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Easy fellows. After all he did aim between his toes.
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I think it was Einstein that said "Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity, though I'm not so sure about the universe"
If I wanted the answer that question I would have taken the boot off.
Never go toe-to-toe with stupid.
He might not have said it. And I have not looked in to it but I remember hearing that they (whoever that is) now believe there are multiple other universes outside of ours. If that's true then our universe might not be so much expanding as moving.I don't think he said that as Einstein eventually realized that the universe is expanding (explaining the redshift discovered by Hubble) and therefore not infinite - i.e, an expanding universe has an outer "edge" to it, or a limit, and therefore is not infinite. That said, beyond the limits of the universe is probably nothing - which is a hard concept for humans to grasp.
He might not have said it. And I have not looked in to it but I remember hearing that they (whoever that is) now believe there are multiple other universes outside of ours. If that's true then our universe might not be so much expanding as moving.
I think they meant kind of how there are multiple solar systems or galaxies. Not the multiverse.Our universe is expanding and when we talk about "the universe" that is generally what we mean, not "the 'verse" (as in Firefly) or the multiverse.
I have a problem with the idea of multiple universes - often explained as a new universe every time someone makes a choice, which means that the universes are built around what goes on in our brains? No, we don't control multiple universes that way - it would have to be based on quantum chance, which means there would be a new bifurcated universe every nanosecond or so, which doesn't seem right either. That theory seems more like one of those mental exercises than something that a scientist could explore and experiment on, much less prove.
There may be other universes sure, but not multiple copies of this one with a new one created every fraction of a second.
Multiverse - WikipediaI think they meant kind of how there are multiple solar systems or galaxies. Not the multiverse.
The universe (or our universe) supposedly has limits. Now if there was something physically outside of those limits what would that be? If it's not another universe would that mean there's some type of weird gap in the universe? What I'm talking about is definitely not an alternate timeline or parallel dimensions.
His new toe arrangement looks like it would make a good bottle opener.
...That said, beyond the limits of the universe is probably nothing - which is a hard concept for humans to grasp.