>

David Calder Hardy's Cosmology

Big Bang

-
 

1) The more I think about the'Big bang', and its intrusion into cosmology, the more I am determined to knock it off its perch.

2) Did there have to be a creation of the universe?
The only reason I can think of is that a beginning is a sort of fundamental human requirement for everything we examine. But why should it be so?

3) Big Bang people say that even space hasn't always existed either. Can that be practicle? I don't think so, and although there is no proof of this massive event, science would have any alternative theories to be backed up by proof. One rule for them and a different one for everyone else.

4) I, and many other thinking people believe that all the galaxies and bits and pieces are observably undergoing constant change, which means that 20 billions years ago the universe was no different then from what it is now excepting that other stars, galaxies etc. were in occupation of it back then.

5) Why not?

6) Matter is indestructable and therefore uncreatable, but all matter in the universe environment can change from hydrogen to everything else and back again into hydrogen. To see the proof that hydrogen is not diminishing in the universe, as the Establishment would like us to bekieve.

7) Big Bang Cosmology Meets an Astronomical Death by the late Prof. Paul Marmet

8) Now space must surely be boundless. There cannot be a wall around it and if there was, something exists the other side of the wall. So such a thing as a wall only adds stupidity to the argument.

9) Hydrogen is the basic atom. There is more hydrogen in the universe than anything else. And there is every reason to expect that wherever there is space there is hydrogen.

10) Hydrogen is the fuel, the substance, the ingredient, the motivator, the energy, that keeps the universe active and in control. From hydrogen everything exists. And everything can revert back to hydrogen. It is the universal alchemist's element.

11) If these actions did not occur, that is a complete recycling from hydrogen back to hydrogen, the universe would come to a grinding halt, because available hydrogen allows nebulae to be built and stars made. As it was, it is now and ever shall be, worlds without end.

12) Let's take another tack. As the universe today, supposedly 13.7 billion years old, has more stars in it than there are grains of sand on all the beaches in the world.Wow. That's some claim!!!! OK. We also learn that stars live for maybe 11 billion years and then explode in a massive supernovae. Now look up into the starry sky and see if you can find any one of these trillions of them blowing up. You might be lucky but I doubt it. The maths involved would suggest that stars ought to be popping off everywhere. Astronomy finds new stars in the making, but rarely dying ones. Why?
 

Search this site


mailto:David Hardy
Homepage
Genesis Continuous