Well, the delay I was not dealing with was the delay in you proving your claims, and showing where the 8 months came from, precisely. We seem to have narrowed it down, that is was YEARS after the fact. Now, who still sees this 8 month stuff, where, how often, starting when, etc?? If you want to talk the talk, you better walk the walk. In your case, maybe we should say, swim the swim, since you think we came from fish.
I notice you've still not bothered to deal with the problem? Since it should be clear by now that I don't actually care who is seeing the 8 month stuff and how often (I mean, you do realise it quite possibly stopped already, and if not, it won't continue forever - the supernova can't release bursts of UV light infinitely many times) why don't you start actually answering my question, or if you can't because you need me to answer a question, how about you convince me that that's actually necessary?
So, the fact is that, at some point, in the past, some scientists observed that the delay between the supernova lighting and the ring lighting was 8 months. Do you agree that this indicates that, for as long as the scientists were watching, that indicated that the ring was 8 * c away from the core, where c is the speed of light that light was traveling at?
But, since it was not at the time of the event, but years later, that is somewhat of a concern.
168,000 years later, yes! Oh, that wasn't what you mean. Pray tell,
why is it a concern - please be specific and relate your concerns to the direct question I asked above - to which I expect a direct answer.
No, I admit that I have no reason to doubt science, on issues they can get hold of. Like light speed around earth. Be rational. Now, let's see you apply that to either the far far universe, or, the far past. That is what it's all about. I don't intend on following this thread if there is an automatic cut off after 1000 posts, so get to it man.
So you have no reason to doubt that science applies miles away from its labs on earth, or even 1000s of miles out in space So what reason
do you have to doubt that it does further out in space? What, that it's further away?
Well, it's all, nothing, or it's a sliding scale, dad. Either we doubt that science can be applied
anywhere outside the lab, we don't doubt that at all, or you have to be able to tell us
how much we have to doubt science, for a given distance away from an experiment.
Come up with the goods, dad.