Some Observers Perceive the Universe To Be Much Younger Than We Do 139
StartsWithABang writes: It's been 13.8 billion years since the Big Bang for us, and when we look out at a distant object in the Universe, we're seeing it as it was in the past. Its age — as it appears — is determined only by how long the light took for it to travel from that object to our eyes, but to someone living there, it will also appear that the Universe is 13.8 billion years old. But it is actually possible for an observer living on another planet, star or galaxy to perceive that significantly less time has passed since the Big Bang, so long as they were moving close to the speed of light relative to the CMB. Paradoxically, if they slowed their speed, they'd find that they themselves were very young, but living in a 13.8 billion year-old Universe.
Re:Cool spam bro (Score:2)
It's Medium.com spam, what did you expect?
Weasel Words (Score:4, Funny)
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Lots of experts, infact (Score:3, Funny)
Jeb Bush believes the universe to be somewhere between 4 and 5000 years old, so there's alot of diverse and nuanced opinion on this subject.
Christian and Old Earth View (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm a creationist, a Christian. I believe the universe is somewhere around 13.5 billion years old. A true reading of Jewish and Christian bibles will reveal this to be the truth. I'm not here to debate the existence of God, rather to say that as a Christian, God is the one who gave us science. Judaism/Christianity and science are partners not or/or.
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Joshua from Nazareth (Score:2)
Creationists need to produce an alien witness who is from a world with a very different time dilation than ours
And this alien might have gone by the name Joshua while on earth, which the Greeks misheard as "Jesus".
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To those that have shall be given. From those that have not shall be taken even that which they have.
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The Bushes have so many advantages, it doesn't seem fair that God also speaks to them personally.
A lot of the Republican candidates in the last presidential election claim God personally chose them to be president. Nasty to be fucking with the faithful like that.
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It may be nasty, but they're asking for it.
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I plead daily with God to not speak to me directly, again. This common amongst those who have had the experience. Life was simpler in the days I could think I wasn't really sure.
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Jeb Bush believes the universe to be somewhere between 4 and 5000 years old?
Hmm, I think even Jeb would have to concede that the universe is more than 4 years old.
Re:Lots of experts, infact (Score:4, Informative)
Jeb Bush believes the universe to be somewhere between 4 and 5000 years old
Jeb Bush is a Roman Catholic, and is not a Young Earther. There are plenty of legitimate reasons to criticize him, so stop making stuff up.
Re: Lots of experts, infact (Score:2)
He makes stuff up. We make stuff up.
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Where in the Bible does it state that the Universe is six thousand years old? It is possible to twist the words to come up with a conclusion something like that, but when somebody starts interpreting it somebody else can come up with another interpretation.
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The methodology that Archbishop Ussher adopted was to tally up the ages of the various patriarchs listed in the Old Testament, then tie them to the historical record at about the Babylonian captivity and more recent events.
They may have been working from ridiculous premises, with ludicrously limited data sources, but they were actually perfectly serious scholars.
New time reference (Score:1)
Instead of using some mythical person to determine that we live in "2015" after his birth, let's use the big bang as a time reference.
Think of all the advantages!
"I'll see you next monday at 8 o'clock *cough* +- 0.059 billion years"
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Then we'd have bloated dates like 12/25/13827642763
Thank You Jesus!
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Far less than that. Actually, the next big computer problem is to happen at January 19th 2038 [wikipedia.org].
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Far less than that. Actually, the next big computer problem is to happen at January 19th 2038 [wikipedia.org].
Only for very small values of "big". Nearly all computers are already using at least 64 bits for time. The number of computers still using 32 bits in another 23 years will be very small, and it is unlikely they will be doing anything critical.
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I have flashbacks to the 80s. Someone standing in a computer room, saying
"Oh c'mon, nobody's going to use those programs in COBOL still when 2000 rolls around, and certainly not for anything critical!"
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I have flashbacks to the 80s. Someone standing in a computer room, saying
"Oh c'mon, nobody's going to use those programs in COBOL still when 2000 rolls around, and certainly not for anything critical!"
... and they were basically right. Some companies invested a lot in preparation for Y2K. Far more companies did absolutely nothing. Neither had any significant problems.
Y2k was predicated on the assumption that programmers had stored years in two bytes instead of four. But that was nonsense. I have never encountered a program that did that. What early programs did instead, was store the year in one byte, and then add it to 1900. So the overflow will happen in 2156 not 2000.
