Origin of the Universe:
When all rational explanations have been exhausted, what is left
must be the solution.
My (James Cooke) solution was that a vacuum was "Something"
A vacuum isn`t "Nothing".
A vacuum is "Something", and from this
"Something" a...
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Origin of the Universe:
When all rational explanations have been exhausted, what is left
must be the solution.
My (James Cooke) solution was that a vacuum was "Something"
A vacuum isn`t "Nothing".
A vacuum is "Something", and from this
"Something" a Universe can be created.
Professor Edward P.
Tryon, independently, agreed with me, or I
independently agreed with him.
Here is Professor Edward P.
Tryon`s
theory of the Origin of the Universe.
In the late 1960s, a young assistant professor at Columbia University
named Edward P.
Tryon attended a seminar given by Dennis Sciama,
a noted British cosmologist.
During a pause in the lecture, Tryon threw
out the suggestion that "maybe the Universe is a vacuum fluctuation.
"
Tryon intended the suggestion seriously, and was disappointed when his
senior colleagues took it as a clever joke and broke into laughter.
It was,
after all, presumably the first scientific idea about where the Universe came
from.
By a vacuum fluctuation, Tryon was re
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