by Vincent Pinto » Tue Mar 30, 2010 10:00 am
I'd have thought that since we're dealing with light, that distance and time are pretty much the same thing. We're seeing the object as it looked 15 million years ago.
What am I missing?[/quote]
We colloquially say sometimes that a store is 5 minutes drive when in reality the store might be say 5 miles away. But miles is a measure of distance, and minutes a measure of time, and distance and time are not the same thing. But we see how easy it is with constant usage to "fuse" the two (actually, confuse the two). What is holding the two together is the speed of travel, which in this case has not changed; the assumption being that the laws of physics held true and invariant from the time we left home right until we reached the store. This reasoning is quite understandably extended and assumed to be true of light when the universe as a whole is considered from its beginning.
Unfortunately the rules of this forum don't allow me to say anything more because I have come to cross over the line to the Theory of Creation (as against the Theory of Macro-Evolution where I was earlier). But, if you would like more info, which is very good, please google: "John G. Hartnett" "A new cosmology: solution to the starlight travel time problem" as a starting point. It has helped me a good deal.
I'd have thought that since we're dealing with light, that distance and time are pretty much the same thing. We're seeing the object as it looked 15 million years ago.
What am I missing?[/quote]
We colloquially say sometimes that a store is 5 minutes drive when in reality the store might be say 5 miles away. But miles is a measure of distance, and minutes a measure of time, and distance and time are not the same thing. But we see how easy it is with constant usage to "fuse" the two (actually, confuse the two). What is holding the two together is the speed of travel, which in this case has not changed; the assumption being that the laws of physics held true and invariant from the time we left home right until we reached the store. This reasoning is quite understandably extended and assumed to be true of light when the universe as a whole is considered from its beginning.
Unfortunately the rules of this forum don't allow me to say anything more because I have come to cross over the line to the Theory of Creation (as against the Theory of Macro-Evolution where I was earlier). But, if you would like more info, which is very good, please google: "John G. Hartnett" "A new cosmology: solution to the starlight travel time problem" as a starting point. It has helped me a good deal.