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You never saw any COBOL then, which absolutely represents such values in a character format, and that represented the vast proportion of Y2K risk. Or any other systems where the date was stored in or parsed from a text file:03/25/89. Or any that did any user date entry that used keystrokes. This sort of code represents the majority of "keeping the lights on" systems.
Pretty sure that wasrn't nonsense, and I was standing there watching a load of people going "WTF" as they tried to find source code for old sof
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In the olden days, data came on 80-column punch cards, and saving a column or two per record might be well worth doing. (I don't find the "save memory" argument at all convincing, but the "save punch card columns" argument is a lot more plausible.) People used this screwy language called COBOL, which would take the data from punch cards and use it as is. COBOL typically represented numeric values as characters, unless specified otherwise, and so month-day-year would be represented as PICTURE 9(6), or it
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Then we'd have bloated dates like 12/25/13827642763
Thank You Jesus!
I hope you mean 13827642763/12/25?
achievement unlocked: relativity (Score:1)
...but only Special Relativity (Score:5, Interesting)
As we look further away from us galaxies are travelling closer and closer to the speed of light and so appear "slowed down" by time dilation due to the expansion of space itself which you need general relativity to account for. All that travelling close to the speed of light should do is shift which galaxies are slowed by time dilation and which are in almost the same frame and so not slowed. Hence you would see effectively exactly what we see now but it will be different galaxies which are in view because you are in a different inertial frame.
Hence I am not at all sure that he got it right. Certainly I'd like to hear it from a cosmologist before I believe it since GR is far more complex than SR and it is easy to get stung applying SR to a situation which requires GR and hence my cautiousness about whether he is wrong since I'm not a cosmologist. This would far from the first thing that he has got wrong...but it would be the first truly spectacular failure.
Inaccurate Summary (Score:5, Informative)
A better way to put it is that when you are travelling nearly the speed of light, if you look behind you at the place you are heading away from time seems to stand still for it; the light from your old hometown is redshifted. But light that's coming in from in front of you (and thus, the perceived rate of time) is way higher. Time seems to be moving a hundred times faster than normal as you look at an oncoming blueshifted star. Then, the star passes you and all of a sudden it slows down... from your point of view.
So from the point of view of the fast moving observer, time is sped up in front of them, and nearly frozen behind. As they travel they pass galaxies that are growing old very fast, but leave behind them a frozen universe, that is changing imperceptibly slowly.
When they stop... they are not 'surprised' that the universe is old. They watched it grow old in front of them. Nor are they surprised that their home, now billions of light years away, has not changed much (it looks 'young') because behind them time seemed to stop. The perceived universe makes sense from the viewpoint of the traveler. Point being that there is no paradox. What happens to the fast moving universe would look really weird from inside (because of the starbow effect [sciencephoto.com]), but they would be used to it. You know... assuming they survived the X-Ray energy sleeting through them from impact with intergalactic matter.
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it would just be read shifted.
This must explain old Slashdot articles.
Re: Inaccurate Summary (Score:4, Insightful)
You must be a hit at parties
He probably is, because he goes to parties full of intellectually curious people. If you think that's annoying, your baseline for normal must be binge drinking at the Alpha Omega Dementia frat house.
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Are there such things?
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Yes. I used to go to parties full of geeks in Santa Cruz, back when to most people "geek" still meant someone who eats weird shit and works for a circus. Not everyone was an intellectual giant, but all were intellectually stimulated. And most of them were damned smart, in fact.
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So they don't call it bi-curious anymore?
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The universe probably does not have an edge [askamathematician.com], though there is no way to know for sure because the vast majority of the universe is beyond our reach, expanding away from us faster than we could get there at the speed of light.
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Huh?
From your point of view, time will appear to happen slower on things moving fast relative to you, whether they're in front or in back. We've known about that since Einstein explained the Lorenz transform.
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Why this works requires some use of the time dilation equation. Let's work with a relatively basic speed: 0.8c. That's the speed where time appears to be about 60% as fast (in both frames) when two ships are being compared to each other. Now let us imagine a ship flying away from the earth to a nearby star and back. In fact, let's steal the example given in this explanation of the Twin Paradox on Wikipedia [wikipedia.org]. You should go read that first, because I'm not going to repeat what it says here.
There are two parts
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That's not how it works.
