Changes

Jump to: navigation, search

Gravity

366 bytes added, 22:24, February 22, 2007
Gravity is considered by scientists and [[evolutionists]] to be one of the [[fundamental forces]] of the [[universe]]. Those damn dirty evolutionists and their theory of gravity! It is a theory which suggests that all masses are attracted to each other because of invisible particles called gravitons or invisible curves in [[space]]. The idea was first developed by [[Isaac Newton]], and has been worked on by prominent scientists like [[Johannes Kepler]] and [[Albert Einstein]].
== Gravity controversy ==
Some have criticized gravity, reminding us that it is only a [[theory]], ( it is not a theory it is a law ) and that no scientist has ever seen a graviton or a space curve. Furthermore, experiments done by NASA prove that the Moon is receding (moving further away) from the Earth at a rate of 3.8cm per year(there are more forces then just gravity, you can pick an apple off of the ground and lift it can you not?), directly contradicting the theory that masses attract one another<ref>http://sunearth.gsfc.nasa.gov/eclipse/SEhelp/ApolloLaser.html</ref>. Indeed, astronomers can observe that all stars in the universe are moving away from one another. Yes, indeed if the theory of gravity were to be correct we would all live on one gigantic universal sized planet that consisted of all matter in the known universe. The considerable disagreement between scientists about the theory of gravity suggests that, like [[evolution]], the theory will eventually be replaced with a model which acknowledges God as the source of all things, the Prime Mover, and the only real fundamental force in the universe.
== References ==
<references />