(March 26, 2014 at 8:17 pm)mohd.ktln Wrote: Ok boru, at least you made an effort, so i'll give you a 2nd chance.
Quote:Because things like cats, cuttlefish, pandas and people don't do very well in an environment that consist of hydrogen plasma at a temperature of 10^32K.
What kept that super cat from existing?
A super cat which can survive in these early conditions you described, just like that super being we call "fish" which can survive marine conditions... conditions which pandas and people can never survive.
Oh, goody. A second chance. Lucky, lucky me *does a little jig of despair*
You kept yakking on about 'life as we know it'. An organism that could survive the conditions of the very early universe wouldn't be a cat. Cats are terrestrial mammals needing moderate temperatures, a nitrogen/oxygen atmosphere, copious amounts of water, and the occasional slow budgie to survive. None of these were present in the early universe (the time YOU stipulated). THAT'S what kept cats from existing during the early inflation.
As to your comments regarding pandas and people not being able to survive marine environments, that is true, but trite. Organisms evolve to fit their environs. I would no more expect to see aquatic pandas than I would expect to see terrestrial jellyfish. But ALL organisms require chemistry to survive. At 10^32K, chemical bonds cannot exist and chemical reactions don't take place - this is not opinion, it is the way things operate.
Since you want to keep playing this game, I graciously give you a third chance.
By the by, what IS your native language?
Boru
‘I can’t be having with this.’ - Esmeralda Weatherwax