As the ship leaves Earth, it's in an inertial reference frame that show Earth aging slowly. As the ship approaches Earth, the same happens. The significant part happens in the deceleration and acceleration (all felt as acceleration aboard the ship). That makes the inertial reference frame change rapidly, and that's when the ship perceives most of the Earth time passing. (If the course change happens gravitationally, and hence without significant observable acceleration, we nee
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I'm sorry, but you are incorrect.
Perhaps you would like to explain how 8 years of communications reach the ship as it is 'changing frames' on the star 4 light years away? What you are describing requires information to travel at faster than light speeds. Can you explain when the doppler effect stops working as things get faster? Does the doppler effect stop working at 0.01c? At 0.1c? At 0.5c? Can you provide a source?
Here is what happened to you, perhaps years ago. You read and partly understood the frequen
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A more complete explanation (I should have checked earlier) can be found on Wikipedia: Relativistic Doppler effect [wikipedia.org]
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Saying I'm wrong doesn't do much (and is wrong anyway). The ship doesn't receive years of communications suddenly, but the acceleration changes the ship's idea of when they were sent. You appear to be confused on time dilation. It isn't the doppler effect, and it isn't a matter of measuring signals as they arrive.
The ship gets blue-shifted communication. The ship can measure how fast it's approaching the planet, and make allowances for that. It can measure where, from its point of view, radio waves
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I explained, backed with math and citations, the relativistic effects on communication between the Earth and a ship; the entire timeline of the journey as perceived by both sides.
The math for the Doppler effect combined with time dilation was demonstrated two ways, both by examining the time experienced by both sides (and working out the speed of the communication that would match that time) as well as examining the actual doppler effect separated out from the time dilation. The math, in both situations, wo
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To put this very simply: you're using Newtonian physics in that analysis. When you use Newtonian physics when talking about relativistic velocities, you're going to get wrong answers sometimes.
When the ship observer receives the planetside pings has nothing to do with relativistic time dilation. It's an effect that can be explained by Newtonian physics, and therefore irrelevant for time dilation. What happens is that, when the ship observer notes down the times the pings arrive, and measures the dist
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So please describe what the ship observes on the entire trip. Not one moment. Do the math. Cite a source. Prove your point, rather than assert it.
I did.
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I never said the speed of light; I said "at nearly the speed of light" right in the first sentence. The difference is significant.
Welcome to 1905... (Score:1)
when Einstein published the theory of special relativity. /. is a bit behind the times.
Yes, but. (Score:3, Interesting)
What paradox? (Score:2)
Paradoxically, if they slowed their speed, they'd find that they themselves were very young, but living in a 13.8 billion year-old Universe.
I'm very young (compared to the universe), but I don't see a paradox when comparing myself to the universe's age.
Okay, that's just me playing with words. But there's no paradox anyway.
Paradoxically, if they slowed their speed...
...then they'd presumably be advanced enough to understand special relativity and take account for it in all their calculations.
The twin paradox has been around - and understood - for over a hundred years. What's next on Slashdot? A Starts-With-A-Bang article on how we only ever see one side of the moon?
And what would they be
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Would they? A photon's momentum is a function of its frequency, thus an object in motion relative to the CMB - one who sees one half of the sky blueshifted and the other redshifted - is going to effectively experience friction and come to an asymptotic halt eventually.
Of course, that is going to take a very long time. And that rises a q
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Huh. News to me. Thanks, I guess...
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We don't have an effective velocity relative to the CMB. So therefore, your question, in and of itself, exposes some sort of flaw in our current understanding of the Big Bang.
I'm just not sure what it is.
Hey, a medium.com article (Score:2)
Haven't seen one on here for a while - was the guy on vacation?
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Think he ran out of useless shit to write about.
Insert anti-creationist comments here. (Score:2, Funny)
Let's try to keep them all in once place.
Dumb question, but (Score:2)
Could a different observer identify the universe as being much older than us, by the same argument?
Also, less seriously, if the rest of the universe is travelling away from us at light speed, but there's nobody on those planets to observe it, is it actually older?
the universe is not all the same age (Score:2)
Ethan doesn't understand relativistic time (Score:3)
He starts out with the Yuval Ne’eman quote about how less people understand relativistic time than believe in horoscopes. Correct, it seems a lot less because as he goes on to demonstrate even someone as enlightened as he himself doesn't understand relativistic time!
