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Previous comments... You are currently on page 2.
Unless you push and stretch the balloon beyond - then you have extended the boundary.
If space does not exist beyond as far as we can see, does it exist? Not until you go look beyond. If you can't look beyond, then anything would have to be reflected back in.
Haven't seen either again for a long time. My age 68 memory gets creaky sometimes.
never-ending, including the universe. It is what it
is. But it could be that it is round, (either spherical,
or flat-round), and that at some point, there is the
end, and it starts all over again.
Like Robert Fl, I wonder how one would distinguish between a flat universe and an immense one with a curvature that is beyond our current ability to measure.
Jan
What if it is curved (sphere) but we perceive it as flat? How can we trust our observations?
You'd either see something beyond (so, you weren't at the edge) or, you'd see yourself looking back in.
Now I feel old - thanks.
(Good article - love this stuff! - should have said that. Oh and whatever I "did there" was probably an accident.)
I wrote about the whole infinity thing a little while back so I won't go into at length here.
But the short answer is that I think that concepts of "infinity" are fine - as concepts - but are problematic when applied to the physical world.
I think "infinity" says more about the limits of our understanding than the "limits" of the physical world.
Here's the link if you're interested.
http://www.galtsgulchonline.com/posts...
It wasn't particularly well received but - oh well. Not my problem! Ha!
(So embarrassing - I couldn't figure out how to fix the typo in the title. The TITLE for christ sake! That's probably why they didn't like it. Yeah - that's the ticket! Ha!)
If G (and thus the gravitational pull of each object) were decreasing, the fact could in principle be observed, because all planets and moons would shift into slightly larger orbits. But the assertions I've seen that this is happening posit a very slow increase, taking at least millions of years to be significant.
Capt. Kirk beat someone in another starship who was thinking "two dimensionally."
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