fertilizerspike Posted April 1, 2013 Posted April 1, 2013 Could dark energy be playing a role in the odd behaviour of the chomosphere layer that exists on the sun and a newly discovered star in alpha century A ? Since "dark energy" is entirely fictional it can not be playing any role in any real phenomenon. -1
pwagen Posted April 1, 2013 Posted April 1, 2013 Since "dark energy" is entirely fictional it can not be playing any role in any real phenomenon. There's a difference between hypothetical and fictional. You might want to look into that.
fertilizerspike Posted April 1, 2013 Author Posted April 1, 2013 There's a difference between hypothetical and fictional. You might want to look into that. The distinctions between "hypothetical" and "fictional" are meaningless. Imaginary is imaginary.
John Cuthber Posted April 1, 2013 Posted April 1, 2013 From my point of view, you are hypothetical: are you fictional?
swansont Posted April 1, 2013 Posted April 1, 2013 Since "dark energy" is entirely fictional it can not be playing any role in any real phenomenon. ! Moderator Note The science sections of the forums are not the place to air grievances with mainstream science. That discussion belongs in speculations. This is off topic.
fertilizerspike Posted April 2, 2013 Author Posted April 2, 2013 From my point of view, you are hypothetical: are you fictional? From your point of view I could be a spotted ape, which is just one reason your point of view is irrelevant, because it can lead you to conclusions that stray far from reality. This is why science is rooted in experimental verification. Where is the experimental verification of "dark matter". Note the absence of a question mark, it's rhetorical, because there is no such verification. Can you produce some of this "dark matter"? Can anyone? Until someone does, this stuff is imaginary. ! Moderator Note The science sections of the forums are not the place to air grievances with mainstream science. That discussion belongs in speculations. This is off topic. Oh, can you produce some "dark matter" so everyone can share your conviction that it is real? No, of course you can not, and nobody else can, either. Until that happens, this stuff is imaginary. -2
John Cuthber Posted April 2, 2013 Posted April 2, 2013 You may think the question is rhetorical, but reality doesn't agree with you so here's the answer. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dark_matter#Observational_evidence By the way, if your ideas do not agree with reality, it is not because reality has made a mistake.
fertilizerspike Posted April 2, 2013 Author Posted April 2, 2013 You may think the question is rhetorical, but reality doesn't agree with you so here's the answer. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dark_matter#Observational_evidence By the way, if your ideas do not agree with reality, it is not because reality has made a mistake. But can you actually produce any of this "dark matter" for study in the lab? Without experiment it's easy to stray off into hallucinatory terrain.
swansont Posted April 2, 2013 Posted April 2, 2013 ! Moderator Note Ignoring mod notes is not a good idea. Hijack posts split off.
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