Greta wrote:Wizard, please explain why you believe that the Universe is not expanding. What is your rationale? How do you explain redshift effects found in Hubble's deep field exploration that suggests that the Universe is not only expanding but the expansion rate is increasing?
This is pivotal because expansion suggests the possible future heat death of the Universe as it pulls apart. If the Universe can die then that would suggest a beginning, so far best postulated as the Big Bang, followed by inflation - 13.8 billion years ago.
My counterargument is simple & repetitive; I've used this before on other forums. If "the universe" is expanding then all of it must be expanding, including space-time on earth, including your own bedroom. Therefore the "space" in between your walls are expanding, maybe by nano-meters. This is the necessary conclusion of the Big Bang and expanding universe theory.
So you measure the distance between your bedroom walls, let's say 20 feet. In a year or two, this measurement should be 20 feet + 2 nano inches, or something to that effect. Because
the whole universe is expanding.
Now here comes the big problem for Big Bang, expanding universe, religious pseudo science fundamentalist activists (call them "Science Priests"). If the space-time between the walls in your bedroom is expanding then why not also the dimensions of the yard stick you used to measure that space? The yard stick, or the nano-inches, the device itself used to measure distance, must also be expanding.
Because the measuring device is also a "part of the universe", is it not? Science cannot resolve this paradox.
So science must use logical fallacies to backtrack. How do I know? Because I've been around very intelligent philosophers & scientists for over a decade. I've heard all the arguments, all the rationales, all the justifications, all the fallacies. And science is just plain wrong. In order to solve this paradox, scientist priests must use another logical paradox.
The measuring device is "not part of the universe". Whichever tools are used to measure space-time, are not "part of the universe" which they're measuring. This is an obvious paradox. But this is what science must postulate, to save the Big Bang Theory.
It's easier just to come with me, to my postulation, that the universe is infinite, endless, and either is not,
or cannot ever become measured by human instrumentation.
My position is common sense and most reasonable.
The philosophy position is superior to both science and religion.
Greta wrote:The mutiverse theory makes intuitive sense to me and, given the relativity of time and the chance that many other "universes" exist (which may just be areas in "the bulk" that contain galactic clusters), it would seem that time began for us 13.8 billions years ago but was already present throughout the other areas of the bulk (aka "universes"), that contain matter. However, their time is not relevant to us because it's inaccessible.