Obvious Leo wrote:...you still seem to be defending the notion that space can expand and contract and bend and twist and curve.
As I say, it seems probable that the universe is made of some stuff. I think the data that suggests the universe is expanding is compelling, and the inference that it used to be very small reasonable. Hence the universe, and therefore everything in it, is very likely made of big bang stuff. An expanding 'field' for want of a better term, but which has mechanical properties and can do just as you suggest. I think labelling this stuff 'spacetime' is confusing, especially to those mathematicians that don't know their ontological arse from their epistemological elbow, as it gives them the impression that dimensions are 'real'.
Obvious Leo wrote:...the universe is a non-linear dynamic system and thus a non-Newtonian entity.
That doesn't really help. I think I get what you are saying about encoding at the Planck scale, but as I said elsewhere, the Planck scale is epistemological, rather than ontological. You also seem to infer from the fact that local galaxy groups can merge under the force of gravity that this is the fate of the entire universe, but again, the evidence of the red shift persuades me that this is not so. I'm sure we Agee on many things, but I'm fairly certain there are things we take opposing views on.
Obvious Leo wrote:Although this notion dates back to the pre-Socratics this is a fundamentally different paradigm from that which is used in modern physics.
There are many different paradigms in modern physics, my money is on some unified field theory, but one which leaves out gravity, because as I have explained elsewhere, I think the best explanation for a phenomenon that looks exactly like refraction, is that it is refraction.