I see these shows on the Science channel talking about planets and the universe. I hear these apparently highly respected experts claiming that at some point even time and space will END. DISAGREE. Time will never end. Space cannot end. Neither one of them physically exist as THINGS.
"Everything holds a life presence and everything is love..." Bullshit, son. Life is not eternal, it's presence is not eternal, therefore in the grand scheme of eternity, life means jack shit to everything except the living. One thing I will agree with though... "Time was (is) ageless." I see these shows on the Science channel talking about planets and the universe. I hear these apparently highly respected experts claiming that at some point even time and space will END. DISAGREE. Time will never end. Space cannot end. Neither one of them physically exist as THINGS. I know the concept of "eternity" is pretty daunting, but the fact remains that space goes on forever and ever and ever and ever and it NEVER stops. You could go so far that no matter at all exists in that enormous portion of space, but that really only means that you're gonna keep going that direction and see a WHOLE LOT MORE of that nothingness.
VaeVictis:i find it funny that you even consider grammar a sign of intelligence, that itself is a very uneducated claim
My (armchair) understanding of modern cosmology is that space is a physical quantity that has some strange properties. As Lawrence Krauss likes to quip, "Science changes the meaning of things. It's called learning."For example, apparently without violating currently understood physical laws, it's plausible that new universes could spawn within our universe. And from our perspective, such a universe would look like a black hole. But that universe would have its own space, which could undergo inflation, and be expanding just like the space in our known universe is expanding.Hard to visualize, and indeed alien to our native primate intuition about space as a boundless 3D expanse.
time is a dimension within our universe, and like the other dimensions, it has the ability to bend, fold, warp, stretch, conflate, and yes, end. Time within our universe is not endless. When this universe ends, time will end with it, because time simply exists as a dimension within our universe. The same is definitely true for space as well. Space is a part of this universe, and when the universe experiences Cold Death (a concept hard to argue against because of the general laws of entropy), space will end as well.
Well there you go. It doesn't take a cosmologist to understand what space is. It exists here on Earth, outside of our atmosphere, and everywhere. It makes geometry, probably one of the more simple and fundamental forms of math, possible at all. A ray, a single point with a line extending from it in one direction infinitely, dictates that space is absolutely infinite. If Lawrence Krauss or anyone else wants to redefine what space (nothingness) is and give it physical quantities with strange properties (somethingness), then they should reconcile it with Euclid before proceeding to call the rest of us a bunch of primitive morons.
We've known space is non-Euclidian for almost a century. Space is curved in the presence of mass, and this is something we've been able to empirically test and observationally verify--
"In the presence of mass." What mass? I think you mean to say matter.
Or perhaps our definitions of "space" and "objects" are not the same. To me, space is void, the absence of matter (or the area in which matter exists). To me, mass is not a thing. Matter is the thing and it has mass (which I suppose would be some combined measurement of weight and how much matter it possesses).
To me, space is void and is not curved, it is not straight, it is no shape at all. It has no mass because it is not matter. It is only the matter that exists in that void which has any shape to give the space a frame of reference.
If we draw a Euclidian ray on the ground here on Earth, or even on an immense piece of paper so large that it covers the entire globe, it's not a true ray. The frame of reference for that ray is flawed because the Earth itself is round. But as a concept, a ray will still always be a single point and an infinite line. We can test and observe that the earth is round, just as we can test and observe that the universe may be laid out in a sphere.
I still completely disagree that space is curved. I say just because what we observe in the universe seems one way, that can't change concepts like geometry
Basically what I'm trying to say is that "space" taken in a frame of reference unto itself cannot be curved, cannot be straight, cannot be anything. It literally is nothing.
...straight lines bend all over the place.
"Hi, I'm Quadz, and this is a straight line!"
Futhermore, you keep saying "occupation". It's not an occupation.
we are not computers. the heart is the epicenter of existence.
we are not computers.