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MRA
Astrum
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Comments by "MRA" (@yassassin6425) on "Astrum" channel.
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@chaelarkcreates7253 Such as?
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@NeoKailthas It tends to, yes - and as you say, that's how science works.
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Climatology is a science. It's the very same discipline that discovered Milanković cycles (this video can't even spell it correctly), and now tells you that anthropogenic climate change is very real. Nothing to do with 'globalists'. It is also very complex and yet is is shocking how many that are ignorant about the science allow themselves to be swayed or reinforce their views based upon the confirmation bias of one erroneous and highly inaccurate You Tube video which is replete in errors. The internet inflicts so much damage on the world.
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Testing cars after you have built a Model T Ford. Testing airliners after you have built a DC8. Here, let me borrow your puerile emoji...🤣 Incidentally, your caps lock key is intermittently malfunctioning.
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By someone who can't even spell Milanković? Righto. You might want to consider what the consilience of evidence in climate science and astronomy has to say as opposed to giving sole credibility to You Tube.
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@Diponty At no stage have I mentioned politics least of all my own. What a strange response.
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At what point is it suggested that it does?
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As should the basic written English that eluded you.
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The first galaxies may have formed much earlier than initially postulated and as little as 200 million years or so after the universe's birth. That's about 300 million years earlier than the oldest previously known galaxies. The universe itself is estimated to be 13.8 billion years old. HD1, the galaxy is some 13.5 billion light-years away. The very first population of stars that formed in the universe were more massive, more luminous and hotter which would explain the luminosity. Moreover, we can also see light from 13.8 billion years ago but it is not star light because as you say, there were no stars then. The furthest light we can see is the cosmic microwave background (CMB), which is the glow left over from the Big Bang, forming at just 380,000 years after our cosmic birth.
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Not necessarily - there can also be new discoveries that confirm or strengthen a theory or a hypothesis.
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Given that you can't even grasp punctuation, perhaps astronomy is a tad premature for you?
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