PSI Blog 20230313 Falsification No. 20 of the Big Bang Theory: Intergalactic Distance Unchanged Over Time
Galaxies are supposed to be receding from each other: They
are not.
“Deep space mapping shows that
densities of galaxy distribution is the same across space and time. If
anything, we see greater density nearer to us, the opposite of what the
expanding universe theory predicts.” (Giles, 2023).
Thanks to Douglas Giles for his wonderful essay entitled:
What
if the Universe Is NOT Expanding?
Dr. Giles is a philosophy professor who obviously understands
the absurdity of the current cosmogony. Normally, anyone teaching philosophy in
the US has to present both sides of controversial issues, generally confusing
students with a mishmash of religion and science. Not so, apparently, for Dr.
Giles, who’s most recent book has this intriguing title: “How We Are and How We Got Here: A Practical History
of Western Philosophy.”
Intergalactic distances have been measured during the last
two decades by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, among others. None have found evidence for
universal expansion, which is a primary foundation of the Big Bang Theory. In
spite of that, Wikipedia parrots the party line by proclaiming “All these
results are in agreement with the measurements of other experiments, notably
those of WMAP. They confirm
the standard cosmological model.” The standard model is, of course, the
Big Bang Theory.
Here is the gist of Dr. Giles’s Medium essay in which he gets
it right:
“The observations of galaxies show that when we plot every
observed galaxy by its distance from us we get an even distribution. If we
compare an incredibly huge section of space centered on a point 2 billion light
years away with a same incredibly huge section 8 billion light years away, we
see roughly the same density of galaxies 2 billion lights years distant from us
as 2, 3, 4, and so on billion light years distant.”