jsanders said:
Actually Stoat you were augmenting my post more than answering statsman’s.
Don’t you find it bizarre that the universal constant (C, the speed of light) doesn’t apply to the expansion. And that in reality the laws are expanding. Definite food for occupying your mind in the morning traffic.
What i was trying to show was that we already know now - not in 100,000 years time - that the universe is expanding. Hubble found that out by experimentation in 1929 -iirc - we have the hubble constant as a result.
I don't actually think that it is strange.
You need to be clear about what you are defining. Space the "empty bit" between matter is actually something. That space is capable of moving.
The time honored visual representation is that of dots on a rubber sheet. Pull the sheet equally in all directions and the sheet expands and the dots move. You've simple expanded the space in which they sit.
So space is something. It can grow and maybe even shrink.
Now another visual representation of my own.
A swimming pool. You are a fish in the pool - a very clever fish

- The shape of the pool can define some of the measurable properties of the the water in the pool i.e. the pressure at the bottom of the pool is a function of it's depth. As a fish you swim to the bottom and notice the pressure increase and you say "wow this pool must be deep".
But the pressure doesn't define the material that goes to make that pool, say concrete. We can infer things about the container that it's deep and perhaps strong but only so far.
The next step.
I think of the universe as a solid object that allows things to move through it -concrete water- odd maybe but it helps me

. The solid object defines the properties of the things that are able to move through it and the movements they are allowed to make but it has it's own properties. As objects in the solid we can infer things about the solid from the interactions we have with it and those we can observe between it and other objects. We also observe interactions between other objects and ourselves.
This bit i have real trouble with. I think that objects in the solid are fundamentally limited in their ability to understand the solid because the solid cannot be described by the sum of our interactions with it or with the properties it bestows on us or other objects in it. It effectively defines the limits of what we can observe and therefore understand.
One of those properties of the solid we know is that it can expand at ever increasing speeds but anything that moves through it can only travel as fast as C. There is no obvious causal relationship between these two observations. At another fundamental level of physics they may be joined but we may also be limited in our understanding by virture of the fact that we exist in the solid.
Now my head hurts.
Anyway that's probably total BS but it helps me make sense of it and that's all the really matters.
TS