Others have pointed out that talking about a galaxy moving a near light speed is purely hypothetical and not particularly interesting or different from other time-bending phenomena such as black holes. But the thing that makes this all completely meaningless (and shows that he doesn't really understand it) is that relativity tells us that there is no universal "now". It's pointless to talk about how old someone at another point in space (whether 100 lightyears or 13 billion light years from us) sees the Universe as being because you're only specifying 3 of his (at least) 4 space time coordinates, assuming the forth one to be "right now", but there is no "now". The "now" is just a convenience we use when the difference is so small as not to matter to us, but when any of the dimensions gets larger you have to specify all of them to say anything meaningful. You could specify the time dimension as a specific amount of time "passed since the big bang" (instead of "now"), but then the title of Ethans little essay becomes its own answer, demonstrating the meaninglessness of the whole exercise (i.e. "is everything that exists 13.8 billion years after the big bang the same age"?)
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To make sure that last sentence isn't misunderstood, make it "You could specify the time dimension as a specific amount of time passed since the big bang at that point in space... it always has to be all 4 coordinates!
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We know the universe is expanding in space, I contend it is also expanding in time, and 'now' is the leading edge of the expansion of the universe in the time dimension.
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Thought the same when I read "we don't see those galaxies as they are *today*." Today where? I think people fall in that trap by drawing a sketch of the entire universe on a sheet of paper, and as that sheet fits in their field of view entirely, they forget there is no universal now.
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A philosophical argument on time. Trying to prove nihilism? Gads so hippish. If there is no now, how can anything be measured, or perceived? How would you have a then?
I didn't say "there is no now", I said "there is no universal now"... for two observers who are some relativistically significant distance apart there is no way of agreeing on a "now" they have in common! But that doesn't mean that they can't each have their own separate "nows". I'm decidedly not trying to make a philosophical argument about time, I'm purely stating a consequence of relativity. You can still measure and perceive anything you want, and move along time's arrow, it's just that it's your per
"moving near the speed of light relative to CMB"? (Score:2)
Sounds to me like an attempt to couch the entire argument in terms of a universal preferred frame of reference, which is the foundation for many, many fallacious arguments relating to relativity.
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There is a dipole anisotropy observed in the CMB as observed from our local observations, which can be attributed to our local motion in reference to the CMB. I'll quote/steal the paragraph from Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmic_microwave_background#CMBR_dipole_anisotropy),
"From the CMB data it is seen that our local group of galaxies (the galactic cluster that includes the Solar System's Milky Way Galaxy) appears to be moving at 627±22 km/s relative to the reference frame of the CMB (al
MIT made a game demo about relativistic travel (Score:2)
Check it out here:
http://gamelab.mit.edu/games/a... [mit.edu]
It's been long for us too (Score:2)
"It's been 13.8 billion years since the Big Bang for us..."
The guide in the science museum showed a graphic representation of the big bang to a bunch of kids with their teacher when one of them asked him how long ago that happened.
The guide replied: Well that was 13,800,000,017 years ago.
The teacher was astonished and asked the guide how he could be so sure about that very exact number.
The guide replied: When I began working here, they told me it happened 13.8 billion years ago and I began working here 17 y
The Big Bang just happened. (Score:2)
There is another source of 'slow time' as well (Score:2)
and we are in it. We know that gravity slows time, and we know that the distribution of matter in the universe is into filaments and the surfaces of 'bubbles'. In those places, like where we live, gravity slows time down unlike 'in' the bubbles and other voids between the filaments. So how much slower are we perceiving time with respect to 'universal' time?
relative to what? (Score:1)
What does this mean? Isn't the CMB a kind of standing wave that fills the universe? a bunch of photons going off in all directions?
Here is my take. I am not a cosmologist or astrophysicist. I know about as much math as the fetal Einstein.
The universe began in a singularity with maximum separation distance of zero, and no meaningful earlier time. Next thing we know it is a dense space full of energy with the maximum separation (or the measureme
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Isn't the CMB a kind of standing wave that fills the universe? a bunch of photons going off in all directions?
Oops. I was winging it a bit since I had forgotten the definition/meaning of 'standing wave'. Here, let me have another shot on the range of bad analogies:
The CMB is a bunch of photons that are everywhere and going nowhere else at the speed of light. Poor CMB photons, all sped up and no place to go.
I almost got carried away and added 'on a computer'. Who knows, it might be patentable that way.
