room is *they could both be wrong.* We have stars nearly as old as the universe. We have black holes that developed in the universe far earlier than we expected. We have people claiming the universe is twice as old as accepted. We have inconsistencies in the distribution of elements in the periodic table. We have galaxies rotating at the wrong speeds. We are neither able to say where the big bang occurred, nor where the boundary of the expanding universe is, nor where we are in relation to that boundary. We have radiation from CMB that should be going away from us, coming back to us somehow. Why? Is it reflected off something travelling even faster than the speed of light? We justify some of these things by arguing that space itself is expanding. But what would that mean geometrically? What sense does it make to say a vacuum is expanding? Some people argue for the tired light hypothesis. But ether was disproved, yet we know that the universe is full of tiny particles that spontaneously appear and annihilate. Some people argue that tired light is explained by gravitational redshift and that the expansion illusion is really what stock traders would describe as "beta loss", the sequential adding and removal of a fixed % or ratio of energy to a photon until gradually over time the energy drops causing a wavelength shift. Personally, I suspect that there's a plasma redshift going on, and we have limited evidence for this happening. When the pioneer 6 spacecraft went behind the sun, as went into teh sun's occult, and the pioneer 6 spacecraft was transmitting through the sun's plasma, we saw a significant and measurable frequency shift of the transmission. This shift was not accounted for by doppler shift, and i've not seen anything to suggest that this was gravitational redshift either. There are essays being ignored from people like Dean L Mamas, and many others that at a certain average density of electrons in deep space (i think it was 32 per cubic meter - but i've not seen the paper for a while, so don't quote me on that) that you get the full spectrum shift of the entire electromagnetic wavelength that accounts for Hubble's Law without the conclusion that the universe is expanding at all. If plasma redshift is a factor in any way, shape or form then it could change the age of the universe by billions of years. Personally, what i would do, is i'd set up an experiment to determine how much of redshift is caused by speed and how much is caused by other factors. The way i'd do this is i'd use high speed sensors like we use today in lidar equipment, and i'd point it at a pulsar star, and i'd measure the time delta between the high frequencies of light and the low frequencies of light. And the nano second time delta between the upper and lower frequencies of light hitting the sensor would tell us quite a bit. It would tell us about the medium in between us and the pulsar, and if this time delta was increasing we'd know that the pulsar was receding. If it was decreasing, we'd know that it was approaching. We could compare this against the redshift of the pulsar, and apply it to surrounding stars to build up a more accurate depiction of whether the universe was expanding or not, if so at what rate, and how much of the redshift wasn't doppler shift, and we could solve the age old problem of whether tired light was actually thing. 20-30 years ago, this experiment wouldn't have been possible. But these days we lidars, and optical quantum key cryptography, and advanced gas sensing / spectroscopy hardware, we do things like this on a daily basis all day, every day. We don't need to spend trillions on particle accelerators, or looking for dark matter, we just need a simple £30,000 validation test on redshift. I'm not saying that big bang is wrong (although i think it is), what i'm saying is that if we follow Ockham's Razor, that all things being considered the simplest explanation is most likely the correct one, i'd argue that any quantum physicist will tell you "if you think you understand quantum mechanics, you don't", and that it's far more rational to question our understanding of light over long distances than to spend billions on a wild goose chase looking for 70% of the universe being dark matter which we have absolutely no evidence for to make this theory work.

  • @atlasnetwork7855

    @atlasnetwork7855

    6 ай бұрын

    Apologies i went on a bit of rant there. But you see where i'm coming from can't you.

  • @infra-cyan

    @infra-cyan

    6 ай бұрын

  • @PearlmanYeC

    @PearlmanYeC

    6 ай бұрын

    'a' (SPIRAL) not 'The' (SCM-LCDM) Big Bang did occur. A hyper-dense start followed by a hyper cosmic expansion 'inflation' epoch. see SPIRAL on the Keating 10 point Big Bang cosmology checklist. One key is 'Pearlman vs Hubble' there is no ongoing cosmic expansion. follow, test, disseminate Pearlman YeC SPIRAL cosmological redshift hypothesis and model at ResearchGate, to advance the science.

  • @safehouse7074

    @safehouse7074

    6 ай бұрын

    Yeah but I don’t say that shit cuz I think “The emergence” sounds cooler

  • @xjoellmarkellx
    @xjoellmarkellx6 ай бұрын

    Oh boy.... just wait until Neil DeGrasse Tyson gets ahold of this information. He will have a major meltdown of epic proportions....

  • @giosasso

    @giosasso

    6 ай бұрын

    You mean the one and almighty, Mr. DeGreasy Tyson? The Big Bang theory never made sense, and it does not hold up to scrutiny. Where did the atoms come from that created the Big Bang? I thought mass cannot be created or destroyed but it can be rearranged. Maybe what scientists claim is everything, is in fact, a tiny fraction of everything and the atoms and particles that created our universe came from something else that we don't understand. Maybe we don't have a clue. Maybe we should be honest about the limits of our understanding of reality.

  • @steviejd5803

    @steviejd5803

    6 ай бұрын

    Neil is probably practicing his trumpet right now.

  • @michaeldodd3563

    @michaeldodd3563

    6 ай бұрын

    That’s because NDT has built his career on indoctrinating people into “believing” the Big Bang.

  • @spidaman0112

    @spidaman0112

    6 ай бұрын

    Neil is a 🦜

  • @jimreaper1337

    @jimreaper1337

    6 ай бұрын

    NDT will blame racism & white supremacy as he's taken to doing lately

  • @fubarexress6359
    @fubarexress63594 ай бұрын

    One thing I hate about the "establishment" in any field is their outright refusal to accept their theories may be wrong. Science can't proceed and evolve if we desperately cling to our theories esp when evidence comes out that their not correct.

  • @boxbury

    @boxbury

    4 ай бұрын

    So very true, and we are also seeing it now in terms of aspects relating to Darwin’s theories but the scientific community (mostly in Western society)have built him into God like status that cannot be challenged.

  • @southernfriedmedia3968

    @southernfriedmedia3968

    3 ай бұрын

    Money is at stake, of course there will be

  • @jamessmith6162

    @jamessmith6162

    3 ай бұрын

    And from what I can remember, this been the case ever since I've been alive, and, I'm certain even long before.

  • @harrymills2770

    @harrymills2770

    3 ай бұрын

    I think some of the sciences are less political than others. Anything to do with social or political science, and most of anthropology is 99% political. The softer the evidence, the more vehemently they insist on a particular theory, and the more intense the political fights between competing theories. Promotions and grants hang in the balance.

  • @jamessmith6162

    @jamessmith6162

    3 ай бұрын

    @BoJangles-mw8od yup, always changing their supposed findings. Yet people still hold on to the science community as the voice of authority. As I recall the history of this world in that annels of the pages of history, and, the ongoing processes they continue to hold to, I'm utterly amazed that people can and will, rise up through the ranks, and perpetual the ongoing errors of this Institutions of Science; and of Higher learning. I choose the simple written word of the Lord. And I could with this source alone, topple and destroy anything that opposes it.

  • @J0HN3
    @J0HN33 ай бұрын

    “Science is provisional” the most honest thing I’ve ever heard from a fellow scientist.

  • @PAWiley

    @PAWiley

    3 ай бұрын

    He's not a scientist.

  • @appsenence9244

    @appsenence9244

    3 ай бұрын

    Really? Go read a book please

  • @fartpooboxohyeah8611

    @fartpooboxohyeah8611

    3 ай бұрын

    Oh, ae you a "fellow scientist"? lol.

  • @jamiekutaj669

    @jamiekutaj669

    3 ай бұрын

    Hello! What does the quote science is provisional mean to you?

  • @warriorgp4640

    @warriorgp4640

    3 ай бұрын

    You're not a scientist

  • @Oryon7
    @Oryon73 ай бұрын

    Stephen Meyer was on the Joe Rogan show?! Whaaaat?!!😮 How did I miss this development? I need to see the full episode!

  • @soaps67
    @soaps674 ай бұрын

    He seems to literally say that this discovery does not mean there was no big bang, just that we are seeing galaxies that are older than we would have expected

  • @Sawyeroh

    @Sawyeroh

    4 ай бұрын

    It had a BEGINNING

  • @SmiteMeAlmightySmiter

    @SmiteMeAlmightySmiter

    4 ай бұрын

    @@Sawyeroh And the big bang also states it had a beginning...? "In particular, the big bang model of the universe begins with a singularity-a point that appeared out of nothing and contained the precursors of everything in the universe in a region so small that it had essentially no size at all."

  • @Sawyeroh

    @Sawyeroh

    4 ай бұрын

    @@SmiteMeAlmightySmiter somthing can’t come from Nothing

  • @SlayuhM

    @SlayuhM

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@SmiteMeAlmightySmiterThis is so funny because I know your dumbass went to google and copied that 😂😂

  • @Brock-yg6jc

    @Brock-yg6jc

    4 ай бұрын

    @@Sawyeroh Says who?

  • @John_Falcon
    @John_Falcon4 ай бұрын

    You can't disprove something that was never proven to begin with.

  • @dimfuturefilms9070

    @dimfuturefilms9070

    3 ай бұрын

    True, you can only DEBUNK 😉

  • @granstaffjohn

    @granstaffjohn

    3 ай бұрын

    Great point

  • @Food4Thought4Love

    @Food4Thought4Love

    3 ай бұрын

    Yes you can, it’s called disproving a theory dingus. If you go to court for a charge you never committed by your logic there is no way possible to prove you didn’t commit what your charged with, smh.

  • @Nerdiness1985

    @Nerdiness1985

    3 ай бұрын

    @@Food4Thought4Love You have no idea what theory means in science now do you? You don't tend to disprove a theory in science, since that by itself is an entire field of study. Hypothesis can be disproven.

  • @Food4Thought4Love

    @Food4Thought4Love

    3 ай бұрын

    @@Nerdiness1985 a theory is a hypothesis that can’t be proven or disproven, if you disprove the hypothesis it is no longer a theory and is false, if you prove a hypothesis then it is fact. your fried you clearly don’t know what a theory is, you learn this in like 3rd grade

  • @randall1715
    @randall17152 ай бұрын

    It is well known in science that when observations do not match your theory, your theory is wrong..

  • @garrettmenteer2066
    @garrettmenteer20662 ай бұрын

    The video literally says big bang IS CONFIRMED. Title is click bait.

  • @Canuck-1976

    @Canuck-1976

    Ай бұрын

    The bang is not confirmed. There isn't any factual evidence for it that can't be refuted. The said the same thing about the age of the bang.

  • @MajorMustang1117

    @MajorMustang1117

    Ай бұрын

    ​@Canuck-1976 While I agree with you, it doesn't change that the video is clickbait. The video speaks of the expansion of the universe, based on bin bang models, to be correct. So why the title says it is disproven in this video really doesn't make sense.

