I agree with the balloon example you describe John. But where did all the space 
on the inside (as populated with matter as the outside surface of the balloon) 
come from. When I speak or think of a "singularity" in the current model, I am 
referring to the "Big Bang", before which there was no time, no matter, no 
space. 

Given those criteria, looking "out" into space at the stars and galaxies, we 
are looking back in time as well. IF we could see all the way back to the time 
of the beginning, would we not be at the "singularity" from which this all 
resulted?  QED - the beginning of time, matter, mass, and space, IF found, 
would be around the entire collection of stuff that is between us and there, 
there being an infinitesimally small point with no time beyond it, one would be 
looking back to the origin of all that stuff. So either space - time is warped 
back upon itself to that singularity, or the singularity encloses all we can 
know.

A complication that has to be ignored or encompassed is the theory that with 
the calculated expansion accelerating at some point "out there" we may not be 
able to see anything, as whatever is there is moving at or faster than the 
speed of light. They're looking into that as well, I think. Allows for the 
thought that the singularity was an infinitesimally dense and small Black Hole, 
which may be what is out there beyond what we can see, an "event horizon" of an 
unknown.

All very perplexing. Wish I could live another 100 years. Other than the 
overcrowding and starvation that will come if we keep on procreating at todays 
rate. My arthritis would be a negative, unless some magic elixir was found 
which cured it or eliminated it. I expect the scientific findings will be 
incredible. Science has a ways to go in that regard. Good for them, as the 
quest keeps them and their families fed and housed.   :)


On Jul 4, 2012, at 18:26 , John Francis wrote:

> Nope.  There's no single "origin point"; the expansion is uniform throughout 
> space.
> 
> Perhaps it might help you to think about the surface of a balloon as it is 
> being inflated.
> The surface is expanding uniformly everywhere, with no special central point.


It's not that life is too short, it's that you're dead for so long......
— Anon

Joseph McAllister
[email protected]










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