Scientist capture the light when a sperm and egg unite.

Lord_nikon

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:mjlol:
 

Yzak

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What if I told you two things could be true at one time from a quantum perspective and that binary thought is inherently destructive and incongruous with the way reality works. Quantum superposition tells us that the entire this vs that argument is silly. Science is just the mechanics.

It's a false dichotomy that limits your perception of possibility space but go ahead, please tell me more since I'm an idiot.

EDIT:
A thought experiment for you:
For us to exist we needed a green star at the peak of EM of 500 nm for chlorophyl production, but the right distance so we could have access to a bit of infrared for past compositional modeling, a bit of ultraviolet for future excitation modeling, water for visible light to permeate and a liquid to form in the first place, land to eventually emerge onto to gain access to temporal cycles. But that also means we need a massive moon that can regulate tides perfectly which can only happen when you have two proto planets smash into each other and one gets bigger and the other is smaller.

You need a supermassive planet to stabilize the system and protect you from asteroids like Jupiter, but it has to be on the other side of the asteroid belt, which your system needs to oscillate energy. Oh, and your system has to be in the middle of the galactic belt otherwise nothing can form. Also you have to have this happen in the middle of the universe's lifespan otherwise either chemistry hasn't started or energy dispersal has slowed too much. Then you have to get perfect tetrahedral sugars and proteins inside the correct size water inside a fat bubble. Then we have to make all the right choices to end up here.

So random? Sure. But if we can say someone who won the lottery received a blessing, then why can we not say to be the beneficiaries of all of these extremely minute chance events is not also a blessing just because we can explain some of the mechanics?
What if I told you I'm not reading all that?
 
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Bro :dead:

Also these nikkas will take ANY scientific observation/discovery and use it as proof of their other unrelated conspiracy theories.

nikkas in here talking about bubbles and shyt

No nikka in here is anti science.. matter of fact, quite the opposite… Yall just need an agenda to make yall feel better than others…. Covid gave yall a style that you could run with but and intentionally made yall dumber in the process
 

Uitomy

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:what:observe the universe ... with eyes .... that can't see most things in the universe





:mjlol:
Our world is the universe, it's part of it is it not? So far as we know, there is nothing like earth in this entire galaxy, so everything that happens on earth is the most relevant phenomena we can observe in our universe and it's the only place we spend alive, so yes, with our own eyes because the only reality that matters is the one infront of us, keeping us alive, proving we exist
 

EBK String

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Atheists see all of the beauty and miracles in nature and immediately go this just a random sequence of events what are you idiots talking about. What a miserable way to exist.
 

null

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Our world is the universe, it's part of it is it not? So far as we know, there is nothing like earth in this entire galaxy, so everything that happens on earth is the most relevant phenomena we can observe in our universe and it's the only place we spend alive, so yes, with our own eyes because the only reality that matters is the one infront of us, keeping us alive, proving we exist

:picard:

@ChatGPT-5

A surprisingly small slice of reality is directly accessible to the human eye. Here’s a clear breakdown of how much we can’t see, and why:




🌌 1. Electromagnetic Spectrum: We only see 0.0035% of the known EM spectrum


The human eye detects wavelengths from ~400–700 nm, known as visible light.


But the electromagnetic spectrum spans from:


  • Gamma rays (10⁻¹² m)
  • to Radio waves (10³ m)

Visible light is a tiny sliver—about 0.0035% of the full range.
This means 99.9965% of electromagnetic reality is invisible to us.


That includes:


  • Infrared (heat)
  • Ultraviolet
  • X-rays
  • Radio signals
  • Microwaves
  • Gamma rays



🔬 2. Size Scales: We can’t see anything smaller than ~40 micrometers


Unaided human vision fails to see:


  • Cells
  • Bacteria
  • Viruses
  • Molecules
  • Atoms
  • Subatomic particles

Even dust mites are too small to see clearly. The visible scale runs from about:


  • ~40 micrometers (limit of naked-eye resolution)
    to
  • ~10–100 kilometers (before curvature, atmospheric scattering, and distance obscure details)

This means we can’t directly observe:


  • 99.999999999% of the structures that make up matter and life.



⚛️ 3. Quantum-scale phenomena: 100% invisible


Human eyes cannot directly perceive:


  • Quantum superposition
  • Particle-wave duality
  • Quantum fields
  • Vacuum fluctuations
  • Virtual particles

These require indirect measurement.




🌍 4. Cosmological-scale phenomena: also 100% invisible


Even at the largest scales, we’re blind without instruments:


  • Galaxies beyond a few million light-years
  • Dark matter (27% of the universe)
  • Dark energy (68% of the universe)

Humans can directly see only 5% of the known mass-energy of the universe, and only a tiny fraction of that with the naked eye.




🧠 5. Time resolution: Our eyes can’t see things faster than ~10–15 ms


We miss:


  • Ultrashort events
  • High-speed vibrations
  • Particle collisions
  • Molecular reactions

Most dynamic processes of nature occur far too fast or slow for direct perception.




🎯 So how much reality can humans directly observe?


By different measures:​


Domain% Invisible to human eyes
Electromagnetic spectrum~99.9965%
Size scales (atomic → cosmic)>99.999999999%
Quantum physics100%
Cosmology (dark matter, dark energy)~95%
Temporal dynamics~99%



🧩 Bottom Line


The human eye can directly observe only a tiny, tiny fraction of physical reality—far less than 1% by most meaningful measures.


Most of the universe is:


  • Too small
  • Too large
  • Too fast
  • Too slow
  • Too dark
  • Not in the visible spectrum

Our perception gives us a useful illusion, not an accurate picture of the universe.
 
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