  • @koobs4549

    @koobs4549

    17 күн бұрын

    It’s not click bait, go back & read the title again. Last time I checked, questions end in question marks & statements end in periods. If you read the title as a statement, you should probably take a course on punctuation so that you’re less confused in the future

  • @MajorMustang1117

    @MajorMustang1117

    17 күн бұрын

    @@koobs4549 I'm convinced you're an idiot. 🫡

  • @ailuosi7241

    @ailuosi7241

    5 күн бұрын

    imagine being as low i.q. as this that you lack basic comprehension skills

  • @yohannlaudren9128
    @yohannlaudren91284 ай бұрын

    We have been completly wrong throughout our history, it is very likely that this is still the case.

  • @user-eo1zf8lp1h

    @user-eo1zf8lp1h

    3 ай бұрын

    agree 100% and it looks like old civilizations had more knowledge of our past

  • @ivannenadovic9465

    @ivannenadovic9465

    3 ай бұрын

    @@user-eo1zf8lp1h how?

  • @appsenence9244

    @appsenence9244

    3 ай бұрын

    Yes we are always wrong. We are probably wrong about everything. Electricity, classical mechanics, relativity, quantum mechanics. This pc im writing on doesnt even work, these fkn scientists am i right? Im supposed to believe that my comment that im writing right now just reaches you from across the planet? Hell no, theres no way, they are always wrong.

  • @eb-ol4po

    @eb-ol4po

    3 ай бұрын

    @@user-eo1zf8lp1hOf course they did. They were closer to our past than we are lol.

  • @Barrythebarnabas

    @Barrythebarnabas

    3 ай бұрын

    @eb-ol4po are you bots? You seem to possess the intelligence of bots. Old civilizations thought Earth was center of the entire universe and that rubbing mud in an open wound was a good way to slow the bleeding. Old civilizations didn’t even know how to make door hinges but you morons think they knew more about astronomy than scientists today? 🤣🤦‍♂️

  • @LMike2004
    @LMike20046 ай бұрын

    Interesting point: In one of my older Astronomy magazines they wrote about observing galaxies that were traveling in adjacent angles to each other. To paraphrase the astronomer: "...if this is true, we know nothing. We know less than nothing."

  • @SSMLivingPictures

    @SSMLivingPictures

    4 ай бұрын

    Yes, that would certainly seem to be true. Very interesting.

  • @gemmawalker9179

    @gemmawalker9179

    4 ай бұрын

    We take to many theories as gospel when really not got a clue

  • @KC-kh8df

    @KC-kh8df

    4 ай бұрын

    Yes so much good info in those older mags.. the ones that came out back toward the 90s! Remember the planet that was detected in our solar system? That came out in 80/90s. IDK if that’s Planet X which is coming out more yet it’s still in theory state! SMH,

  • @stevenp8198

    @stevenp8198

    4 ай бұрын

    thats angular momentum and it would be impossible with a big bang as theorized!!!

  • @russcooke5671

    @russcooke5671

    4 ай бұрын

    It would be better if not knowing if it’s wrong. We are in awe of these scientists because they know big words. That’s all plus they all get a good living promoting lies. It’s all BOLLOX. The universe is many many times older then we think. The good thing about science is when your wrong you just move the goalposts and keep raking your wages in. Then come up with more BOLLOX to confuse people all over again

  • @michaelbruns449
    @michaelbruns4493 ай бұрын

    Every 100 years or so most of our concepts change, the more we think we know the more we know we dont know, real reality is beyond human comprehension, as was designed.

  • @malachi-

    @malachi-

    2 ай бұрын

    A new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die, and a new generation grows up that is familiar with it. - Max Planck (Nobel Prize in Physics in 1918)

  • @Pow_FIsh

    @Pow_FIsh

    Ай бұрын

    @@malachi- tell that to quantum theory

  • @elonever.2.071

    @elonever.2.071

    Ай бұрын

    @@Pow_FIsh Max Planck was one of the founders of Quantum Theory. He also said, contrary to traditional materialist physicist belief, that Consciousness creates matter not the other way around.

  • @atheisticallysound

    @atheisticallysound

    Ай бұрын

    😂 😂 “as was designed” 😂😂 If Adam and Eve ate from the tree of knowledge, wouldn’t that have meant they knew everything about reality? If they lived for over 900 years having children that would populate earth, surely they would have written things down about gravity, germ theory, the speed of light, our solar system, relativity, etc. Why did it take thousands of years for humans to discover these things if Adam and Eve ate from the tree of knowledge, giving them the knowledge about everything in the universe? If you make the claim, that the forbidden fruit only provided the “opportunity” to know things, that would mean when god made Adam and Eve, he didn’t make us intelligent. How about instead, knowledge grows / evolves the more we ask questions like science does. When will you theists wake up?

  • @Pow_FIsh

    @Pow_FIsh

    Ай бұрын

    @@atheisticallysound try to find evidence of curvature that you can personally verify (not using indirect means). When you realize the earth is a snowglobe, it's time to start reevaluating things. t.lifetime atheist until a friend of mine got into unround terra and I scheduled a couple hours to prove her wrong but couldn't.

  • @n0t_bdub
    @n0t_bdub3 ай бұрын

    That was a misleading video title…

  • @user_James_Foard

    @user_James_Foard

    Ай бұрын

    Actually it was the Medium Kaboom.

  • @koobs4549

    @koobs4549

    17 күн бұрын

    It’s not the video title that’s the problem, it’s just your reading comprehension skills. Questions end in question marks while statements end with periods. The video title is clearly presenting a question but you seem to be reading it as if it’s a statement. The sooner you learn how punctuation works, the less confused you’ll be about the titles you click on 😂

  • @ExpertContrarian

    @ExpertContrarian

    16 күн бұрын

    @@koobs4549You tried so hard only to fall on your face.

  • @user_James_Foard

    @user_James_Foard

    16 күн бұрын

    @@ExpertContrarian Exactly. @koobs4549 was trying so hard to prove that he made it past the third grade. Running his keyboard mouth and saying absolutely nothing.

  • @darkuncle77

    @darkuncle77

    11 күн бұрын

    Have you discussed your feelings about this with your associates and colleagues?

  • @mothman-jz8ug
    @mothman-jz8ug6 ай бұрын

    The elephant in the room, that one huge question which is never brought up: What existed BEFORE the big bang? What, exactly "banged"? Are we to simply assume that matter didn't not exist, then it suddenly sprang forth from nothing? It is always presented as if suddenly, everything came from nothing. Has there been only one bang? Perhaps there were other bangs early, and they have expanded beyond our ability to recognize their existence?

  • @coolguy1127

    @coolguy1127

    6 ай бұрын

    The Big Bang theory is that all matter previously existed prior to the Big Bang, but this bang set it all in motion. Science has never said that matter came from nothing. Also we have evidence of the fallout or afterglow of the Big Bang. Fascinating stuff.

  • @loopaking

    @loopaking

    6 ай бұрын

    Something had to create the bang, the beginning, the universe. Nothing cannot create nothing. It had to be something. In my opinion I think it's amazing that how much more we discover the science behind things, the more we realize that there was "something" that started it or created it's law, or it's "purpose". Sounds familiar right? lol. It is said that no matter how much we keep going as humans, we will only ever discover a grain of sand to what's really happening and what's going on. That's even more amazing to think lol. For example, a living raw cell. No matter what we ever do, we can never create a raw cell from nothing, like they are here naturally. The cell itself has a purpose so therefore it has a creator.

  • @coolguy1127

    @coolguy1127

    6 ай бұрын

    @@loopaking the universe is nothing but pure chaos, black holes, planets colliding with asteroids, gravity ripping through space and time. Galaxies are born and die , with no rhyme or reason. Why is our galaxy any different? If you look at what goes on in the universe there’s no plan it’s just cosmic level destruction. Why are humans so egocentric that they think this universe needs some glorious purpose, when all this universe has shown us is that there is absolutely no plan, no reason just randomness.

  • @werdwerdus

    @werdwerdus

    6 ай бұрын

    space and time both were created in the big bang. there is no "before" the same way there was no "stuff"

  • @ulrikof.2486

    @ulrikof.2486

    5 ай бұрын

    The answer is "we do not know".

  • @dannydonuts4219
    @dannydonuts42196 ай бұрын

    No matter what new record distances are discovered about dimensions of the universe the whole thing still fits inside something even larger.

  • @Corteum

    @Corteum

    6 ай бұрын

    Yes. Consciousness.

  • @johntitorii6676

    @johntitorii6676

    6 ай бұрын

    We will never truly know anything

  • @Corteum

    @Corteum

    6 ай бұрын

    @@johntitorii6676 And yet we know something! We know that we dont truly know anything! LOl

  • @zacharyshort384

    @zacharyshort384

    6 ай бұрын

    @@johntitorii6676 I know Coke is better than Pepsi.

  • @nahCmeR

    @nahCmeR

    6 ай бұрын

    I don't think Space expands into anything.. what exactly does it fit inside?

  • @javperalta6964
    @javperalta6964Ай бұрын

    What gets me every time is hearing that every thing came from nothing

  • @infinidominion

    @infinidominion

    Ай бұрын

    And the fact that they buy that is incredible

  • @mindofwaves4470

    @mindofwaves4470

    Ай бұрын

    everything came from everything

  • @godsbeautifulflatearth

    @godsbeautifulflatearth

    Ай бұрын

    Nobody can fathom God's Creation.

  • @trinchuzosparty

    @trinchuzosparty

    Ай бұрын

    Who says that? 😅 Einstein already pointed out to the eternal constant amount of energy and matter in the universe

  • @zoenation6573

    @zoenation6573

    Ай бұрын

    To quote Lon Milo, the first kind of nothing, is really nothing - not even the concept of no-thing. Then the light bulb moment when the vastness realises the notness of its nothingness! This double negative is tantamount to saying something is! and sets the stage for the first positive in the Universe - the concept of One.🤪

  • @jopo6388
    @jopo63884 ай бұрын

    NASA ‘Not A Space Agency’. Lmao.

  • @zackerybartlett8050

    @zackerybartlett8050

    3 ай бұрын

    Never A Straight Answer

  • @kingjoe3rd

    @kingjoe3rd

    3 ай бұрын

    NASA is not a civilian space agency but a military one, as everything they do is subject to military classification.

  • @jaimefish173

    @jaimefish173

    3 ай бұрын

    Because NASA didnt care about its astronauts back in the day, we called them, Need another seven astronauts.

  • @laoch5658

    @laoch5658

    3 ай бұрын

    NASA is a military agency not a space agency

  • @edwardclancy8336

    @edwardclancy8336

    3 ай бұрын

    @@jaimefish173 Challenger no one died they are alive several now claiming to be twin brothers who did not attend funeral services and no record of birth for twins. One so called twin carries on the Legacy remembering his whatever. do your own research it is easily available

  • @haydenradcliff9774
    @haydenradcliff97744 ай бұрын

    ALL of my problems and the daily problems that everyone in the world faces will be completely resolved once this mystery is solved!

