A very interesting train of thought, though Harry's dismissive tone rains on the parade over and over again. I'm sorry, I shouldn't get irritated.
Harry, how do you know "Our universe cannot be a BH and cannot have an event horizon regarless of the mass"?
I'd say the purpose is that it makes lively and interesting discussion. It doesn't need more than that.
I don't know about how others feel, Harry, but I think a little humility in your writing would do you a world of good.
We are seeing well past 5 billion light-years, assuming one takes the red shift measurements to imply distances. I still question this basic assumption, but I'm keeping an open mind. It's interesting that now and again I see distance numbers quoted WELL in excess of 13.7 billion light-years. I've always taken that to mean this red shift = distance theory isn't quite complex enough. It's also why I wonder whether things we regard as constant - e.g., the speed of light - have not always been so.
Oh, and ta152h0, I don't believe I'm mixing up anything. In my view, the universe is not mixed up, it is not running on "Newtonian Physics", specifically, nor "Quantum Mechanics". It is an integrated whole, running on its complex set of rules, and that's how I imagine it. I don't claim to understand 1% of any of these fields, but I really don't need to now, to be able to picture 3 physical dimensions + 1 (time) in my imagination, then develop my own views on how it works.
Can you further describe this "huge difference" you speak of between gravitational forces and mutual attraction? Surely you're not just talking about the other forces (magnetism, nuclear forces, etc.)? Note that I didn't say the perturbation of time by mass density was the only thing operating here.
I imagine we won't be able to see the 'edge' of the universe, so to speak. More than likely what we'll observe is simply things becoming dimmer and more and more redshifted, until they're beyond observability.
I like the way you think, Qev. That sounds very right to me.
And what if time is traveling backwards in this huge black hole in which we live, and what we see as expansion is really in grand sense the collapse of matter inward from material falling into the universal event horizon. And further, what if entire new universes are being created in our own black holes, and universes within them, ad infinitum? Perhaps we're seeing into the future with our telescopes.
-Noel