(January 1, 2020 at 2:22 am)AtlasS33 Wrote: But science does say that the big picture is indeed organized:
http://cosmos.astro.caltech.edu/page/structure
Quote:The universe contains organized structures on all different scales, from small systems like the earth and our solar system, to galaxies that contain trillions of stars, and finally extremely large structures that contain billions of galaxies. How and why these organized structures formed and how they influence one another is a major focus of modern astrophysics.
Gravity works the same across the Cosmos. It is pretty organized P-T; or else our satellites and spacecrafts won't work.
The more you can see the big picture; the greater your admiration for the design -and also inventive power- would be. Einstein created the atomic bomb for God's sake.
I think you've run afoul of some of the vagaritys of the English language.
The word 'Organized' in the sense you're presenting above is simply not the same as if I were to use it in the sentence "Jack organized the boxes on his shelf from largest to smallest."
It more means that 'We', Humans, see something that looks like a pattern.
We can give explanations for why we see a pattern.
Or, perhaps, we can determin the cause of the pattern.
Much like sticking a tree branch into a river will cause swirls in the flow behind.
As for gravity being the same across the cosmos... Well it's only so far as we can tell.
In some particular places within the cosmos gravity either works to the point of breaking reality (Black holes) or it doesn't seem to actuall work at all.
Hence why currently there is a 'Place holder' name for 'Dark matter'.
While, yes, Einstein was indeed a very smart person. He didn't split the atom all on his own. (A possibly needles pedant, but I feel it should be pointed out.)
Cheers.
Not at work.