--
Moving faster (Score:2)
There's no "there" up there, there's a limit (Score:2)
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http://www.independent.co.uk/n... [independent.co.uk]
This one do? Okay, that is a fair chunk of Christians covered right there, not sure where the rest stand.
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Some Christians. I am not really the person to defend people whose only defense against the DSM IV definition of delusion is that they are explicitly exempt from it (because else any religion very much fits the definition perfectly), but it should be said that not all of them are THAT delusional. Only a rather tiny minority, and close to 100% of that minority residing in the USA, actually believes that.
Outside the US, new earth rubbish plays no significant role.
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Man, don't even defend that strawman. The ratio of actual Christian fundamentalists espousing young Earth, to those that use their existence to justify their modern progressive liberalism, is at least one in a thousand.
Here's what I notice: Generally, those fundie Christians (you have to go find them) will keep their ideas to themselves, unless pressed. They've had a persecution complex forever, and now in my old age, I'm having doubts that it is totally unfounded.
On the other hand, the people that seem to
Re:Okay. (Score:4, Insightful)
Man, don't even defend that strawman. The ratio of actual Christian fundamentalists espousing young Earth, to those that use their existence to justify their modern progressive liberalism, is at least one in a thousand.
Here's what I notice: Generally, those fundie Christians (you have to go find them) will keep their ideas to themselves, unless pressed.
psst, trying to bust a strawman with a strawman. Cute
They've had a persecution complex forever, and now in my old age, I'm having doubts that it is totally unfounded.
They also have a surprisingly strong grip on one of the US' main political parties. To the point where when you ask that parties candidates if they say believe in evolution, they'll tend to answer you something like "Well, I'm not a scientist", or "There are controversies.
Back to your premise....
Well, all I have to go on is personal experience. I grew up in a town where fundamentalists held sway. Until the early 70's no stores were allowed to open on Sunday. You want the Sunday paper? You drive to another town, Eventually, they allowed newsstands to open for a couple hours so people could get papers on the way home from church. Eventually it went to normal as they lost their iron grip on the town. That was mainly a nuisance, amusing not to think back on.
School - Mandated sex education was 1 - 1 hour class saying if you have sex before marriage, you'll get VD and die.
No evolution was taught, and can you imagine - anything that might allow someone to divine an age of the universe younger than 6000 years old was not allowed. I made it the entire way through grades 1-12 without hearing the word dinosaur.
Grandparents were fundies Ever wake up in the middle of the night with your grams praying at the foot of your bed, or forced to listen to her rail on about how you are going to go to hell all day on Sunday and an hour or so every day?
My experience of all intrusive and rather scary fundies is in opposition to your apparent shy creatures, only wanting to be alloed to live the lives they choose model.
On the other hand, the people that seem to have in in for them, 'progressives' I guess, will take every opportunity to loudly proclaim the fundies' ignorance, and stupidity, and mean-spiritedness, and so on.
You don't have to be progressive (another nice strawman) to find the fundamentalists quite repulsive. Having been raised among them, ignorance and stupidity, and mean spritedness are not unreasonable assessments of their activities.
Can't even have a thread on science without the big pile-on.
If I'm forced to take a side, which in itself seems weird to me in a modern society; well, the choice seems clear.
That statement isn't completely clear. Does that mean you're aligning yourself with science, or that you're going to be trying to force schools to teach religion in science class, agitate for legislation to ban same sex marriage, declare the US a Christian nation, and tell us all that Darwin was the Devil?
Time to campaign to get the Duggars back on TV.
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Some Christians. I am not really the person to defend people whose only defense against the DSM IV definition of delusion is that they are explicitly exempt from it (because else any religion very much fits the definition perfectly), but it should be said that not all of them are THAT delusional. Only a rather tiny minority, and close to 100% of that minority residing in the USA, actually believes that.
That definition was changed in DSM-V. Significantly. [dsm5.org] The delusion no longer has to be demonstrably false. Now, they can believe that it is true, and still be diagnosed with a mental illness, if their behavior warrants it. But it also means that it is up to the clinician making the diagnosis. Parents who sincerely think praying is going to heal their child should not be penalized for holding that belief if the clinician determines there is no danger to the child. As long as their delusions are doing no
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A post of sound and fury, signifying nothing.
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You will all be cows in 10 billion years. Practice for it, say MOOOOO!
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Oh, oh. He's on to us. Shut it down! [moviescramble.co.uk]
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I don't know about you but I travel through time regularly. In fact, I'm planning on travelling 24 hours today!