  • @ianlassitter2397

    @ianlassitter2397

    3 ай бұрын

    😂😂😂

  • @trulymental7651

    @trulymental7651

    2 ай бұрын

    If they hadn't wasted billions pretending they know stuff ,blowing stuff up ,ruining the environment here doing it, maybe the world could be a nice place . Boys and their nazi rockets 😀

  • @highendservicesbarrieont8347

    @highendservicesbarrieont8347

    Ай бұрын

    😂😂😂👍🏻👍🏻

  • @0rangecray0n

    @0rangecray0n

    5 күн бұрын

    Maybe once the smartest people in the universe turn their attention towards us maybe life will get better

  • @trulymental7651

    @trulymental7651

    4 күн бұрын

    @@0rangecray0n or even the smartest people on this planet.

  • @erickedmondromanharris1549
    @erickedmondromanharris15495 ай бұрын

    "Space may be the final frontier but it´s made in a Hollywood basement." RedHotChilliPeppers

  • @lukaspersson447

    @lukaspersson447

    4 ай бұрын

    Another cheap and generic lyrics about taking drugs, pretending to be deep. The only depth that band has is the bass and guitar.

  • @Wyckateer

    @Wyckateer

    4 ай бұрын

    @@lukaspersson447 or he could be talking about the fake moon landing that was obviously not real

  • @WolfOfLosAngeles

    @WolfOfLosAngeles

    4 ай бұрын

    Never really liked Red Hot Chili Peppers and I’m from LA lol

  • @boazzippor1972

    @boazzippor1972

    4 ай бұрын

    love the hissy fit the comments for this (brilliant) quote brought here... lol

  • @UniteAgainstEvil

    @UniteAgainstEvil

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@boazzippor1972always hatin'

  • @danbulger6673
    @danbulger66733 ай бұрын

    So how was it disproven? If anything, what was discussed is in support.

  • @100nakpvp2

    @100nakpvp2

    3 ай бұрын

    I don't understand it either. I think that it's not about disproving it, but that we interpreted it wrong... Idk. That's why he is on Joe Rogan and not me i guess. He's smart

  • @enderwiggen3638

    @enderwiggen3638

    3 ай бұрын

    It wasn’t, he said it was confirmed that they saw the red shift they expected for a universe that originates from a single point. The newsie misquoted the scientist … what that scientist said is that galaxies formed a lot faster after the Big Bang than they thought possible.

  • @Pangora2

    @Pangora2

    3 ай бұрын

    There's a market these days in making huge claims that everything we know is wrong in favor of something 'exciting'. The exciting thing doesn't answer anything usually.

  • @elonever.2.071

    @elonever.2.071

    Ай бұрын

    The title is click bait to get more views from people who don't think the big bang is actual science.

  • @koobs4549

    @koobs4549

    17 күн бұрын

    Your confusion can be cleared up with simple punctuation. When you come to the end of a sentence, if there is a question mark, that means it was a question & if there’s a period, that means it’s a statement. You made the mistake of reading the question as if it were a statement. Hope that cleared up any confusion for you

  • @richardmcbroom102
    @richardmcbroom102Күн бұрын

    With the latest JWST findings, a paradigm shift equivalent to the Copernican revolution is needed. Everyone needs to be involved in the transition to make that critical shift.

  • @AMC2283

    @AMC2283

    Күн бұрын

    why, what do you think it found?

  • @bosstitties7798
    @bosstitties77984 ай бұрын

    Everyone is so smart yet we live like animals under control. The whole world is delusional

  • @the6ig6adwolf

    @the6ig6adwolf

    2 ай бұрын

    At this point in our existence, who honestly cares if the Big Bang did or did not happen? We can't even afford homes or food while government officials and corporations tighten the noose. Our species is doomed.

  • @boooooof731

    @boooooof731

    2 ай бұрын

    what does this even mean

  • @bosstitties7798

    @bosstitties7798

    2 ай бұрын

    @@boooooof731 what does your delusion mean? Are you stupid , open your eyes and you'll see a man who thinks he's a girl

  • @bosstitties7798

    @bosstitties7798

    2 ай бұрын

    @@boooooof731 it means you are a stupid slave, think for yourself victim

  • @jimhughes1070

    @jimhughes1070

    Ай бұрын

    @@boooooof731 they "think" the older than they "thought"👍.... And the evidence continues to support the theory that the Universe had a beginning... But they still have no evidence to support any theory of how it came into existence in order to expand.... In hillbilly terms.... It's fun to play with expensive toys, but they still don't "know" anything for sure. The Bible says "God stretched out the heavens"... But nothing on "continuing to stretch"😎

  • @printerman99
    @printerman995 ай бұрын

    I read a few months ago that they now think the universe is 26 billion yrs old, not 13.5, 138, etc. since it keeps changing, maybe we just don't know.

  • @2norberto

    @2norberto

    4 ай бұрын

    You should be careful when one person makes a claim even if they are a scientist. The scientific consensus is still 13 something billion years old.

  • @fatmayo2293

    @fatmayo2293

    4 ай бұрын

    Science changes almost daily and cannot always be trusted. Too many scientists are caught up in arrogance, when a lot of them are just flat out wrong.

  • @josephakot4821

    @josephakot4821

    4 ай бұрын

    @@2norberto consensus means nothing when there is contrary evidence.

  • @2norberto

    @2norberto

    4 ай бұрын

    @josephakot4821 Yes, it does. Scientific consensus means mean when the majority of the evidence and studies point to one direction. You dont go with what one person says until it's Scrutinized by many different sources.

  • @Hubtones1

    @Hubtones1

    4 ай бұрын

    Agreed, unmerited confidence coming from all directions

  • @DennisKenneybees
    @DennisKenneybees3 ай бұрын

    What the Hel. The title says "Big Bang Just DISPROVEN" and this video tells just the opposite; that there is more evidence that the Big Band theory is likly true.

  • @bbwolf495

    @bbwolf495

    3 ай бұрын

    Punctuation is very important and you obviously missed the ❓

  • @jimmykrackin6344
    @jimmykrackin6344Ай бұрын

    James Webb, Eric Larnar, and Stephen C. Mayer have Alien features

  • @ontheroadtoZ

    @ontheroadtoZ

    20 күн бұрын

    😂🤣😂

  • @kdubs9111
    @kdubs91116 ай бұрын

    This is the equivalent of Gobekli Tepe setting the date back for the emergence of settlements and the fussy academics still can’t accept the new paradigm.

  • @mozes42

    @mozes42

    6 ай бұрын

    And they’ll fight the new info tooth & nail just like they have with Gobekli Tepe too. Seeing such closed-mindedness in “academics” is so disappointing.

  • @phillies4eva

    @phillies4eva

    6 ай бұрын

    ⁠@@mozes42it is sad isn’t it? Most people don’t change their minds they just die. Add a power structure to that and you get the current state of academia.

  • @DJCallidus

    @DJCallidus

    6 ай бұрын

    Lots of "gatekeeping" goes on within institutions. So much is invested in the world as it's been presented since the 'enlightenment'. One topic that interests me is why various influential people, many being politicians have visited Antarctica and why any research or exploration of the place seems heavily discouraged or shrouded.

  • @bradleyperry1735

    @bradleyperry1735

    6 ай бұрын

    You should read The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. This is actually how science tends to work. New information only is accepted when the old guard dies. The scientific establishment doesn’t actually operate according to what people call the scientific method.

  • @fromtheland86

    @fromtheland86

    5 ай бұрын

    You may be confusing one of the strengths of the scientific method with stubbornness in some cases. When a new idea emerges that goes against the current status quo, it's expected that other scientists will do their best to tear the idea apart and attack any angle they can. It is only by surviving this gauntlet of challenges that a fringe idea can one day become mainstream. If the evidence is conclusive, ideas gain traction fairly quickly. When other explanations also can fit the data, or results vary there will be much more pushback. Some men built their legacy around theories that may be disproven later, surely they'll defend them. But other men build their legacy disproving older theories and changing the paradigm.

  • @JonathanDiggsDuke
    @JonathanDiggsDuke4 ай бұрын

    “Forever” is hard for the overwhelming majority to grasp.

  • @musyclover

    @musyclover

    3 ай бұрын

    You included 🙀

  • @eddieestrada636

    @eddieestrada636

    Ай бұрын

    Nope that’s all the time before and after very simple

  • @maryb3620

    @maryb3620

    5 күн бұрын

    And it’s precisely why more humans than not choose to dwell in their sin,repeat it over& over as if their eternal destination isn’t a reality directly caused by their current choices& walk in life. Some arrogantly think that they can just convert on their deathbed & a golden ticket entry pass. The truth is it doesn’t really happen that way. If you choose to remain hardened in your sin for your whole life Uoj won’t change your mind at the end,even if you have time to choose at the end which many won’t get that option at all& be taken w/o notice or belief.

  • @adrianmoore8840
    @adrianmoore8840Ай бұрын

    Beauty of science and discovery is you find new things that can send you into a completely different direction and make you start again it's a beautiful thing

  • @christophercremo3020
    @christophercremo30206 ай бұрын

    The universe is probably older than they thought and those galaxies just had more time to form than they thought

  • @markb3786

    @markb3786

    6 ай бұрын

    Your common sense is not welcome here. Only conspiracies.

  • @plasmaphysics1017

    @plasmaphysics1017

    6 ай бұрын

    Nope. Not according to evidence.

  • @christophercremo3020

    @christophercremo3020

    6 ай бұрын

    When I was a kid they told me it was 5 billion old. Trust me. It will keep changing. They act like they know. They don’t

  • @plasmaphysics1017

    @plasmaphysics1017

    6 ай бұрын

    @@christophercremo3020 _"They act like they know. They don’t"_ Yes they do. And it is based on evidence. Care to deal with it?

  • @christophercremo3020

    @christophercremo3020

    6 ай бұрын

    @@plasmaphysics1017 Humans are very limited, but very egotistical. Some think they know it all, but in reality they know next to nothing.

  • @victor7574
    @victor75746 ай бұрын

    "Give us one free miracle, and we'll explain everything else."--Terence McKenna

  • @ramirocantu3869

    @ramirocantu3869

    6 ай бұрын

    More like miracles

  • @victor7574

    @victor7574

    6 ай бұрын

    McKenna was referring to the Big Bang.@@ramirocantu3869

  • @speleoth

    @speleoth

    6 ай бұрын

    The free miracle has already been given in Jesus's sacrifice on the cross.

  • @a-walpatches6460

    @a-walpatches6460

    6 ай бұрын

    @@speleoth That's a fairytale not a miracle, there's an important distinction.

  • @seraphimdunn

    @seraphimdunn

    6 ай бұрын

    @@a-walpatches6460 The big bang is literally a creation myth, but go off.

  • @Youtubechannel-po8cz
    @Youtubechannel-po8cz5 күн бұрын

    Science is about discovery and investigation. James Webb is advancing this process, now it’s up to scientists to make sense of the new information. Another step forward.

