Aspirations:


- A sun warmed pitch of granite
- A clear blue sky & clean air
- A challenging workplace
- A family and house
- A super long life
- A Ford Pinto?
 
 
Just what is life about? ...who cares, enjoy it





Uncategorized "isms"

So what about black holes?

What if a black hole is a puncture where matter exits from our space-time continium into a neighboring one?

Hypothetical Rules: (What if...)

  1. Matter is the smallest tangible unit.
  2. Matter pre-exists (can't come from nothing).
  3. All matter everywhere draws from a finite pool.
  4. Multiple forces exist which can build universes.
  5. Those forces require matter to build with.
  6. Forces can be added/subtracted from the pool.

Hypothetical Question:

Given the rules above... How could new universes be created in a static matter enviroment? Could it be that a black hole acts as a mechanism for passing matter from one realm of control to another? In quid pro quo, one gives for something in return, so are there white holes then? An inward pointing mechanism which spews incoming matter?
Do planets come from spent stars?
Do planets come from expended stars?
I have heard that when a star spends its fuel it collapses under it's own gravity, and that one of two things results from this collapse...
  1. If the rate of collapse is greater than the rate of rotation the matter becomes ultra dense as the collapsing star turns in to a black hole. (I wonder though, does the ultra dense matter at some point wear a hole in the fabric of space? If not, does the super dense matter reach a point of maximum compression and the mass of the black hole begin to grow... wouldn't a black hole eventually fill the entire universe then?)
  2. If the rate of rotation is greater than the rate of collapse the star goes super nova, spewing its material into space...

However, what if the rate of collapse and the rate of rotation are sufficent to cancel each other? Is the result a "no longer burning" spherical object? Does this ever happen? Is this where the core of planets comes from? If so, the remaining mass attracts free matter and as the captured matter accumulates friction between neighboring material becomes sufficient to make it molten? So is a living planet simply in the process of dying as the shifting material seeks ever more compact configurations? Eventually won't maximum compression be reached and the friction cease? The outer part of the planets material cools and condenses... from heat loss to space? How does a planets atmosphere then come into existence? Is it the process of activity internal to the planet system or is it captured externally from space too?


A scale model of 2001's sea of humanity?
This is from an email my mother sent me... I am unaware of it's source, accuracy, or anything else except that it interested me. If you can validate it, I would love to hear from you.

"If the population of the world were reduced to one village of precisely 100 people, with all the existing human ratios remaining the same, it would look like this:

  • 57 Asians, 21 Europeans, 14 from the Western Hemisphere, 8 Africans
  • 52 Female, 48 Male
  • 70 "non-white", 30 "white"
  • 70 "non-Christian", 30 "Christian"
  • 91 heterosexual, 9 homosexual
  • 59 percent of the entire world's wealth would be in the hands of only 6 people and all 6 would be citizens of the United States
  • 80 living in substandard housing
  • 70 illiterate
  • 50 suffering from malnutrition
  • 1 near death
  • 1 near birth
  • 1 with a college education
  • and only 1 would own a computer"



Stupid "isms"


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