A
Note about Hawking's Beginning of Time
Sam Ghandchi
http://www.ghandchi.com/824-hawking-time-english.htm
یادداشتی درباره آغاز زمان هاوکینگ
http://www.ghandchi.com/824-hawking-time.htm
Sam Ghandchi
http://www.ghandchi.com/824-hawking-time-english.htm
یادداشتی درباره آغاز زمان هاوکینگ
http://www.ghandchi.com/824-hawking-time.htm
For a longtime, we have been seeing the farthest point of the universe to be
around 14 billon light years away from us. And all the talk about
Big Bang and that point being the beginning of time and space, i.e. our
universe! Stephen Hawking in a past phase in his "A Brief History of Time" used
to say that to ask what was before that time is like asking what is North of the
North Pole because he considered that point to be the beginning of time itself.
What if the reason we have not been able to see anything beyond that point is because that point of time and space is our horizon. I mean for millennia people saw the point of horizon on Earth whenever they looked at a ship in a distance in the sea but because of their pre-Copernican view of the Earth, did not realize that the point of horizon was not the end of the "flat" Earth and no ship would fall, and their observation only meant the Earth is not flat and is a sphere.
Maybe this is somewhat a similar situation about the universe and where we are. I mean, to be able to observe the universe from a point which would have a significant change of horizon for us, we would need to travel distances that will not be possible for our space travel capabilities for a very long time or we would need to communicate with some ET that would be far enough to have a significant different point of horizon from where we are located in the universe.
What if the reason we have not been able to see anything beyond that point is because that point of time and space is our horizon. I mean for millennia people saw the point of horizon on Earth whenever they looked at a ship in a distance in the sea but because of their pre-Copernican view of the Earth, did not realize that the point of horizon was not the end of the "flat" Earth and no ship would fall, and their observation only meant the Earth is not flat and is a sphere.
Maybe this is somewhat a similar situation about the universe and where we are. I mean, to be able to observe the universe from a point which would have a significant change of horizon for us, we would need to travel distances that will not be possible for our space travel capabilities for a very long time or we would need to communicate with some ET that would be far enough to have a significant different point of horizon from where we are located in the universe.
If
the above is true,
then all the talk about beginning of time and space around 14 billion years ago
may just be because of our own kind of so-called pre-Copernican view of our
universe. And thus believing in multiverse would not mean that other universes
would be, beyond time and space, and would simply mean that they are beyond our
horizon.
Sam Ghandchi, Editor/Publisher
IRANSCOPE
http://www.ghandchi.com
http://www.iranscope.com
October 23, 2014
Sam Ghandchi, Editor/Publisher
IRANSCOPE
http://www.ghandchi.com
http://www.iranscope.com
October 23, 2014
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