The Cosmic Origin of life "Everything is determined, at the beginning, as well as the end, by forces over which we have no control. It is determined for the insect as well as star. "Human beings, vegetables or cosmic dust, all dances to a mysterious tune, they sang in the distance by an invisible Piper". -Albert Einstein "S H." -Einstein was wrong when he said: "God does not play dice". Examination of the black holes suggests not only that God plays dice, but that we sometimes confused by throwing them in place that cannot ...
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The Cosmic Origin of life "Everything is determined, at the beginning, as well as the end, by forces over which we have no control. It is determined for the insect as well as star. "Human beings, vegetables or cosmic dust, all dances to a mysterious tune, they sang in the distance by an invisible Piper". -Albert Einstein "S H." -Einstein was wrong when he said: "God does not play dice". Examination of the black holes suggests not only that God plays dice, but that we sometimes confused by throwing them in place that cannot be seen. "-Stephen Hawking" Hawkins statement is certainly; formation of stellar bodies develops off, gases that are cooled on the other side of a black hole, and were not detected by the instruments in experiments performed by Hawking until April 8, 2015 new discovery "Einstein said that if quantum mechanics were correct, then the world would be crazy. "Einstein was - the world is crazy". -Daniel M. Berger Green Everything is determined, at the beginning, as well as the end, by forces over which we have no control. It is determined for the insect as well as star. "Human beings, vegetables or cosmic dust, all dances to a mysterious tune, they sang in the distance by an invisible Piper". Good news from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope is that Einstein was right - maybe. A strange form of energy called "dark energy" is looking a little more like the repulsive force that Einstein theorized in an attempt to balance the universe against its own gravity. Even if Einstein turns out to be wrong, the universe's dark energy probably won't destroy the universe any sooner than about 30 billion years from now, say Hubble researchers. "Right now, we're about twice as confident than before that Einstein's cosmological constant is real, or at least dark energy does not appear to be changing fast enough (if at all) to cause an end to the universe anytime soon," says Adam Riess of the Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore.
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