- #1
Mark_W_Ingalls
- 8
- 0
Anybody--
A friend of mine, whom I highly respect, made the following comment the other day:
"If you travel in one direction fast enough, you'll eventually get back to where you started."
This was so strange an 'idea' I didn't even know how to respond! After awhile I asked him how he thought of that idea, and he responded:
"Well, the universe is not infinite. And you'll never come up against a wall beyond which there is no more. So how could it be any other way? Unless the universe is just expanding too fast to do the circumnavigation."
I think he has heard something about "curved space" and he thinks space curves back on itself! Can anyone help me explain to my friend that, no matter how fast you go in a "one direction" you'll never be able to get back to your starting point? (I am an engineer, not a cosmologist.)
Thanks in advance!
Mark W. Ingalls
A friend of mine, whom I highly respect, made the following comment the other day:
"If you travel in one direction fast enough, you'll eventually get back to where you started."
This was so strange an 'idea' I didn't even know how to respond! After awhile I asked him how he thought of that idea, and he responded:
"Well, the universe is not infinite. And you'll never come up against a wall beyond which there is no more. So how could it be any other way? Unless the universe is just expanding too fast to do the circumnavigation."
I think he has heard something about "curved space" and he thinks space curves back on itself! Can anyone help me explain to my friend that, no matter how fast you go in a "one direction" you'll never be able to get back to your starting point? (I am an engineer, not a cosmologist.)
Thanks in advance!
Mark W. Ingalls
Last edited: