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Hi, HansgeorgPS: is that coffee you are drinking over the computer? Need to go to other library that has a cafeteria!
Green Tea .
How can we calculate something that is still in progress, not completed ?
God Bless
Hi, HansgeorgPS: is that coffee you are drinking over the computer? Need to go to other library that has a cafeteria!
Green tea, how wonderful!How can we calculate something that is still in progress, not completed ?
God Bless
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[/QUOTE]Wonderful.
Now, here is some data for you:
- every day six billion pairs of eyes see a non-moving earth
The link was a student exercise. You will notice that the students are told to make an assumption and then to explain why the result arising from the assumption is incorrect. The exercise is teaching students not to make assumptions because they often lead to incorrect results.Every day six billion pairs of eyes do not see Malaria trypanosomes. Every day six billion pairs of eyes do not see polarised light. Every day six billion pairs of eyes do not see God.
I notice that you do not question the validity of the data on moving continents.
You have still not answered my question about your data indicating whether it is America, Europe or neither that is actually at the centre of the universe.
rossum
mellestad was right. The neo-geos are pick-n-choosers with a big dose of conspiracies. For example, Cassini says over and over that geocentrism has been the subject of papal decrees and declarations, but in fact there are no papal decrees on the subject. See my article here.Absolutely correct Mell, literal as defined and declared by the Church and all the Fathers of the Catholic Church. Certain people, who know the Church does not get its decrees wrong re-examined the matter with this infallibility in mind…And yes, certain people also believe in conspiracies. In the Catholic Church we are told to watch out for them…Both these things like believing in a geocentric world and the Devil do lead to all sorts of silly things, yes, mell, like a devil tempting people to do all sorts of silly things that the Church teaches NOT to do and believe in.
This is important. In general I have written about the theological aspects of this matter, since I consider those to be the potentially most harmful to peoples’ hearts and souls. But scientifically geocentrism ends up to be basically a giant exercise in special pleading.
- earthquakes and the minute continental drift that is supposed to have been measured by very expensive equipment in the space unavailable to most of these six billion pairs of eyes are not in the dimension this is considering. Neither are tides.
This is important. In general I have written about the theological aspects of this matter, since I consider those to be the potentially most harmful to peoples’ hearts and souls. But scientifically geocentrism ends up to be basically a giant exercise in special pleading.
- earthquakes and the minute continental drift that is supposed to have been measured by very expensive equipment in the space unavailable to most of these six billion pairs of eyes are not in the dimension this is considering. Neither are tides.
Ahh, very well said. To the point, with just enough snark to give someone a nudge without necessarily crossing the line to being a jerk. Expect my next response to geocentrism to sound eerily similar to what you just postedThis is important. In general I have written about the theological aspects of this matter, since I consider those to be the potentially most harmful to peoples’ hearts and souls. But scientifically geocentrism ends up to be basically a giant exercise in special pleading.
Everywhere else in the observable universe, planets go around their stars and moons go around their planets. But ours is different, you know?
Everywhere else in the observable universe, massive objects rotate on their axis. But the Earth is different. Indeed, these other objects have an equatorial bulge from this rotation (just as you would expect). The Earth has an equatorial bulge too, but of course we know it’s not from rotating on its axis, it’s from the whole universe revolving around the Earth.
Objects that revolve around other objects create tidal forces that slow the rotation. The Earth experiences a slowing of its rotation and you might think that this is from the moon’s tidal force on the Earth. But no, actually the Earth doesn’t rotate on its axis and it is really the entire universe that is slowing down, just in the amount that you would expect from the Moon’s inertial drag.
The Earth’s rotation is influenced by earthly phenomena such as earthquakes. This is even true when the earthquakes are man-induced, by injecting material into faults. But it is not actually that the Earth’s rotation is slowing, the whole universe’s revolution around the Earth is influenced by earthquakes, natural and man-made.
Stellar parallax should not exist in a universe that is centered on the Earth. It would never have been predicted in a geocentric model. But stellar parallax does exist. Oh, the neo-geos say, no problem. It’s just that the movement of the stars just happens to be centered on the Sun, not the Earth (oh, the neo-geos don’t want to say “centered”, but that’s what is required to explain it.)
So we calculate things like the geostationary positions for satellites and the Lagrange positions around the Sun based on a heliocentric model of the solar system. And lo and behold the magical “aether” just happens to push when you need it to push and relax when you need it to relax so that the neo-geo can claim that it all works out the same in his universe too (but–and this is important–he could NEVER have been able to do the same calculations and dare to try to place those satellites there.)
As another observer noted on another forum:
"To date not one prediction of that view of reality has been shown false. Considering the difficulties encountered explaining even simple observations like parallax or precession in the geocentric model, I’d say you are the one who is really funny. Indeed, if you did not know about parallax or precession, Geocentrism would never lead to their prediction. Indeed, unlike most scientfic theories, Geocentrism must be from its first principles be adapted to observation after the fact. A simple geocentric model would not even predict the planetary motions as observed in the sky - hence you modified Tycho-brahe model. All one needs to understand the majority of planetary observed motions in the standard model is to understand the above equation and the fact that planetary orbits are ellipses, not circles. " theologyweb.com/campus/showthread.php?129749-Geocentrism-Discussion-II&p=2852292#post2852292
Indeed.
even more to the point - see video and discussion on geocentricism on www.mbowden.info - twincAhh, very well said. To the point, with just enough snark to give someone a nudge without necessarily crossing the line to being a jerk. Expect my next response to geocentrism to sound eerily similar to what you just posted![]()
Seeing a non-moving earth and not seeing some things that can be verified by extra research are two different things."Wonderful.
Now, here is some data for you:
Every day six billion pairs of eyes do not see Malaria trypanosomes. Every day six billion pairs of eyes do not see polarised light. Every day six billion pairs of eyes do not see God.
- every day six billion pairs of eyes see a non-moving earth"
Our eyes are imperfect organs; they do not see everything that there is.
More to the point, every day six billion pairs of eyes see themselves at the centre of the visible world. Are they all right?
Stellar parallax is what convinced me of geocentrism.Everywhere else in the observable universe, planets go around their stars and moons go around their planets. But ours is different, you know?
Everywhere else in the observable universe, massive objects rotate on their axis. But the Earth is different. Indeed, these other objects have an equatorial bulge from this rotation (just as you would expect). The Earth has an equatorial bulge too, but of course we know it’s not from rotating on its axis, it’s from the whole universe revolving around the Earth.
Stellar parallax should not exist in a universe that is centered on the Earth. It would never have been predicted in a geocentric model. But stellar parallax does exist. Oh, the neo-geos say, no problem. It’s just that the movement of the stars just happens to be centered on the Sun, not the Earth (oh, the neo-geos don’t want to say “centered”, but that’s what is required to explain it.).
How much? How accurately is this measured? Can earthquakes have influenced clocks? Well, let us discount that one, if the clocks are outside earthquake area. And stick with the first two questions.The Earth’s rotation is influenced by earthly phenomena such as earthquakes. This is even true when the earthquakes are man-induced, by injecting material into faults. But it is not actually that the Earth’s rotation is slowing, the whole universe’s revolution around the Earth is influenced by earthquakes, natural and man-made.![]()
Well, dance moves are predictable things, and Tychonian geometry might be as attractive to angelic dancers. Or their Heavenly Choreographer. Stars moving parallactically can be explained as angels moving in time with sun, for obvious theological reasons. Like him being put to rule the day. Or honoured by showing his honours to Our Lord on Calvary or to his namesake some thousand years earlier.Considering the difficulties encountered explaining even simple observations like parallax or precession in the geocentric model, I’d say you are the one who is really funny. Indeed, if you did not know about parallax or precession, Geocentrism would never lead to their prediction. Indeed, unlike most scientfic theories, Geocentrism must be from its first principles be adapted to observation after the fact. A simple geocentric model would not even predict the planetary motions as observed in the sky - hence you modified Tycho-brahe model. All one needs to understand the majority of planetary observed motions in the standard model is to understand the above equation and the fact that planetary orbits are ellipses, not circles.
Standing on Mars I would see a moving Earth. Does the truth of the universe change when I change my viewpoint?Seeing a non-moving earth and not seeing some things that can be verified by extra research are two different things.
What results do you expect if the experiment is performed on a moving American continental plate?How about this - and it will be cheap ( a lot less than the LHC)
Redo Airey’s experiment.
If any of the platforms are moving then the tilt amount will be predicted and accounted for.What results do you expect if the experiment is performed on a moving American continental plate?
What results do you expect if the experiment is performed on a static American continental plate?
What results do you expect if the experiment is performed on a moving European continental plate?
What results do you expect if the experiment is performed on a static European continental plate?
What results do you expect if the experiment is performed on a space vehicle similar to Voyager?
What results do you expect if the experiment is performed on Mars?
This is science, you need to have some idea from your theory as to what results you would expect for your experiment performed in different locations.
rossum
Thank you for bringing up Mars.What “extra research” could we perform on Mars to show that it is not at the centre of the universe and that it is actually moving?
Phoenix on Mars
torsdag 29 juli 2010 10:44
Från: “Hans Georg Lundahl” (…@…) Visa kontaktinformationTill: dwayne.c.brown@nasa.gov
Were there Newton meters on it, were accelarations measured so as to verify Mars accelerates and decelerates according to heliocentric model?
Actually what you say is just what would be expected. Due to the extremely small angles involved, we are only able to measure the parallax from those stars close enough to us. There are many billions of stars and galaxies too distant for the measurement to be done.Stellar parallax is what convinced me of geocentrism.
Most stars do not show one. Tens of thousands do, but they are still a minority. The biggest parallax is 0.76 seconds per half year and next half year back to where it started. 1 second is like two radii of earth popping up through surface at about 30 metres’ distance.
As I said above, geocentrism represents a massive exercise in special pleading. Geocentrism would never have predicted stellar parallax and now, once it is proven to exist, the neo-geos have to come up with an ad hoc explanation. In this case, however, it’s ironic since their explanation would just as well prove that the Sun is the center of the universe and not the Earth. In fact, the former would be a more plausible and more satisfactory explanation.I do not say the stars that move have their movement centred round sun, only it is - in this case - in time with sun. This means we do not have parallax trigonometry to support the big distances and the big bodies.
So I’m curious whether, when the Gaia Mission satellite is placed at the Sun-Earth L2 Lagrangian point and gets correlative stellar parallax readings, that will have any impact on your viewpoint. [NB: the L2 Lagrangian point is calculated by orbital mechanics using a heliocentric model of the solar system. The neo-geos would not be able to determine an L2 point based on first principles. But we have spacecraft sitting at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lagrangian_point”]Sun-Earth Lagrangian points, which by itself is physical evidence against geocentrism.]If you do have a rocket near Saturn supporting independently the distances of Proxima Centauri, or confirming that when not viewed from earth it is not moving each half year, that would/might further the case of modern “science” somewhat (I have not worked out the trigonometric implications yet). All I have heard it is observing is the planets and the impact of their gravity. Nothing about Prox. Centauri being independently observed from there for the half years.
You have already admitted the validity of using stellar parallax to measure the distances to stars, therefore it should be obvious that the distances involved are precisely why it’s difficult to locate other planets. The fact remains, however, that in ever single case in those solar systems the planets all go around their star. Special pleading aside, why would ours be different?The “everywhere else in the Universe” rhetoric looks impressive, until you find that we do not see planets around most stars and we do not see moons around most exo-planets. This might be due to big distances, et c, as of modern science.
Again, special pleading. Does the neo-geocentrist really believe that earthquakes cause the whole universe to slow down or that earthquakes cause atomic clocks to change time so that our measurements are off?Maybe the Orange shape is just attractive to our Creator?
How much? How accurately is this measured? Can earthquakes have influenced clocks? Well, let us discount that one, if the clocks are outside earthquake area. And stick with the first two questions.
hansgeorg, once you have recourse to the dances of angels moving the stars in unpredictable ways, fairies in Iceland pushing the continental plates around, or magical “aether” as other neo-geos utilize to explain the holes in their view, we are well outside the boundaries of scientific investigation. There’s little more to be said at that point, since any possible evidence that runs contrary to your view can be handled on an ad hoc basis by recourse to miraculous intervention. If an individual Catholic wishes to hold such a view he is free to do so, so long as he agrees that the Catholic Church herself does not hold us to any such view of the universe.Well, dance moves are predictable things, and Tychonian geometry might be as attractive to angelic dancers. Or their Heavenly Choreographer. Stars moving parallactically can be explained as angels moving in time with sun, for obvious theological reasons. Like him being put to rule the day. Or honoured by showing his honours to Our Lord on Calvary or to his namesake some thousand years earlier.
Special pleading. In other words, the explanation is possible, but leaves the proof so much less cogent.Actually what you say is just what would be expected. Due to the extremely small angles involved, we are only able to measure the parallax from those stars close enough to us. There are many billions of stars and galaxies too distant for the measurement to be done.
Angels guiding stars are not ad hoc. Both Pagans and Hebrews thought something like that, as well as certain Christian Theologians including St Thomas Aquinas.As I said above, geocentrism represents a massive exercise in special pleading. Geocentrism would never have predicted stellar parallax and now, once it is proven to exist, the neo-geos have to come up with an ad hoc explanation. In this case, however, it’s ironic since their explanation would just as well prove that the Sun is the center of the universe and not the Earth. In fact, the former would be a more plausible and more satisfactory explanation.
, which by itself is physical evidence against geocentrism.]So I’m curious whether, when the Gaia Mission satellite is placed at the Sun-Earth L2 Lagrangian point and gets correlative stellar parallax readings, that will have any impact on your viewpoint. [NB: the L2 Lagrangian point is calculated by orbital mechanics using a heliocentric model of the solar system. The neo-geos would not be able to determine an L2 point based on first principles. But we have spacecraft sitting at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lagrangian_point”]Sun-Earth Lagrangian points
Oh, learn to read!You have already admitted the validity of using stellar parallax to measure the distances to stars, therefore it should be obvious that the distances involved are precisely why it’s difficult to locate other planets. The fact remains, however, that in ever single case in those solar systems the planets all go around their star. Special pleading aside, why would ours be different?
How about the equitorial bulges of rotating bodies? How about the slowing of the rotation of the Earth? How about geo-stationary satellites? How about spacecraft sitting at Lagrange points calculated using heliocentric assumptions?
Why would somebody continue to hold a geocentric model as a tenable hypothesis in light of the physical evidence?
I can imagine the measurements are off. Am I THE neo-geocentrist now? I am not speaking for Sungenis, nor is he speaking for me until I read him and agree.Again, special pleading. Does the neo-geocentrist really believe that earthquakes cause the whole universe to slow down or that earthquakes cause atomic clocks to change time so that our measurements are off?
Dances of angels, as said, are NOT unpredictable as to movements, since we can predict them - as long as the dance goes on.hansgeorg, once you have recourse to the dances of angels moving the stars in unpredictable ways, fairies in Iceland pushing the continental plates around, or magical “aether” as other neo-geos utilize to explain the holes in their view, we are well outside the boundaries of scientific investigation. There’s little more to be said at that point, since any possible evidence that runs contrary to your view can be handled on an ad hoc basis by recourse to miraculous intervention. If an individual Catholic wishes to hold such a view he is free to do so, so long as he agrees that the Catholic Church herself does not hold us to any such view of the universe.
You may also notice that the first linked source is not from Urban VIII but from the Congregation of the Holy Office during Urban’s reign. It was never signed by the Pope but was approved only in forma communi. That same Roman Congregation, according to Finocchiaro, issued positive permission in 1822 for Catholics publicly to present the earth’s motion as an established fact:You may notice, Leo XIII is not formally contradicting Urban VIII on the question.