Quote Originally Posted by MastaChronic
true, what i meant by destroying is changing, shifting the climate of the worlds contained in the atoms of the logs, maybe if this were true then the worlds would simply dry up, turn into deserts or something.
I think that just because the chemical reaction involved heat it would not necissarily have a heat correlated response. If you were to change the whole chemical or cosmetic makeup of the habitat in which you reside ( let's say your habitat is your universe, and each universe is an atom ) perhaps it would have a different effect such as changing gravitational pull for all things within the habitat. Or even still, what if the universe were the actual object -- like a log, and when you burn it, the reaction that occurs happens to be similar to that of the big bang ( a small dense piece of matter splintering out into what now exists. ) We're still talking philisophically, correct?
Cautios Reviewed by Cautios on . are there infinite universes? what is outside of the universe? the universe is ever expanding, but what is outside of it? materials are made up of atoms and we all know atoms have empty space between them, and inside the atom there is electrons and protons and nuclei, but there is still empty space. size is infinite. is our universe contained within a single atom on a blade of grass in some cosmic vacant lot containing an infinite number of other universes? but there must be an end to amount of universes? the finite Rating: 5