Cosmology and the earliest beginnings

CENTER FOR PERFECTION STUDIES: CONTINUITY  • SYMMETRY  • HARMONY  • USA • Goals • 2018
HOMEPAGES: JUST PRIOR|ORIGINAL 72 of 202:  A grid-matrix-system for everything, everywhere for all time. Not a theory or vision, just math.

The Four Horsemen

FourHorsemenRichard DawkinsChristopher HitchensSam HarrisDaniel Dennett

Also known as “The Four Horsemen of the Non-Apocalypse” these people have become known for their attacks on religious concepts and their impatience with people who believe in God. All four are brilliant, highly-articulate, and entirely sure of themselves. Collectively, they have millions of followers. At one time atheists quietly went about their business and were not evangelists. These four, each in their own way, are evangelists for Atheism. Even though Hitchens is dead, his books and articles live on and remain popular.  At different times each has been listed among the 100 Most Influential People in the World. All of them believe in some variation of the big bang theory.

Our historic cosmologies started within various  religious cosmologies 

Wikipedia begins with Mesopotamian cosmology (as early as 16th century BCE) and comes up to the modern era. Within that period there is a variegation of  religious cosmologies. And, within that scope, there is biblical cosmology. Though part of my heritage, it is perhaps best reflected in the Genesis 1 and John 1 stories. Both open with these words, “In the beginning…”  Of course, these passages do not appear to jive with modern cosmology, especially the big bang theory.

However, neither our horsemen nor any of our religionists have explored an integrated view of the universe.

Let us consider what might constitute a mathematically-integrated view of the universe:

  1. You will grant that mathematics and logic help to structure and give order to data.
  2. If there are units of data that are profoundly instructive in the way that they order data, can they be used to order all the data within the universe?
  3. In December 2011, we certainly didn’t think so, but we weren’t sure, so we called it a “Big Board of our little universe.”
  4. By April 2014, there were growing questions. We also had developed our first UniverseTable
  5. By April 2016 we had a chart of the universe that we called a Quiet Expansion.

NOTE: We know this an idiosyncratic model so we are always asking questions.
Our page of assumptions is here: https://81018.com/boundary/ (January 2019)
Questions about space, time and infinity are here: https://81018.com/infinity/ (December 2018) and continues here:  https://81018.com/open-questions/

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