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hecd2
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This is typical Sungenis - claiming, either through ignorance or deliberate lies, that something that supports geocentrism when it does not.Code:The most significant scientific evidence that is challenging Copernican cosmology hails from that gathered by astronomers themselves. In short, they are increasingly confronted with evidence that places Earth in the center of the universe. In a paper written by three astrophysicists from Oxford in 2008 evidence for the centrality of the Earth was the simplest explanation for the practical and mathematical understanding of the universe, far superior to the forced invention of “Dark Energy” to support the Copernican model.
Here is the abstract of the paper -you will notice that there is no mention of the earth being at the centre of the universe (being near the centre of a low density void is nothing like being at the centre of the universe), or claim that one hypothesis is superior to the other:
“A fundamental presupposition of modern cosmology is the Copernican Principle; that we are not
in a central, or otherwise special region of the Universe. Studies of Type Ia supernovae, together
with the Copernican Principle, have led to the inference that the Universe is accelerating in its
expansion. The usual explanation for this is that there must exist a ‘Dark Energy’, to drive the
acceleration. Alternatively, it could be the case that the Copernican Principle is invalid, and that
the data has been interpreted within an inappropriate theoretical frame-work. If we were to live in
a special place in the Universe, near the centre of a void where the local matter density is low, then
the supernovae observations could be accounted for without the addition of dark energy. We show
that the local redshift dependence of the luminosity distance can be used as a clear discriminant
between these two paradigms. Future surveys of Type Ia supernovae that focus on a redshift range
of 0.1 − 0.4 will be ideally suited to test this hypothesis, and hence to observationally determine
the validity of the Copernican Principle on new scales, as well as probing the degree to which dark
energy must be considered a necessary ingredient in the Universe.”
And the conclusion:
“Two very different paradigms have been invoked to explain
the current observation of an apparently accelerating
Universe, depending on whether we invoke or reject
the Copernican Principle. We have shown that in the
coming years it will be possible to experimentally distinguish
between these two scenarios, allowing us to experimentally
test the Copernican Principle [28, 29, 30], as
well as determine the extent to which Dark Energy must
be considered a necessary ingredient in the Universe.”
Sungenis either misunderstands the paper or misrepresents it, and you are naive and misguided to be fooled by him.
Alec
evolutionpages.com