  • @HaulingBonez
    @HaulingBonez3 ай бұрын

    So, every car passing me on the highway started from a single point in space?

  • @Lukey111

    @Lukey111

    3 ай бұрын

    The particles that comprise the car? Yes

  • @foogentog

    @foogentog

    3 ай бұрын

    No. Space was created by the Big Bang. Space didn’t exist until matter existed.

  • @scottdoleac5651
    @scottdoleac56514 ай бұрын

    The fact Joe hangs in there with conversations blows my mind. You tha man joe

  • @Shroomification7

    @Shroomification7

    4 ай бұрын

    Yeah it's really hard to just listen

  • @CrookedJoeBiden

    @CrookedJoeBiden

    4 ай бұрын

    Joe been doing this for a while. Go back an watch some of his old clips from 4 and 5 years ago of him interviewing different scientists and doctors. Joe kinda smart😅

  • @Pow_FIsh

    @Pow_FIsh

    Ай бұрын

    Joe was tricked almost immediately. He accepted the 'misquote' cope, it doesn't matter if she loses sleep over 'the big bang' or 'galaxy formation' those are the same things represented slightly differently. There's no world where JUST galaxy formation is wrong, galaxy formation is wrong because GRAVITY is wrong. That's what keeps her up. And the scumbags that run this channel know and are paid to lie to us.

  • @VernCrisler
    @VernCrisler6 ай бұрын

    Some people simply refuse to accept contradictory data -- no matter how clear it is. Meyer is just another in a long line who refuses to open his eyes to the failures of BB Theory.

  • @murraymadness4674

    @murraymadness4674

    6 ай бұрын

    Exactly, any data that can be consistent with the theory is accepted, anything that refutes it is an 'anomoly' that needs further study. Galaxy rotation shows GR theory of gravity is not correct, but then dark matter is created out of nothing with no evidence whatsoever so the GR theory remains.

  • @valentinmalinov8424

    @valentinmalinov8424

    6 ай бұрын

    These people are protecting their jobs, not the truth. The circular diagram of this "proposed event" and revealing facts can be found in the book - "Theory of Everything in Physics and the Universe"

  • @plasmaphysics1017

    @plasmaphysics1017

    6 ай бұрын

    _"the failures of BB Theory."_ Where did that happen? It makes a number of successful predictions. Unlike any alternative 'models'.

  • @bhajandaniel9771

    @bhajandaniel9771

    6 ай бұрын

    Right on.

  • @kyplummer3657
    @kyplummer36573 ай бұрын

    We will never stop hearing the earth is an oblate spheroid.

  • @SpacePonder
    @SpacePonder15 күн бұрын

    4:45 Where did you get this amazing animation of the time going back from big bang to present day? :O

  • @bobafeet1234
    @bobafeet12346 ай бұрын

    (To me, this sounds like the Universal Torus theory. Birth, life, death... rebirth, infinitely). I think the Roger Penrose theory, that the cosmic background radiation was already evenly dispersed at the moment of the Big Bang, is fascinating. That means the empty space the Universe propagated into was already there for an infinite amount of time. And that we are living in the opposite side of a black hole... the Big Bang was a white hole (explains a lot)... crazy.

  • @charlesbrightman4237

    @charlesbrightman4237

    6 ай бұрын

    CMBR: (Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation): Consider the following: Per QED (Quantum Electro Dynamics, whereby 'em' interacts with the electrons in atoms and molecules) and QCD (Quantum Chromo Dynamics, whereby 'em' interacts with the nucleus of atoms), matter has to exist for 'em' to be given off by that matter. What matter exists in outer space for that microwave 'em' to be seen by us? And 'if' it were from when matter first came into existence during the fairy tale of the 'singular big bang', that 'em' should be long gone by now and should not even be able to be seen by us. BB -> Matter and 'em' are created -> 'em' moves at the speed of light, matter moves more slowly -> (Billions of years go by) -> matter (and us) here ..........................................'em' long gone. (And there is no matter 'out here' yet for any 'em' to come back to us via QED or QCD).

  • @charlesbrightman4237

    @charlesbrightman4237

    6 ай бұрын

    IN THE INTEREST OF FINDING THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING: SOME THINGS MODERN SCIENCE DOES NOT APPARENTLY KNOW: Consider the following: a. Numbers: Modern science does not even know how numbers and certain mathematical constants exist for math to do what math does. (And nobody as of yet has been able to show me how numbers and certain mathematical constants can come from the Standard Model Of Particle Physics). b. Space: Modern science does not even know what 'space' actually is nor how it could actually warp and expand. c. Time: Modern science does not even know what 'time' actually is nor how it could actually warp and vary. d. Gravity: Modern science does not even know what 'gravity' actually is nor how gravity actually does what it appears to do. And for those who claim that 'gravity' is matter warping the fabric of spacetime, see 'b' and 'c' above. e. Speed of Light: 'Speed', distance divided by time, distance being two points in space with space between those two points. But yet, here again, modern science does not even know what space and time actually are that makes up 'speed' and they also claim that space can warp and expand and time can warp and vary, so how could they truly know even what the speed of light actually is that they utilize in many of the formulas? Speed of light should also warp, expand and vary depending upon what space and time it was in. And if the speed of light can warp, expand and vary in space and time, how then do far away astronomical observations actually work that are based upon light and the speed of light that could warp, expand and vary in actual reality? f. Photons: A photon swirls with the 'e' and 'm' energy fields 90 degrees to each other. A photon is also considered massless. What keeps the 'e' and 'm' energy fields together across the vast universe? And why doesn't the momentum of the 'e' and 'm' energy fields as they swirl about not fling them away from the central area of the photon? And electricity is electricity and magnetism is magnetism varying possibly only in energy modality, energy density and energy frequency. Why doesn't the 'e' and 'm' of other photons and of matter basically tear apart a photon going across the vast universe? Also, 'if' a photon actually red shifts, where does the red shifted energy go and why does the photon red shift? And for those who claim space expanding causes a photon to red shift, see 'b' above. Why does radio 'em' (large 'em' waves) have low energy and gamma 'em' (small 'em' waves) have high energy? And for those who say E = hf; see also 'b' and 'c' above. (f = frequency, cycles per second. But modern science claims space can warp and expand and time can warp and vary. If 'space' warps and expands and/or 'time' warps and varies, what does that do to 'E'? And why doesn't 'E' keep space from expanding and time from varying?). g. Energy: Modern science claims that energy cannot be created nor destroyed, it's one of the foundations of physics. Hence, energy is either truly a finite amount and eternally existent, or modern science is wrong. First Law Of Thermodynamics: "Energy can neither be created nor destroyed." How exactly is 'energy' eternally existent? h. Existence and Non-Existence side by side throughout all of eternity. How?

  • @johnwilliams3555

    @johnwilliams3555

    6 ай бұрын

    @@charlesbrightman4237 Who the heck are you Charles? Well that just threw a spanner in the works. Brilliant!

  • @charlesbrightman4237

    @charlesbrightman4237

    6 ай бұрын

    @@johnwilliams3555 Thanks, consider my view concerning 'red shift' as well: RED SHIFT: WARNING: (CONTAINS EXISTENTIAL MATTERS): Red Shift: Consider the following: a. Current narrative: Space itself is expanding. (Even though science does not fully know yet what 'space' actually is nor how it could actually expand). b. But consider: The net effect of solar winds, particles and energy pushing outward from galaxies, (even modern science claims 'em' has momentum), continuously, over a prolonged period of time, with other galaxies doing the same, with nothing to stop them from doing so, would tend to push galaxies away from each other and even potentially allow the cosmic web to form between galaxies. And then, when we here in our galaxy, look at far away galaxies, with other galaxies in between, the net effect of all those galactic interactions would have galaxies furthest from ours move away faster the further those galaxies were from us, including us perceiving a red shift of energy. c. Now, utilizing the scientific principal of Occam's razor, which way is more probably correct? What the current narrative is ('a' above), or 'b' utilizing known physics? * Added note: Plus, 'if' my analysis is correct that our spiral shaped galaxy is collapsing in upon itself, then consider also: d. When we look at solar systems between ours and the center of the galaxy, those solar systems would be getting pulled faster towards the center than ours, hence also seeing a red shift of energy. e. When we look at solar systems between ours and the outer edge of the galaxy, our solar system would be getting pulled faster towards the center then them, hence also seeing a red shift of energy. f. Only if we looked at solar systems adjacent to ours should we see a blue shift of energy (as the solar systems became closer together as they moved towards the center of the galaxy). I also propose looking for blue shifts of energy between our solar system and adjacent solar systems to confirm or deny this current belief. g. But if true, would also add to our observation of seeing a red shift of energy in this universe as our spiral shaped galaxy collapses in upon itself. Of which, not only would species from this Earth have to get off of this Earth before the Sun becomes a red giant one day and wipes out all life on this Earth if not even the entire Earth itself, but species from this Earth would also have to successfully get out of this collapsing spiral shaped galaxy, otherwise, most probably death awaits us all and this Earth and all on it are all just a waste of space time in this universe. All life from this Earth would eventually die and go extinct. Currently, no exceptions. h. QUESTION: Do basically all galaxies eventually collapse in upon themselves? (Which would add to the perceived red shift between galaxies as they all basically shrink in size). Modern science currently states that 'gravity' is matter bending the fabric of spacetime. There is a lot of matter in a galaxy and hence would make a huge dent in spacetime. How could galaxies not collapse in upon themselves if space and time were bent to make it so? Of which also, the progression of galaxies?: 1. How exactly do galaxies form? (The current narrative is that matter, via gravity, attracts other matter. The electric universe model also includes universal plasma currents.) 2. How exactly do galaxies flatten out if gravity is acting on the whole galaxy? (Other forces must also be at work besides gravity for a galaxy to flatten out? Electrical and/or magnetic forces?) 3. How exactly do galaxies become spiral shaped? (At least one way would be orbital velocity of matter with at least gravity acting upon that matter, would cause a spiral shaped effect. The electric universe model also includes energy input into the galaxy, which spiral towards the galactic center, which then gets thrust out from the center, at about 90 degrees from the input. Additionally, with the conservation of energy, as energy moves into the vertical plane from the center of the horizontal plane, energy from the horisontal plane moves to the center of the horizontal plane to replace the energy that moved into the vertical plane. There is also the conservation of angular momentum. As more matter moves towards the center of the galaxy, that portion of the galaxy would speed up relative to the matter towards the outer portions of the galaxy.) Additionally: GALAXY SPIN: (Inner and Outer areas spinning at the same speed): The inner and outer areas of the galaxy are connected via gravitational, electrical, and magnetic energy fields. While moving at the same speed, the inner area has less space to travel whereas the outer area has more space to travel. Hence a spiral shape forms. 4. The natural progression of a galaxy would be to become smaller and smaller. 5. Of which, does all life throughout the entire universe (if other life even exists in the universe besides what is on this Earth, which is most probably true) eventually die and go extinct and the entire universe and all in it are ultimately meaningless in the grandest scheme of things and the entire universe and all in it are ultimately just a waste of spacetime in existence? And even 'if' the current narrative of space itself is expanding, and the entire universe would eventually end in a 'big freeze', wouldn't the end of life itself in this entire universe still occur?

