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/sci/ - Science & Math


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6850933 No.6850933 [Reply] [Original]

So I was thinking just now:
>planets orbit the sun, satellites orbit planets
>Gravity doesn't pull them into a singularity on a large scale, but does so locally as in our gravity on earth
>they are for the most part stable
>electrons exist in shells surrounding atom's nucleus
>they don't collapse into a singularity thanks to the strong-weak interactions in the atom
>they are for the most part stable
>millions of stars surround a galactic core most likely containing a hypermassive black hole thousands of times larger than our sun, anchoring itself into spacetime enough to spin an area billions of light years across
>None of these galaxies collapse, while anything that crosses the event horizon, including photons, are obliterated from existence
>They are stable structures
>The Universe contains massive voids of "something" that looks like nothing, with galaxies forming along veins or trees
>Stable, even though objects in a vacuum try to come to an equilibrium with its empty space, as it does locally

Why does all this happen? Seems to me that the universe is both 1.) fractal, from a topological perspective and 2.) an iteration of pre-programmed rules, matter and energy under the influence of very discrete laws.

Are there holistic, interdisciplinary fields that try to study? I dont see anyone but a genius figuring out the fine-tunement of our reality, an the implications that has for other realities, the absolute limits of ours, and what our endtime will appear like. I cant stop thinking about all the possibilities.