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The observed
universe is clumpy, and full of chains, knots, rings and walls of
clusters of galaxies interpesed by great voids. The galaxies appear
in many shapes and forms; the clusters also show many varities;
the stars are formed in many colours and forms; the weird shapes
of the nebulae arouse human fantasy in finding visual correspondences
to describe the objects. Often imagaries like crab, hourglass, spider,
turtle, dumbbell etc. are used to describe the veils of gases and
dusts, where stars experience different stages of evolutions. There
also exist a plethora of visual fields where stars, galaxies, and
clusters appear to be interacting, merging, exploding, or being
swallowed by others. And most interesting of all, the galaxies around
us are all flying away, while the universe remains immersed in a
ball of microwave radiation.
It is a general consensus among the scientists of today that it
may have been caused by an initial explosion, known as Big-bang,
which occured in the beginning of time.
However, the author of this article challenges this cosmological
view, and instead finds that the universe, with all its clumpiness
and weirdness, bears an absolutely perfect order and a beauty, which
is timeless. It never began and will never come to an end.
The universe, rising from its own ashes everywhere, is locally everchanging,
but globally remains tranquil by self-regularizing the inflows and
outflows from and in all scales. The turbulences, which one sees
in fire, water, wind and clouds around on Erath, carry replica of
this eternally perfect design that is imprinted on the entire universe
itself.
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