  • @charlesbrightman4237

    @charlesbrightman4237

    6 ай бұрын

    @@johnwilliams3555 I am 'me'.

  • @kylemoran4343
    @kylemoran43436 ай бұрын

    I always assumed, "space" was something between the ears of politicians and news reporters ! Gee, guess I might be right ?

  • @Justdont693

    @Justdont693

    4 ай бұрын

    Well. If we’re being honest. We all have some space is that area. Some more than others 😂

  • @frwansie

    @frwansie

    4 ай бұрын

    We all started with a bang

  • @ataho2000

    @ataho2000

    4 ай бұрын

    When it comes to politicians and news reporters, your conflating space with void.

  • @RodMartinJr

    @RodMartinJr

    4 ай бұрын

    Yes, and space (which separates us) is also the opposite of Love (which brings us together). 😎♥✝🇺🇸💯

  • @Pow_FIsh

    @Pow_FIsh

    Ай бұрын

    ding ding ding

  • @cecaju9516
    @cecaju9516Ай бұрын

    Scientists are the ones announcing these findings that challenge the current understanding of the universe, thus proving that science isn’t dogmatic.

  • @koobs4549

    @koobs4549

    17 күн бұрын

    Science can’t be dogmatics only people can be dogmatic about science. Science doesn’t answer questions, it only eliminates incorrect theories. It cannot prove, only disprove.

  • @drmom9900
    @drmom99005 ай бұрын

    We can't even accurately date the monuments of ancient egypt. I think its safe to say we know absolutely nothing about the universe

  • @dio13373

    @dio13373

    4 ай бұрын

    we know lots of things about the universe, dating things on earth is tricky as you need to deal with erosion over time and weather, which makes it hard to date due to many external factors affecting it, but light has a constant measure which means no matter what its speed is not changing with this we can accurately calculate distance/time. because of this we can calculate a point of origin, commonly referred to a bing bang. where everything was together superheated in a ball of plasma. but we can't "look" further back we can only state hypothesis from there. which means the universe could of existed before its plasma state for an infinite amount of time for all we know.

  • @pawpkitty

    @pawpkitty

    Ай бұрын

    That's because radiocarbon dating isn't perfect lol

  • @lukesanborn87
    @lukesanborn874 ай бұрын

    After reading many comments here, it seems that many are reading and reacting to the video title without really listening to/understanding what Stephen is actually saying.

  • @kylemenos

    @kylemenos

    3 ай бұрын

    No they are just too stupid to understand what he said. Unfortunately. Ya, that's what you get when you throw the family and nation out the window for identity politics and drugs.

  • @elonever.2.071

    @elonever.2.071

    Ай бұрын

    We understand what he is saying we just don't agree with it.

  • @Pow_FIsh

    @Pow_FIsh

    Ай бұрын

    its an important lesson about the lies of science.

  • @lukesanborn87

    @lukesanborn87

    Ай бұрын

    @@Pow_FIshBased on that response, you’re definitely one of the people my comment was directed at. Literally nothing he said indicates that he is concerned with the “lies of science”, whatever that might mean.

  • @koobs4549

    @koobs4549

    17 күн бұрын

    The main problem is that people don’t seem to understand the simple difference between a period & a question mark 😂

  • @duhbomb101
    @duhbomb1013 ай бұрын

    as a non-physicist, based on the assumption that all the mass in the universe is finite, why wouldn't there be more galaxies formed in an ever-expanding universe?

  • @DSP_2.0
    @DSP_2.04 ай бұрын

    I have always wondered, what if there have been multiple big bangs. That might explain some of the older Galaxies they didn't expect. So, rather then there being a beginning of time, it's just cycles of galaxies being started. But it's just a thought.

  • @HereForAStorm
    @HereForAStorm4 ай бұрын

    We will have to consult Dr. Fauci on this... I heard that he is, in fact, science itself.

  • @mikegeee3319

    @mikegeee3319

    3 ай бұрын

    Or Joe Rogan....he knows everything 🙄

  • @garrettramirez428

    @garrettramirez428

    3 ай бұрын

    Nah, cut out the middleman and just ask Bill Gates

  • @Turgz

    @Turgz

    2 ай бұрын

    @@mikegeee3319 Knowing more than you do doesn't mean knowing everything.

  • @jimhughes1070

    @jimhughes1070

    Ай бұрын

    😭😭😭🤣🤣🤣💯

  • @mikegeee3319

    @mikegeee3319

    Ай бұрын

    @@Turgz I'll trust a scientist w 40 years experience over Rogan lol

  • @dropkickirish4449
    @dropkickirish44496 ай бұрын

    “To realize that all your life, all your love, all your hate, all your memories, all your pain, it was all the same thing. It was all the same dream, a dream that you had inside a locked room, a dream about being a person.” - Fred Rogers

  • @fcztyuo876b6

    @fcztyuo876b6

    6 ай бұрын

    Or Rustin Cohle.

  • @dropkickirish4449

    @dropkickirish4449

    6 ай бұрын

    @@fcztyuo876b6 *Rusty Hole.

  • @user-du7dt2ky8y

    @user-du7dt2ky8y

    4 ай бұрын

    Kanye said it too

  • @00range

    @00range

    4 ай бұрын

    Zhuangzi dreams of a butterfly

  • @dragonflysword

    @dragonflysword

    4 ай бұрын

    @@user-du7dt2ky8y I knew he was a plagiarist.

  • @Lizardgrad89
    @Lizardgrad893 ай бұрын

    Nobody said the Big Bang didn’t happen, they did say it might have been longer ago than previously thought.

  • @BigMan.270

    @BigMan.270

    2 ай бұрын

    So who or what created the "Big Bang". Nothing can just happen from nothing.

  • @_lfab
    @_lfab3 ай бұрын

    Too bad Joe didn’t ask Kat Williams for clarification on this last week.

  • @X3MgamePlays
    @X3MgamePlays6 ай бұрын

    I still think there is something fundametal wrong with the whole theory regarding redshift. They still need to measure redshift, redshifting. Meaning that the wavelenght of a very distant object is visible changing over time too. Lets say that for example z=10 becomes z=10.000000001 over a span of the last 50 years or so. Something like that. If it cannot be calculated and tested, redshift itself might be caused by something else.

  • @plasmaphysics1017

    @plasmaphysics1017

    6 ай бұрын

    _"redshift itself might be caused by something else."_ And what would that be? Trust me, various crackpots have been pushing tired light nonsense for decades. None of them have a viable mechanism.

  • @iori1303

    @iori1303

    6 ай бұрын

    Redshifting is a proven theory, you CAN messure it and calculate it

  • @ArchonOne

    @ArchonOne

    6 ай бұрын

    I strongly suggest looking up Halton Arp so you can find out exactly what is wrong with redshift. It's a lot. More than you can easily imagine. Happy hunting.

  • @ArchonOne

    @ArchonOne

    6 ай бұрын

    Oh its a proven theory is it? So I guess you never read the Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies by Halton Arp where he shows pictures of thousands of blue-shifted galaxies physically connected with a visible plasma bridge to highly redshifted ones? How's that possible if redshift is an indication of direction and speed? My best advice is to be very careful about what you accept as a proven theory. It might shock you to learn just how much of our theory of space is one broken theory piled on top of another broken theory. Whenever you have a conclusion and are looking for evidence to support it, things tend to go bad; and that is exactly what our theoretical space sciences have become. A bunch of biased people protecting their degrees and reputations by ignoring what we observe and patching their broken, non-predictive theories. In 200 years, the stuff we "know" today is going to be laughed at and people are going to wonder how anyone ever bought into this big-bang dark matter nonsense. @@iori1303

  • @brianfriedman101

    @brianfriedman101

    6 ай бұрын

    Hubble didn't think so. Can you imagine? Redshift of light on those distances cannot be proved

  • @metagaminguniversemgu2240
    @metagaminguniversemgu22406 ай бұрын

    The "Nasa People" are the Engineers at Northrop Grumman that built the JWST on behalf of a NASA contract.

  • @regpharvey

    @regpharvey

    6 ай бұрын

    okay great thanks

  • @bjornfeuerbacher5514

    @bjornfeuerbacher5514

    6 ай бұрын

    So he is completely ignoring the contributions by ESA and CSA?

  • @simonalcock1125

    @simonalcock1125

    6 ай бұрын

    Let's stop with the conspiracy theories and listen to huge consensus from a wide range of scientists around the world. Nothing is ever proven in science (unlike maths) but for now there's a LOT of data indicating that the big bang + inflation model is the current one to beat.

  • @dhollsynthmusic
    @dhollsynthmusicАй бұрын

    5:12 "it's always possible that we can change our minds on things because science is always provisional." ...yeah, tell that to the 'trust the science!' crowd.

  • @user-xs3ws1nj1e
    @user-xs3ws1nj1e3 ай бұрын

    The debate on big bang vs static universe needs to be reopened, there has been no real investigation since Bell Labs accidentally discovered the microwave background radiation, and it was decided that the Big bang theory had won, and anyone that questions this ends up without a career.

  • @ransomsimmons3218
    @ransomsimmons32186 ай бұрын

    This accomplished physicist said something that I do not think he meant. He said that the redshifts in faraway galaxies were predicted by the Big Bang theory, when in fact, redshift was known before the Big Bang was an accepted theory. If a galaxy is moving away from you, even if there were no universal expansion or Big Bang, there would still be a redshift of the light.

  • @ulrikof.2486

    @ulrikof.2486

    5 ай бұрын

    Imho correct.

  • @edeledeledel5490

    @edeledeledel5490

    3 ай бұрын

    Perhaps he meant the extent of the particular redshifts? I don't know, is spite of the fact I studied astrophysics at Uni. But it was 52 years ago... Everything that I knew is now probably complete bollocks. That's what happens with science.

  • @Pow_FIsh

    @Pow_FIsh

    Ай бұрын

    you have to really hunt for things that confirm the big bang, and totally ignore the cosmic background radiation is oriented to earth.

  • @sidd_not_vicious2609
    @sidd_not_vicious26094 ай бұрын

    I do not believe we will ever know the actual size or reason of our universe..its beyond us as a species..

  • @colinpierre3441

    @colinpierre3441

    4 ай бұрын

    Yup you're sure right about that... time is better spent getting to know the Creator of the universe

  • @sidd_not_vicious2609

    @sidd_not_vicious2609

    4 ай бұрын

    I agree@@colinpierre3441

  • @daleyoung4710

    @daleyoung4710

    3 ай бұрын

    There is no creator. Grow up.

  • @changeforthebetter4063

    @changeforthebetter4063

    3 ай бұрын

    @@colinpierre3441 Amen

  • @lionbolt2136

    @lionbolt2136

    3 ай бұрын

    @@daleyoung4710 And your source is what? trust me bro? You grow up.

