There was nothing to not understand about it.Atla wrote: ↑Tue Nov 19, 2024 6:09 pmTHANK YOU!
You're literally the first person I've met on a philosophy forum who understood the bounded and circular time concept (you did, right?). It's not part of Western philosophy. It's not part of Eastern philosophy. It's not part of mainstream science. It's completely counter-intuitive.
Another example of one who is narrowed, or closedAtla wrote: ↑Tue Nov 19, 2024 6:09 pm But it sure is a lot of fun, so I'm having fun with it. But more importantly, it's the only speculation about the total universe that I've found logical, due to its total simmetry. Every other speculation I find illogical, and is therefore not interesting to me.
Once again, speculations and assumptions are made instead of just 'looking at' 'what IS', onlyAtla wrote: ↑Tue Nov 19, 2024 6:09 pm (Also, the 2nd law of thermodynamics is a goner in my view - just a necessary local Goldilocks feature. I even think that black holes probably do decrease entropy, but I'm open to being shown wrong on this one. I'm a heretic.)
I think we sort of have to bet that the total universe behaves logically, otherwise it's completely pointless to speculate about it.
Atla wrote: ↑Tue Nov 19, 2024 6:09 pmThis is an example of an uninteresting speculation to me - an inherently illogical picture due to lack of simmetry.Can't be a big bang without expansion. The bang happens everywhere, not at some location. A finite size universe would have a tiny beginning that expands into what we see today.
That's why if dark energy is antigravity, then maybe antigravity should be most effective on very large scales, maybe on scales beyond that of the cosmological principle. In that case, dark energy wouldn't be constant, but would appear as largely constant to us, as the dark energy of many galactic superclusters would roughly average out.Antigravity wouldn't be constant just like gravity isn't. But dark energy is constant energy density regardless of the change in the density of everything else as expansion occurs.
That, or maybe antigravity just flat out gets stronger the bigger the distance.
I don't think so, I'm talking about a spacetime worldline. It can't actually be travelled, I'm just talking about it from "a God's eye perspective fromn outside the universe".OK, you mean a spacelike worldline, not a timelike worldline of something travelling (moving through space). Sure, that can encircle the hypersphere even with accelerating expansion.
And then drop the curvature and any spacelike consideration, and just retain the fact that we have a circular chain of elements.I can visualize that, but it's still curved.