How would you explain what's going on here?
I mean this is everything. But it looks like static, or a web. Or like I somehow turned on a lightbulb, recorded everything it emmits, created a map of it, and then jumped inside of it to settle into a planet.
>>8542879
blow it out your ass, cockswipe.
>>8542879
It's a nerve. Inside the brain of GOD.
what's inside the voids?
>>8542993
Forces that interact with our universe but cannot be measured
>>8542888
Duke can you go shitpost somewhere else?
>>8542993
Contemplation of the 4th sigma rarity billion light year wide voids is one of my favorite thoughts
>>8542993
retard, that's not the point-the point is the pictures next to it
>>8542879
Huh. Kinda looks like brain synapses.
>>8542879
Literally gravity, and slighyly assymetric initial random distribution of matter
>>8543177
With also the possibility of it having been affected, in part, by outside forces. I wonder how much affect a collision with a parallel universe would have on it.
>>8543177
>>8543243
Dark matter affects it's shape, yes?
And it looks like waves. It just makes sense for it to have this kind of a pattern.
But really, can anyone explain why it looks so similar to neurons, or even light pollution with highways and cities for that matter?
I mean what are the odds that structures like that keep popping up in completely unrelated systems?
>>8543974
>unrelated systems
>made out of matter
>matter is the relation
>>8543495
No, there's no need for dark matter, gravity is all you would need, dark matter may have played a part in forming the universe but would not require it in order for it to form the 3d web patterns
>>8543243
There's no need for a parallel universe, unless you are assuming some sort of supersymmetric universe would have arose instead, and why?
>>8543177
>asymmetry distribution
>random
>>8542879
OP's picture is about "Simulating the joint evolution of quasars, galaxies and their large-scale distribution"
http://wwwmpa.mpa-garching.mpg.de/galform/millennium/
>>8543974
>completely unrelated systems
All of that is the same universe. The same patterns will repeat whether we want them to or not.
Everything is waves and spiderweb interconnected patterns and we're all stuck in it. It's pretty neat.
>>8544195
Random could have symmetry if matter placement was based on a radial function, what a poster was suggesting as it would require external forces to disrupt the distribution
>>8543974
because the same physical laws apply everywhere
there are certain shapes and ways of distribution of matter that are energetically favorable and you will see this pattern re-occur
it doesn't mean some spooky shit is going on, or that we are actually some fucking neurons in a brain
it's the laws of nature that guide matter into certain shapes and patterns
god
why are you dumbshits so eager to jump to shitty conclusions
>>8545648
Why did such a politely curious question irritate you so much, my spergy son?
>>8545638
>Everything is waves and spiderweb interconnected patterns and we're all stuck in it. It's pretty neat.
It's beyond neat, the fact that we can observe and comprehend these things is transcendental
Really when I start to think about it like that it motivates me even more to continue studying and reading
>>8545692
Same here. This is what self-awareness is all about. A pretty great gift we have as animals on Earth to be able to see all these different patterns in this universe, study it, and understand it.
>>8545677
because it's the same as asking why aren't soap bubbles triangular instead of spherical
pseudoscience and pseudo-intellectualism is cancer
>>8543974
>it looks so similar to neurons
This is a qualitative observation made by an organism that survived thanks to its ability to overanalyze patterns in nature.
Not to mention all the images of neurons you've seen that you're using to make this judgement are made by staining only a small fraction of the neurons in a given chunk of brain tissue. In reality neurons are very densely packed.
>>8542879
>Dese two thangs luk de sem so dey are de sem
Kill yourself.