  • @hib32
    @hib323 ай бұрын

    The good thing about numbers is that they are infinite, unlike the universe apparently. No matter what is found in the universe, numbers can always be adjusted.

  • @koobs4549
    @koobs454917 күн бұрын

    You shouldn’t listen to anyone telling you, “the science is settled” science is not an answer, it’s a process for helping to eliminate wrong answers. Science doesn’t say, “yeah it’s definitely this” science can only say, “it’s definitely not that”.

  • @RTevault-if1to
    @RTevault-if1to6 күн бұрын

    It wasn't a bang, it was an intention.

  • @jacksonnc8877
    @jacksonnc88776 ай бұрын

    The universe is way older than what they have predicted based on how fast these distant old galaxys should be at

  • @senju2024

    @senju2024

    6 ай бұрын

    So the big bang theory is still valid but our timeline and the age of the universe seems incorrect? That would make sense.

  • @readynowforever3676

    @readynowforever3676

    6 ай бұрын

    Dude, stay in your lane. Your cosmo expertise, when it comes to qualitative literacy, quantitative analysis and final computations, is not much superior than your pit bull’s.

  • @earlforrester4908

    @earlforrester4908

    6 ай бұрын

    I read something other day saying the galaxy’s formed much faster then thought possible because all the matter that made them was closer together. The age time was the same but the space around them wasn’t.

  • @readynowforever3676

    @readynowforever3676

    6 ай бұрын

    @@earlforrester4908 That sounds coherently probable and plausible. 👍🏽✊🏽💪🏽👏🏽 Instead of relying merely upon intuitive assumptions, and making half baked conclusions, stay cognitive and explorative. And that will expand your intuition vastly. Sounds like you have the right practices. ✌🏽

  • @zacharyshort384

    @zacharyshort384

    6 ай бұрын

    @@readynowforever3676 You don't know his Pit Bull's academic achievements, mate.

  • @theeffete3396
    @theeffete33966 ай бұрын

    I think the biggest flaw with all these predictions is assuming that time itself has remained consistent throughout Expansion. If the universe is expanding, it's reasonable to suggest that time is also expanding. In other words, the length of a second as we measure it now is longer (more "stretched out") than a second was billions of years ago. Those distant galaxies didn't form ultra-fast, they formed at a standard rate. It's just that by our current measurement of time it only seems too fast.

  • @Nahash5150

    @Nahash5150

    6 ай бұрын

    I'm inclined to agree. The period of a second is relative to our current experience of space-time, which they admit evolved significantly since the BB.

  • @tonywells6990

    @tonywells6990

    6 ай бұрын

    There is no reason to think, or evidence, for time running at a different rate in the early universe. In the first 20 minutes the universe seemed to run exactly as it does today, which is why the predictions of nucleosynthesis (the creation of hydrogen, helium and other light elements) match observations. Time would be dilated if gravitational curvature in the early universe was high (like it is around a black hole), but it wasn't. Spacetime is almost 'flat', which means its curvature (and any time dilation) was nearly zero.

  • @plasmaphysics1017

    @plasmaphysics1017

    6 ай бұрын

    @@tonywells6990 Well said. However, I fear you are wasting pixels on the amateur physicists posting on here :)

  • @h.glover9843

    @h.glover9843

    6 ай бұрын

    Just because something is 'reasonable', does not make it more than an extension of the imagination. Time is solely a human function within our physical reality; a measurement of existence necessary to organize our physical reality. Although Einstein alluded in his theory of special relativity that as we approach the speed of light time dilates, however, within that moment of existence, for the observer - and the traveler - a second is still just a second. The measurement of time, i.e., a second, a minute, etc, within itself does not change, but the dilation effect is merely the comparison experience of the observer's clock to the traveler's clock. It is the speed that causes the effect, not the life of either the observer or the traveler... or the galaxy. To the observer a second is still a second, while on the traveler's warp-enveloped ship, a second is also just a second. An earth-measured year is still an earth-measured year, regardless of location or speed. In other words, the traveler doesn't get 'longer' seconds, days, months or years on his ship at warp speed, while the observer on Earth does not get 'shorter' seconds, days, months or years in his still position. The measurement does not change, only the comparative observational experience does.

  • @BrandyBalloon

    @BrandyBalloon

    6 ай бұрын

    @@h.glover9843 What I find frustrating is that there's no way to determine absolute time. It's all relative and based on motion. Our perception of time and the ways we measure it are all based on how fast things move. If everything started moving faster, as observed from outside our frame of reference, we wouldn't know, as you said. If time sped up to twice as fast (if that even makes sense) a clock would tick twice as fast, things would fall twice as fast, we would age twice as fast, but it would still happen at the same speed from our perspective because our own thoughts and senses are also working twice as fast.

  • @NormNormally
    @NormNormallyАй бұрын

    I would’ve ventured a guess that if the big bang were disproven, I wouldn’t be hearing about it on Joe Rogan’s podcast first

  • @pawpkitty
    @pawpkittyАй бұрын

    This whole thing can be rebutted by the big crunch theory. Just because the big bang didn't happen exactly the way this man alleges does not negate the fact that it happened.

  • @martinroncetti4134
    @martinroncetti41346 ай бұрын

    Imagine that, the “science ISN’T settled”…

  • @pelgrim8640

    @pelgrim8640

    6 ай бұрын

    It never claimed to be.

  • @brandondetroitfanmichaels4325

    @brandondetroitfanmichaels4325

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@pelgrim8640science always puts people in realities, that we think it should be until we learn something new! And we're put into that reality now until another new thing comes up. Like over 500 years ago, people thought the earth was flat. They lived in that reality

  • @pelgrim8640

    @pelgrim8640

    6 ай бұрын

    @@brandondetroitfanmichaels4325 Again, science never claims to be "settled", in fact it is a core principle in science that ALL knowledge is provisional, it is called falsifiability.

  • @brandondetroitfanmichaels4325

    @brandondetroitfanmichaels4325

    6 ай бұрын

    @@pelgrim8640 like I said, people live in realities until they're proven wrong. Just like people 500 years ago, think in the world was flat

  • @irfanshaikh9390

    @irfanshaikh9390

    4 ай бұрын

    That's the point of science. It constantly adapts to new information. What the hell is so difficult to grasp?

  • @davidabbett7011
    @davidabbett70116 ай бұрын

    It is exciting beyond description seeing how the JWST is proving its financial investment with incredible observations. If only we could simply allow the scientific method to run its course without hyperbolic arguments over observations that have not been vetted or refuted over normal due diligence. Thank you for the JWST !

  • @scottanderson3751

    @scottanderson3751

    6 ай бұрын

    …can still spot a bot a mile off,just saying ✌️

  • @ThresholdGaming

    @ThresholdGaming

    6 ай бұрын

    No ya can't, just saying@@scottanderson3751

  • @someonethatwatchesyoutube2953

    @someonethatwatchesyoutube2953

    6 ай бұрын

    The information gleaned from the telescope is moderately interesting but how will it benefit us otherwise? I don’t think it’s worth more than 10 minutes of my slavery to the state.

  • @AstralApple

    @AstralApple

    6 ай бұрын

    The Big Bang theory is illogical and not thought through. It is ridiculous to think that nothing existed before the big bang. Plus why would the Big bang theory ever be advanced in the field of science when no one could ever postulate what could have "caused" it.

  • @ricomajestic

    @ricomajestic

    6 ай бұрын

    @@someonethatwatchesyoutube2953 It is worth it! Knowledge is power. And the new technology that sprung from it has numerous practical applications.

  • @pinkybrown1525
    @pinkybrown15254 ай бұрын

    Read old science books, just go back 50 years. Thats the great thing about science, we update it

  • @zenorabbit439
    @zenorabbit4393 ай бұрын

    I think the reason the galaxies were forming faster is cause there was less dark matter in the early universe making general gravity more intense

  • @glenw-xm5zf

    @glenw-xm5zf

    3 ай бұрын

    God spoke this universe into being in less than a second. Lets pretend the 'exprts are right and man is 25 million yrs ol. If they started with 4 and 2 men 2 women. and they had just 4 kids and this repeated every 40 years. Do the exponential growth and decay thingy and tell me what our pop would be. Hint, the world would be covered with people to a depth of over 30 feet. Man has been around for 6,000 years. they can laugh at me for saying that, but I can laugh too, and often do. cheers

  • @elonever.2.071

    @elonever.2.071

    Ай бұрын

    Dark matter and dark energy are fudge factors to balance their equations. Anytime you have a fudge factor of +/- 10,000 times the sum there is a good chance either your original premise or your equations are wrong.

  • @TJ_PowPow

    @TJ_PowPow

    Ай бұрын

    ​@elonever.2.071 Exactly. Having went down the dark matter/energy rabbit hole, it resembles religion. You can't prove it does exist or doesn't exist. You can only say it should exist because there is currently no other explanation.

  • @biskienator
    @biskienator6 ай бұрын

    I would love to know if they have been able to determine the approximate center/starting point of the big bang and where we are in relation to that "center"

  • @williampearl2384

    @williampearl2384

    6 ай бұрын

    There is a "Great void" where there are very few galaxies and stars. I wonder if this could be the "center".

  • @Gary_Winthorpe

    @Gary_Winthorpe

    6 ай бұрын

    Lololoool. You guys actually believe this stuff? 😂

  • @coltfathwell6185

    @coltfathwell6185

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Gary_Winthorpe anyone with a brain and wasn't brainwashed for 20 years by their mommies and daddies knows science has better explanations of the start of the universe then the "sky daddies' theory"............ we know we know your imaginary friend in the sky had some random bums and drunks feel his love and write a bunch of chapters in a book and it said god is real.

  • @TheManOfSteel5151

    @TheManOfSteel5151

    6 ай бұрын

    I think according to the theory the center point is the entire universe so there is no starting point it just expands in every direction and does not expand away from a starting point.

  • @wsplatinum

    @wsplatinum

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Gary_Winthorpe care to share an alternative model?

  • @h.glover9843
    @h.glover98436 ай бұрын

    I love Stephen Meyer! Here, as in his books, he is clear, understandable, as he gives usable information gleaned from complex data. He correctly refutes misinformation with relevant explanations. Thank you for this clip.

  • @shanen457

    @shanen457

    6 ай бұрын

    Interesting, I was just thinking the opposite about him with all of his bloviating, circular reasoning, double speak and basically being a woman with endless speech without really saying anything.

  • @Whotfareyou123

    @Whotfareyou123

    6 ай бұрын

    He didn't refute anything. The surprising part is there are galaxies that are older and more formed than the big bang theory predicts not that there is infrared light

  • @Reclaimer77

    @Reclaimer77

    6 ай бұрын

    Uh no he literally distributes misinformation. Cambrian "explosion."? He lied about when the Cabrian period actually began. Irreducable complexity? Debunked a gillion times in lab experiments, he keeps repeating it. No benefitial mutations? They only count those which have nothing to do with environment which is nonsense. DNA is like computer code? False. DNA is governed by physical laws by way of amino acid chains physically forming into geometric patterns. It's nothing like computer code or "information".The time problem? They only consider mutations happening in sequence, not parallel, and they totally ignore the roll gene expression plays in evolution. Time and time again they either lie, straw man, or deliberately rig things in their favor to come to a predetermined OUTCOME. It's not science.

