As if black holes weren't mysterious enough, astronomers using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope have found an unexpected thin disk of material furiously whirling around a supermassive black hole at the heart of the magnificent spiral galaxy NGC 3147, located 130 million light-years away. The conundrum is that the disk shouldn't be there, based on current astronomical theories. [1] Based on theories we shape what the cosmos looks like. And if there is a discrepancy, we either change the theories (more difficult) or reshape the cosmos (easy, since we are gods). But we miss the point. For whatever can easily – or difficulty – change should not be there in the first place. Look at the galaxy again. Look at the black hole. They are both where they should be. You aren't…
(c) Philosophy WIRES - Commenting world news from philosophy's perspective…
(c) Philosophy WIRES - Commenting world news from philosophy's perspective…