A Septillion new stars have been found. Scientist discount the existence of dark matter.
Theories come and go. Today we awaken to find that the belief in “dark matter” is a thing of the past, no longer held in high regard by scientists and thinkers. The existence of invisible but existing “dark matter” was inferred by scientists as a result of observed gravitational effects coming from non-luminous sources. Background radiation combined with the gravitational effects made the existence of the dark matter a likely explanation. Now, new findings, of red dwarf stars, “More numerous than all the grains of sand on our deserts and beaches,” stars only half the size of our sun, explain the inconsistencies, and eliminate support for dark matter.…

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26 - James Ph. Kotsybar
UNCERTAINTY PRINCIPLE
-- James Ph. Kotsybar
Poets and scientists are forever
philosophizing the same great questions.
Despite their best efforts, they have never
come up with anything but suggestions
for the meaning of life or why we're here
or the ultimate cause of existence.
They'll never get better than close, it's clear,
and yet they persist in their persistence,
with allegory,premise and theory,
to lock down the answers larger than they.
Whatever the Age, they don't get weary
of adding their voices, with more to say,
and, while there is some progress we can see,
what emerges is never certainty.
27 - John Lake
How sad it would be if the universe with its stars, planets, suns and moons, days and nights had unfolded, with no one to witness the unfolding. None to see glorious existence. In order to remain beautiful, there had to be man, and birds, and the animals, worms, snails, ...
there had to be man to see the stars.
28 - Christopher Rose
I think life is the phenomenon of the universe exploring itself so, yes, there had to be man to see the stars.