Re: Many people landed on Mars



On May 25, 9:32 am, Sam Wormley <sworml...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Lin Liangtai wrote:
Ancient people have landed on other planets for many, many times over
50 million years ago. Modern man has never physically touched the
Moon, let alone Mars.
If other planets in the solar system are suitable for human living in
the "last 400 million years", many people would have lived on Mars
now. Mars now has dead bodies of people who lived there 2,500 million
years ago.

Without evidence and without a plausible physical theory... all
you have is an implausible idea that is contradicted by physical
reality.

The physical reality is that
there is a solar wind (the interplanetary magnetic field)
http://users.accesscomm.ca/john/magfield.gif
constantly blowing outwards.

The planets are gradually pushed further away,
and each goes through the habitable
zone, which the Earth is in now.

Mars used to be in the zone, but now is
too far from the Sun. Our ancestors probably
lived on Mars a long, long time ago.

Every once in a while there is a huge event
on the sun that burps out another protoplanet.
As the planets move outward, they gradually grow
both by accretion, but more importantly also by the
absorption of energy which is blocked and causes
gravitation.

Eventually one of these gradually growing planets will avoid
destructive events long enough to get sufficiently
large to become a second Sun and form a binary system.

There's a plausible idea that is supported by
physical reality, Sam. Let's hear your more plausible
one.

What's the current view?
That the whole planetary system appeared in
one gigantic event?

That the whole Universe suddenly appeared in one huge
explosion?

Do you guys not see how primitive and laughable these
ideas are?

That is simply not supported by everything we see
around us; gradual building of mountains,
gradual erosion of structures, gradual developement
of organisms. Nothing around us appears with a large
boom and suddenly *is*.
Big Bang!

What a stupid concept-

John
Galaxy Model
http://users.accesscomm.ca/john
.



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