Could you provide me with the evidence for the expansion please. — MikeL
How do they verify that everything is moving away from everything, rather than everything is moving away from us. We haven't gone to the galaxies to observe the shifts. Its all speculation based on a red shift. If we were approaching it, it would be blue shifted, but if it we were moving away from it (as they say it is moving away from us), or contracting away from us it would be red shifted. — MikeL
We could be moving away from them linearly (as we race faster than them toward the centre of the universe — MikeL
If there is, and if we were moving toward it, we would be moving away from some galaxies and toward others — T Clark
Sorry to steal your thunder. I would love to hear your thoughts — MikeL
Let me first state that I have of course no way of knowing whether the universe is really expanding or not. As it has been noted, the sole argument in favor of expansion is the color shift (red), and that is itself based on a theory that is accepted by everybody... except by me. But since I am, in academic terms, a nobody, don't let it deprive you of your sleep. — Hachem
I am suspicious of theories rejected by the consensus of the scientific community. If you look, there are lots of people that say relativity and quantum mechanics are hoaxes. At the same time, I am sympathetic to the frustration that comes from not understanding the chain of inference that scientists follow on complex issues. It would be helpful if we could get someone on the line who knows the science well — T Clark
Your suspicion is shared by many. I find it reassuring that not any objection to the consensus is blindly accepted. I understand the need for Science to be conservative, and set the bar higher. At the same time, discussions of what seems to be an eternal truth should not be silenced. Your suggestion that only people who do not understand a theory do not agree with it is very condescending, and, I am convinced, wrong. — Hachem
Let me first state that I have of course no way of knowing whether the universe is really expanding or not. As it has been noted, the sole argument in favor of expansion is the color shift (red), and that is itself based on a theory that is accepted by everybody... except by me. But since I am, in academic terms, a nobody, don't let it deprive you of your sleep.
see also
https://philpapers.org/post/17834 — Hachem
T Clark
why are you so hostile? If you think I am not credible, just ignore me.
edit: let us not hijack this thread. — Hachem
If this were so, the red shift would be greatest towards the mass that is pulling everything in since acceleration would be greatest there. Smaller red shift in the opposite, and blue shift in the other 4 directions as things parallel to us all get sucked closer to this mass. This tendency is called tidal force: expansion in 2 dimensions and contraction in the other 4, and is a signature of a strong gravitational field.Hmmm. What I think we've observed is red shifted galaxies relative to us. It could be that those closest to the centre (we need a centre for a big bang or for a new convergence place) are moving faster than us toward the centre, just as those further from the centre are moving slower relative to us. It would make sense as gravity grows stronger - almost like a singularity toward the centre. — MikeL
I find it reassuring that not any objection to the consensus is blindly accepted. I understand the need for Science to be conservative, and set the bar higher. At the same time, discussions of what seems to be an eternal truth should not be silenced. — Hachem
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