  • @LANCEtheBOIL

    @LANCEtheBOIL

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Whotfareyou123 now they've found galaxies even further out and way to formed to fit in the old " age of the universe " theory, plus they may have found " dark stars" and they really throw a wrench into physics

  • @coltfathwell6185

    @coltfathwell6185

    6 ай бұрын

    @@LANCEtheBOIL what are you talking about? they've known about all that. none of this is "new". light can only travel so fast. the light due to the big bang hasn't gotten here yet this isn't hard to understand. these devices show us what's out there it's up to us to go through the data and see what it says. the time they say the big bang could have happened is just an educated guess this guy is throwing out a lot of word salad

  • @freidrichnietzsche6643
    @freidrichnietzsche66433 ай бұрын

    … “Science is always provisional”

  • @sergio199407
    @sergio1994073 ай бұрын

    Big bang theory sounds cool in middle school but the older you get it's so flawed

  • @OrangeGeemer

    @OrangeGeemer

    3 ай бұрын

    3:05 watch the video, not just the clickbait title. The measurement made the Big Bang Theory stronger, the anomaly is on galaxy formation, specifically the time current models predicts it will take to form.

  • @jameson2916

    @jameson2916

    2 ай бұрын

    The whole flaw is that its supposed to explain the beginning of the universe but it doesn't. It just "explains" the expansion of it. The question of how did something come from nothing has no explanation to someone who values science as the study of evidence. So to bandaid the original thought in a less scientific, more religious matter many wanted to believe what they had been told as a child or just simply "had faith" that it was so, it was changed to the universe bieng condensed before it exploded. They assumed models that fit thier conformation bias and as they were disproven over time had to be band-aided even more as more study of evidence was actually done. A scientific mind can not accept that everything, including matter, energy and forces, space, time, information, and intelligence to recognize it, simply came from nothing with no prior cause. It was already here and just exploded into everything. But, where did it come from? That's the question that the Big Bang theory was supposed to answer and now has become merely a Band-Aid for its own self.

  • @koobs4549

    @koobs4549

    17 күн бұрын

    What cracks me up is how Christians & Scientists continue to argue semantics. A Christian will say there was no Big Bang, while believing that God spoke everything into existence. Isn’t that the same friggin’ thing? 😂 I mean the word itself, “universe” literally means a single spoken phrase. So the two communities should agree on this concept, no?

  • @koobs4549

    @koobs4549

    17 күн бұрын

    @@OrangeGeemerit’s not clickbait, you just need to stop reading questions as if they’re statements. The title made no claims, it asked a question, once you understand punctuation, you should be less confuse going forward

  • @Daimo83
    @Daimo836 ай бұрын

    One day they will say "can you believe they used to teach physics?" to kids in an elementary school classroom.

  • @bgbuilds2712

    @bgbuilds2712

    6 ай бұрын

    More likely they will say "can you believe they used to have classrooms?"

  • @blinkonce29

    @blinkonce29

    4 ай бұрын

    More like can you believe people didn't believe in physics 😂.... People need to understand what a theory means in science... It isn't a fact or can't be proven to be 100%true. It's called the Big Bang Theory for a reason 😂

  • @seditiouswalrus

    @seditiouswalrus

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@blinkonce29 did you know the use of too many laughing emojis in any given sentence denotes a lack of intelligence? It is call the smiling emoji cluster meter. _a scientist_

  • @blinkonce29

    @blinkonce29

    4 ай бұрын

    @@seditiouswalrus Did you know that a complete stranger assuming they know your level of intelligence by counting the use of emojis in an informal comment section is......... absolutely hilarious 😂😆😂😂. Man you're smart 😂🤣 oh excuse me , I think you'd prefer "intelligent" 🤣. How many did I use I didn't count 🤣

  • @blinkonce29

    @blinkonce29

    4 ай бұрын

    @@seditiouswalrus I just noticed you ended your comment with " a scientist" 😂. No wonder you didn't have anything but a toddler's attempt at an insult instead of actually addressing what I said. Because what I said was true. As a scientist I hope you understand that you aren't intelligent. The men/women that actually discovered, came up with the facts,theories , data and information you've memorized are actually the intelligent ones. Not you 🤷

  • @williamjones2803
    @williamjones28033 ай бұрын

    "Science is always provisional..." Wow! The dude must never have heard of Covid 19 science or climate change science. Both of those are settled sciences.

  • @FuzzyFoot58
    @FuzzyFoot588 күн бұрын

    I dont think that the universe is the age we think it is. I think it is much older. Just because the oldest light we see has a certain age does not mean that this is the oldest light to ever have existed. There could easily have been older sources of light that perished and its light went out and passed by this planet beyond the observable universe far earlier than what we are able to see today. This may also be why our timeline for when the formation of galaxies dont add up; the universe is simply older than we think it is and the formation of galaxies is actually correct.

  • @Latinkuro
    @Latinkuro6 ай бұрын

    To me it is all about the data, the JWST data is telling us something is off, our perceived age of the universe might be incorrect. Our understanding of galaxy formation theory is so incomplete we can't really confirm or deny these findings at the moment. However, the JWST data is consistently pointing out that we do not have the full scope, and what we think is the age of the universe might be of by as much as 14 billion years.

  • @dustinweeks7245

    @dustinweeks7245

    6 ай бұрын

    *off

  • @jimreaper1337

    @jimreaper1337

    6 ай бұрын

    Time & Space are meaningless, i mean there are stars out there that could fit 400 quadrillion of our sun, inside... I can't even fathom 400 quadrillion, let alone 400 quadrillion suns, in just 1 star Yet apparently, all this mass and universe, just one day, popped into existence from a point no bigger than a pin head 🤔

  • @hdmccart6735

    @hdmccart6735

    6 ай бұрын

    Let's explain it all with a zombie carpenter in middle east shitsville...

  • @n-xsta

    @n-xsta

    6 ай бұрын

    @@hdmccart6735 😂😂😂

  • @Imagicka

    @Imagicka

    6 ай бұрын

    @@jimreaper1337 no. The Big Bang theory is about the rapid expansion of the universe, and not about what caused the rapid expansion. The BBT works with assumption there was an infinitely dense singularity, not that anything just popped into existence. The people who are claiming that everything came from nothing are believers/theists who believe in creatio ex nihilo.

  • @MM-vs2et
    @MM-vs2et6 ай бұрын

    If it does, then good. It means progress. It means discovery. And that is always healthy in science. In fact, theories get disproven all the time. Usually by their own authors. The day that theories stop getting proven or disproven would be a dark day for science.

  • @mcephas6982

    @mcephas6982

    5 ай бұрын

    The Copernican Principle has been disproved multiple times, but that doesn't stop scientists from engaging in mental gymnastics to keep their theories propped up. If they have to reinvent the laws of physics with special relativity, insert made up dark matter into their equations, invent an ever expanding Big Bang universe to explain away why everything is red shifted, they'll do it. They'll do it rather than question their foundational beliefs regarding the earth. Anything to prop up the Copernican Principle. In fact, most of the new theories discovered over the past century have been used to prop up their foundational theory that the earth moves and has no favoured location.

  • @terrorsquadlith

    @terrorsquadlith

    5 ай бұрын

    yes, that's why science can not be trusted

  • @danemaui8259

    @danemaui8259

    4 ай бұрын

    That's already happened. Need to break it to you. Is the big bang theory? When was the last time somebody tried to disprove that??????????? Or approve for that matter....

  • @terrorsquadlith

    @terrorsquadlith

    4 ай бұрын

    @@danemaui8259 when was the last time ? :DLMAO not that long ago actually..

  • @RodMartinJr

    @RodMartinJr

    4 ай бұрын

    Good point. Scientists are human, and human frailties like *_Ego_* and *_Toxic Certainty_* only get in the way of science. Scientific Method requires that we be unbiased. Regrettably, scientists seem to have chosen a heavily biased paradigm -- doubt-ridden "skepticism." Contrary to the popular myth, the better paradigm for discovery is restraint and humility. Restraint from jumping to the easiest conclusion, and humility to empirical evidence (humility to God, the source of that evidence). But asking some scientists to be humble, is like asking a donkey to fly by shoving it off a cliff. The poor creature is not suddenly going to sprout wings. 😎♥✝🇺🇸💯

  • @davidgonzales6105
    @davidgonzales61052 ай бұрын

    The old saying you can't get something out of nothing it's impossible

  • @philcastillo3719
    @philcastillo37193 ай бұрын

    Ok, so where is the start point of the Big Bang? I've never heard anyone explicity say where or shown a map stating somewhere around this point. It should be the easiest thing to figure out since everything is moving away from that point. If it has been reported, please add link. I'm very interested

  • @gordonc4721
    @gordonc47216 ай бұрын

    So now I cannot time travel back to kick my butt for leaving college?

  • @provy1kanobi673

    @provy1kanobi673

    5 ай бұрын

    U did already.....it was the best move you ever made....

  • @kennethjackson3285

    @kennethjackson3285

    4 ай бұрын

    At least no big collage loans to pay back

  • @PrinceIsot

    @PrinceIsot

    4 ай бұрын

    So they can brainwash you into thinking cosmetic surgery can change genders? 😂 You're good.

  • @andymat7359
    @andymat73596 ай бұрын

    I've always been a bit sceptical of big bang theory, how did a lot of matter explode out of something pea sized without contradicting conservation of energy and the 1st & 2nd laws of thermodynamics?

  • @plasmaphysics1017

    @plasmaphysics1017

    6 ай бұрын

    Because you don't understand said laws?

  • @thomasmaughan4798

    @thomasmaughan4798

    6 ай бұрын

    Give scientists a trillion dollars and they would be happy to work on the "how".

  • @berylbazor3756

    @berylbazor3756

    6 ай бұрын

    Amen to that.

  • @plasmaphysics1017

    @plasmaphysics1017

    6 ай бұрын

    @@berylbazor3756 'Amen' is highly apt for the OP. His arguments from ignorance are the standard nonsense of creationists.

  • @BPond7

    @BPond7

    6 ай бұрын

    @@plasmaphysics1017 It’s not as if atheists have any more believable theories. To date, science has nothing to say, about how the universe was created. Following on that, science has nothing to say on how life can spring forth from non-life. The most hard-hearted, scientifically-oriented atheist is as ignorant of these things, as anyone else.

  • @Johnsmith-hp6tw
    @Johnsmith-hp6tw23 күн бұрын

    Slight problem - the bb wasnt disoroven

  • @AMC2283

    @AMC2283

    22 күн бұрын

    but but but the webb telescope! new telescope!

