The edge of the universe is a kind of holographic storage of all the information in the universe. As are the surfaces of black holes.
http://www.astroengine.com/?p=3189
http://spatialtheory.wordpress.com/...gram-projected-from-the-edge-of-the-universe/
http://www.sentientdevelopments.com/2009/01/our-holographic-universe.html
Just linked some random stuff on the subject. I saw it in "Through the Wormhole", docu hosten by Morgan Freeman (gotta love his voice).
I don't find the premise of us existing on the surface of the edge of the universe far fetched at all. In fact, it's how I now see the universe. What all this means is not something I'm going to speculate on.
EDIT: It's possible the "size" of the universe doesn't even exist. The human concept that is size may be complete bull.
There isn't any method to make an appropriate guess. We don't know enough nor have the capability of making any kind of informed guess at such a thing.
you've been touched, haven't you?
Sometimes I'm actually being serious. This is one of those times. When it comes to the size, shape, or scope of the universe, there is only speculation.
We are all being maintained in static warp core shell.
God seems like he a guy that likes the volume at 11
You're routinely an anti-science troll. There are multiple methods for estimating (not speculating) what the actual radius of the universe is. - our 13.75 billion year old universe. (note: the 1, 3, and 7 are certain, the uncertainty is in the 5; might be 6, might be 4.)
Your statement that "there isn't any method to make an appropriate guess" is incorrect. What you really mean is that you deny that any method will lead to an approximate estimate of the age and size of the universe. Either that, or you mean that you're too ignorant to know of methods.
In response to your anticipated "durrrr, well then, what are the methods?" The answer is LOOK IT UP YOURSELF before making ignorant statements such as "there isn't any method..." It's not too hard to do. Go to scholar dot google dot com and search for the radius of the universe.
Of course, you'll probably realize that all the scholars whose papers are published are all idiots, because their date doesn't agree with your 6000 year age of the universe.
Publishing a paper doesn't make you a scholar nor does it make you right.
Quite a few "scientific" papers have turned out to be fabrications.
The appeal to authority doesn't cut it.
You're routinely an anti-science troll. There are multiple methods for estimating (not speculating) what the actual radius of the universe is. - our 13.75 billion year old universe. (note: the 1, 3, and 7 are certain, the uncertainty is in the 5; might be 6, might be 4.)
Your statement that "there isn't any method to make an appropriate guess" is incorrect. What you really mean is that you deny that any method will lead to an approximate estimate of the age and size of the universe. Either that, or you mean that you're too ignorant to know of methods.
In response to your anticipated "durrrr, well then, what are the methods?" The answer is LOOK IT UP YOURSELF before making ignorant statements such as "there isn't any method..." It's not too hard to do. Go to scholar dot google dot com and search for the radius of the universe.
Of course, you'll probably realize that all the scholars whose papers are published are all idiots, because their date doesn't agree with your 6000 year age of the universe.
Publishing a paper doesn't make you a scholar nor does it make you right.
Quite a few "scientific" papers have turned out to be fabrications.
The appeal to authority doesn't cut it.
Publishing a paper doesn't make you a scholar nor does it make you right.
Quite a few "scientific" papers have turned out to be fabrications.
The appeal to authority doesn't cut it.
