9 December 2014

The universes

Endless space. That is the container.

People all think of our 'universe' as the ultimate container for everything we know and could comprehend.

Some have suggested the idea of other universes in a sort of 'multiverse', however there is no multiverse, nor is our universe anything in itself but a spread of matter from a central point (singularity/ 'big bang'). Endless spreads of matters such as our own in all likeliness exist throughout space.

Space doesn't have borders or limits to its expanse and size, because it is not a measurable object spanning a distance or a container, it simply 'is', it's nothingness and the container for all that isn't nothingness as well as its own infinite vacuum.

Don't define space as our universe, for our universe is within space, and that definition limits the minds eye on the subject. Just as there are solar systems, galaxies, galactic clusters, everywhere in our existence at the smallest and largest levels we know, we see consolidations of matter at points, all part of a larger thing - from the atoms spaced apart in what we see as solid objects such as our own body or a plank of wood, to the very planets and galaxies. To universes, probably spread endlessly throughout infinite space.

What are your thoughts on the origin of the singularities ('big bang points') from which universes originate? Were they perhaps themselves a universe once, that over endless billions of years of gravitational pull of its own galaxies together once again reached a sort of 'singularity mass'?