There are two standard objections to the universe being infinite. One is that in a infinite universe of infinite age the night sky should be as light as day, since there is a star (in fact an infinity of stars) in every point of the sky and since the light has had forever to get here, it should have done so by now. The photon decay hypothesis at least answers the question of why we aren't dazzled at all times by arguing that distant starlight is no longer in the visible part of the spectrum by the time it reaches us. There should however be an uninterupted lengthening of wavelength with distance and we should be bathed in radiowaves in a way I'm pretty certain we are not.Godfree wrote:The Universe is not expanding , it is infinitely old and infinitely large ,
There was no beginning , there will be no end .
Another objection is that a universe that is not expanding should collapse under it's own gravity. Newton tried to counter this by claiming that in an infinite universe there is an equal pull in every direction. That only works in a stationary universe and requires improbable balance. Einstein's answer was the Cosmological constant, a force he made up to counter gravity; he later called it the greatest blunder of his career. (Some people argue it anticipates dark energy, but as that has been invoked to account for the apparent acceleration of the universal expansion it doesn't really.)
We do know that stars fuse hydrogen. In your version, is there a source of hydrogen, or is a period when there are stars burning hydrogen just a phase? But then if the universe is infinitely old, why haven't we passed through that stage infinitely long ago?
Some people do, not me.Godfree wrote:Man sees himself as the main event , it's all for us made by god ,
Godfree wrote:I would consider that masturbation ,
Each to their own.
This is essentially the same objection Fred Hoyle had to Georges Lemaitre, a Catholic priest who first proposed that the universe started as a tiny point. He called it the Cosmic egg; Hoyle pooh-poohed the idea deriding it as a Big Bang. Hoyle suggested the Steady-State theory in which matter is continuously formed in the empty space between galaxies. I don't know if that is the sort of thing you are proposing, but although it was taken seriously until the 1960's, it is generally accepted that the background radiation found by Penzias and Wilson is strong evidence for a big bang.Godfree wrote:and they need a beginning , to make it fit the bible , "In the beginning"
Beats me, but I think the idea of an infinite universe raises more questions than it answers.Godfree wrote:So answer me this Mr tillingborn ,,
If there was ever nothing in the universe ,
then where did the something come from,?????????