  • @Johnsmith-hp6tw

    @Johnsmith-hp6tw

    21 күн бұрын

    @@AMC2283 but but but kiss my ass christian

  • @koobs4549

    @koobs4549

    16 күн бұрын

    That slight problem comes down to basic reading comprehension skills. The title ends in a question mark, not a period, if you thought a question was a statement, that’s where your confusion lies

  • @Johnsmith-hp6tw

    @Johnsmith-hp6tw

    16 күн бұрын

    @@AMC2283 what about it?

  • @Cnupoc
    @CnupocАй бұрын

    We believed for centuries that earth is at the center of the universe, and now we believe that the universe has a center where it all exploded/started from and is ever expanding. Yet Andromeda is on a coliision course with Milky Way....

  • @alexbowman7582
    @alexbowman75826 ай бұрын

    They were never gonna straight out admit they were wrong.

  • @cortical1

    @cortical1

    6 ай бұрын

    You really don't understand how scientific research works at all. Not only is there no better way to make a big career for yourself than by being able to disprove dominant theory with compelling empirical evidence, but the entire incentive structure in academic science compels individual scientists to provide novel findings. There is such an overwhelming disincentive for replicating already known results that it's difficult to even get many such studies published because the findings aren't viewed as making a significant contribution to the scientific literature. Grant applications that don't have sufficient novelty aren't even funded to begin with. So every single aspect of conducting scientific research highly incentivizes disproving existing theory and falsifying dominant paradigms. That's why it's actually quite meaningful and important when many decades of research produce areas of understanding upon which large majorities of researchers and scientists agree. "They" are all trying to prove the others are wrong, all the time. I know. I developed a theory of human brain function that is standing up to three decades of people taking potshots at it. So far, it stands. If it ever gets toppled, it will be a happy day where our understanding of the brain and our ability to help people improves. 🇺🇸

  • @JumpDiffusion

    @JumpDiffusion

    6 ай бұрын

    Who are “they”? What exactly do you mean?

  • @Puzzoozoo
    @Puzzoozoo6 ай бұрын

    I personally think the universe is bigger then we imagine and is thus older, and the big bang theory will be proved wrong.

  • @Zionbahzard
    @Zionbahzard2 ай бұрын

    Reality popped into existence 5 mins ago along with all things as they are now including our memories, and we have no way to prove that didn't happen.

  • @_PhuckJoeBiden_
    @_PhuckJoeBiden_3 ай бұрын

    Everything we know isn't false. Everything you believe is false. But there is truth and there is still time to accept Him into your life.🙌🏼🙏🏼

  • @manofmaat

    @manofmaat

    3 ай бұрын

    So what does that mean for your belief in Him??

  • @_PhuckJoeBiden_

    @_PhuckJoeBiden_

    3 ай бұрын

    @manofmaat i believe in Him the Truth. I do not believe the lies these clowns push to suit their narrative, so it says nothing about my belief in Him. You ever notice that the more we learn, the more science is disproven, and the teachings from The Bible and religious texts are strengthened?

  • @happyapple4269
    @happyapple42693 ай бұрын

    Never believed it in the first place. There is no way we can know at this stage of evolution how the universe began.

  • @tonyisnotdead

    @tonyisnotdead

    3 ай бұрын

    no one claimed that the big bang is 100%, no questions asked, the actual origin of the universe. the big bang is just the best explanation based on all the evidence

  • @HarryJ10
    @HarryJ106 ай бұрын

    What are the best books to read for a beginner/novice with an interest in the universe and space?

  • @MrHuddo

    @MrHuddo

    4 ай бұрын

    For a beginner, I'd suggest 'A Universe From Nothing' by Lawrence M. Krauss.

  • @belgischepommes7466

    @belgischepommes7466

    4 ай бұрын

    The universe in a nutshell have good think points

  • @hayneshuntingcom

    @hayneshuntingcom

    4 ай бұрын

    Im Ok...Your OK...but space is weird. I forget the author

  • @bradmowreader5983

    @bradmowreader5983

    4 ай бұрын

    Electric Universe Model , Thunderbolts project, Wal Thornhill, Velekovsky

  • @happyhealthydutchie

    @happyhealthydutchie

    4 ай бұрын

    The Dream, David Icke

  • @KevinSandy2
    @KevinSandy26 ай бұрын

    "Scientific knowledge is a body of statements of varying degrees of certainty some most unsure, some nearly sure, none absolutely certain.” Nobel Prize physicist, Richard P. Feynman

  • @plasmaphysics1017

    @plasmaphysics1017

    6 ай бұрын

    Errrr, yes. We have known that since long before Feynman. Stating the bloody obvious is not adding anything to the discussion.

  • @AUniqueHandleName444

    @AUniqueHandleName444

    6 ай бұрын

    @@plasmaphysics1017 He's just some guy in the youtube comments section, don't worry about it

  • @ThePerpetualStudent

    @ThePerpetualStudent

    4 ай бұрын

    My biology professor in undergrad once told me that "Science is a progress report of what we think we know at the time."

  • @Ahmed_Amine
    @Ahmed_Amine3 ай бұрын

    NO! That does not disprove the big bang theory.

  • @koobs4549

    @koobs4549

    17 күн бұрын

    They never said it did, read the title again, it ends in a question mark, that makes it a question & not a statement

  • @RealitySlipTV
    @RealitySlipTV3 ай бұрын

    it's because it's a swirling soup, not an explosion.

  • @phk2000
    @phk20006 ай бұрын

    The universe is infinite. What is infinite cannot expand - it’s already everywhere.

  • @oskarskalski2982

    @oskarskalski2982

    6 ай бұрын

    Ever heard of scale factor?

  • @JasonDoege-js8io

    @JasonDoege-js8io

    4 ай бұрын

    actually infinite means always expanding, not endless

  • @phk2000

    @phk2000

    4 ай бұрын

    @@JasonDoege-js8io you need to get yourself a dictionary.

  • @JasonDoege-js8io

    @JasonDoege-js8io

    4 ай бұрын

    @@phk2000 nothing could ever process something endless. so its impossible to know if it exists or not. its the old if a tree falls in the woods and no one hears it does it make a sound thing. so if you want to believe in thats up to you, but you will, nor will even God ever be aware of it. so whats the point

  • @phk2000

    @phk2000

    4 ай бұрын

    When infinity is seen the immediate and positive change to your experience of life is incalculable. Dig deeper into this. You’ll be amazed!

  • @tomjjackson21
    @tomjjackson216 ай бұрын

    I don't have a witty response related to the content in this video. Just taking my morning poop, wanting to say hello to whoevers here in chat.

  • @peterquinn2997

    @peterquinn2997

    6 ай бұрын

    TMI!

  • @tupacalypse88

    @tupacalypse88

    6 ай бұрын

    hope it was a good one buddy 👍

  • @zacharyshort384

    @zacharyshort384

    6 ай бұрын

    "Please, no." ~your toilet

  • @grantschiff7544

    @grantschiff7544

    6 ай бұрын

    Smile on the void.

  • @josem6761
    @josem676111 күн бұрын

    kinda seems that what we think the universe is never pans out, but when we look for something it tends to appear.

  • @emki542
    @emki5427 күн бұрын

    Better call Saul

  • @raljix1566
    @raljix15665 ай бұрын

    I think the Universe is far older than we think it is

  • @LazyOtaku

    @LazyOtaku

    5 ай бұрын

    I'm far older than I think I am

  • @lyndsiedrapeau527
    @lyndsiedrapeau5276 ай бұрын

    I believe in devolution. We are all definitely getting dumber no question

  • @requim936

    @requim936

    4 ай бұрын

    Me too. We hit our stride a while back and now it's rapidly going downhill. People today are confused about what bathroom to go to.

  • @winstonsmith8482

    @winstonsmith8482

    4 ай бұрын

    There are multiple reasons for that, the main among them being the fact that there are no more selection pressures/natural selection. And the government giving incompetent, undeserving people free "childcare credits", welfare checks, disability checks, EBT cards and food stamps actually incentives the dumbest, least succesfull people to keep reproducing more and more offspring.

  • @user-ij5nd3sz4y
    @user-ij5nd3sz4y19 күн бұрын

    They're no closer than they were 50yrs ago. STOP FUNDING THESE PEOPLE.

  • @alexcaro6673
    @alexcaro66733 ай бұрын

    All the comments that say "BBT was/is disproven" clearly did not care to watch the video where the guest explicitly states that the data confirms and coincides with expectations of a Big Bang Theory beginning.

  • @scottlarson8364
    @scottlarson83646 ай бұрын

    It suggests Galaxies formed in what would necessarily be the innermost, least energetic, and therefore least dense area surrounding the singularity, or where it once was. And yet that area somehow must have cooled and coalesced within the first 200 million years. Most of the energy had already been flung outward. However, perhaps its like the center of an explosion, the energy expands outward, but it leaves a puff of smoke hanging in the sky. Maybe it was a big pocket, bubble or puff of energy that cooled and coalesced into matter, then formed galaxies. It would explain how those innermost galaxies developed first. There must have been residual energy lingering around the center of the Big Bang.

  • @LecherousLizard

    @LecherousLizard

    3 ай бұрын

    There's no "explosion". All parts of the universe would move away from each other at the same speed, so there wouldn't be a "bubble" or "puff of energy" in the center that cooled faster.

  • @leduc0721

    @leduc0721

    3 ай бұрын

    xD

  • @DrSpawn
    @DrSpawn6 ай бұрын

    Conclusion: Galaxies seems to be older than we expected

  • @mycrazylife408

    @mycrazylife408

    4 ай бұрын

    Sure but they still had a beginning. Which is God. Science keeps proving God the more time goes on.

  • @Sbeve_One

    @Sbeve_One

    4 ай бұрын

    @@mycrazylife408ahh religious goons always gotta shoehorn god into it unless it’s something bad 😂

  • @chuch541

    @chuch541

    3 ай бұрын

    @@Sbeve_One eh there’s nothing wrong with summating about a hypothetical creator. Albeit “religious” folks are generally abhorrent. “Spirituality” is completely in line with all stem science.

  • @CBT5777

    @CBT5777

    3 ай бұрын

    @@mycrazylife408 Which God?

  • @mycrazylife408

    @mycrazylife408

    3 ай бұрын

    @@CBT5777 Christian God is the Only God.

  • @Floxflow
    @Floxflow3 ай бұрын

    Very interesting discussion. Eric Lerner should be on Joe Rogan.

  • @user_James_Foard
    @user_James_FoardАй бұрын

    I was really getting into the scientific aspects of this discussion when about five minutes into it an infomercial popped up with a woman talking about how a drug made her husband longer and bigger. Could we have maybe infomercials on this site about educational topics, or maybe animal charities or hair restoration products? These kinds of commercials in the middle of such an important topic sort of trivialize and ruin the whole presentation, like someone throwing up in the punch bowl at a wedding. Thank you.

Келесі