From: Ross A. Finlayson (RAF@tomco.net)
Date: Sat Mar 27 1999 - 19:49:24 MST
I would say that the universe as we know it encompasses all physical things to the
extent of the travel of light and energy from the core of the Big Bang.
Metaphysical things might or might not be a part of the universe, depending on
whether they are or not.
Beyond our universe, we do not have any empirical evidence of what exists.
However, we might conjecture that there is absolute vacuum and no light beyond the
extent of light and energy flying away from the Big Ground Zero. Whether our
universe is the sum totality of all light, energy, and mass that exists anywhere
in space-time remains to be seen.
At any rate, there is someplace beyond our universe as we know it, otherwise there
would be no context for our universe. I would think that physical laws as known
would be the same beyond the extreme limits of detritus thrown from the Big Bang.
Ross F.
EWyatt794@aol.com wrote:
> In a message dated 3/27/99 8:57:10 PM Eastern Standard Time, echoz@hotmail.com
> writes:
>
> > Universe-The totality of known or supposed objects and phenomena
> > throughout space.
> So, can we sum up this definition as "everything"?
>
> William
-- Ross Andrew Finlayson 202/387-8208 http://www.tomco.net/~raf/ "C is the speed of light."
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