OntarioCanuck - 5/7/2023 12:50 The James Webb telescope is able to look back to almost the beginning of the universe. I recently listened to a video that was discussing some of the latest pictures from the James Webb that are raising more questions about how things worked and developed shortly after the expansion began. If you check it out you will find that it is able to see stars and developments from very close to the beginning some 13 billion years ago. As for the Milky Way, do not think of it as a static thing. It has been evolving through time and will continue to do so. A collision with another galaxy is shown to be coming in the future which will change things again
And that is the point; they can see back to very close to the beginning or what science thinks is the beginning of time and one of the observed formations is A1689B11. You have not answered the question why the Milky Way which we can see at a much closer point of time then A1689B11 at 11 billion years is still a spiral galaxy. Where is the evolution? The claim is the spirals become elliptical as they age. The Milky Way is the same age as what A1689B11 is if not older. We can see what A1689B11 looked like then we can see what the Milky Way looks like now. Where is this evolution that you believe in? I have to assume that 11 billion years of aging must just not be quite enough time to be considered old.
OntarioCanuck - 5/7/2023 12:53 Do you ever ask yourself why you chose to follow the 'god' that you just believe in? and not one of the other thousands that others just believe in?
As a matter of fact I have. Plenty of evidence to support the claims made. It is all around if one just looks for it. |