But your model violates reality in that we and the earth are part of the same space-time continuum as the rest of the universe. In other words, we are analogically on the surface of the balloon.
ok; but since we do not observe nor experience,
as in the case of gravitational influences, every mass that is on the sphere, it would be irrelevant, in my opinion, to use the sphere as a model. Since we observe the universe in the way that the farthest galaxies represent a time closer to the beginning of the big bang, it would seem that instead of a sphere, the model ought to be a form, having a curvature which continously reduces in radius as distances increases, which,at first thought, would be something like a cone instead of a sphere. However, the cone shape has a center, and I do agree that according to observations we fail to observe any center.
Just so, but “anything goes” is completely uninteresting. Such speculations are trivial (and trivially wrong).
I fully agree with you, I should not have written any of such speculations but ought to have kept them to myself. Unfortunately, Alec, that’s not the way I see it. I like better to throw any ideas and wait for replies from people such as you or warpspeedpetey to see where or why such reasoning is false.
Interest arises from propositions that fit the observations. Einstein’s most famous and popular insight was the mass energy equivalence, so you are a little late on the “energy is equivalent to mass” phenomenon.
I know I shouldn’t continue along my line of thoughts…but I can’t resist.

Now don’t be offended or frustrated or whatever. I’m asking you these retarded questions because I know that you have the answers and I’m only a laymen asking questions…not pretending to know science.
My thoughts on the energy producing mass centered on what I would believe to be an exponential component of the energy expenditure in creating increasingly heavy atomic mass elements. In other words, while a hydrogen atom is half the mass of the helium atom, I would think that a much greater amount of energy is used in the process of fusion in order to create a helium atom than simply twice the energy to create a hydrogen atom. The energy expenditure would, in my opinion be responsible for gravity and not simply the mass.
For example, while you did mention that the sun is
400000 times the mass of the earth, it’s surface gravity is 28 times, which doesn’t seem to correspond with the ratio of mass/ gravity.
Anyway, let me assure you this to be the last time I’ll mention this issue.
Because we are discussing a natural, not a religious idea (so I don’t really undersytand why a Catholic would be more frustrated than I am), and if we are to continue in dialogue, your constant stream of ad hoc ideas to rescue geocentrism, all of which are false given a moment’s thought, still require effort to refute. Speculations which are immediately false because they utterly fail to fit the evidence are not fun - they are tedious. I am frustrated because you seem to be an intelligent guy who is prostituting his intelligence in the service of a bankrupt idea.
I think if you would look through my posts, the geocentric value I give is purely philosophical in essence. The models I’m trying to use to identify a
geocentric universe is mearly for equivalence purposes, and nothing more. I am however, totally against an absolute heliocentric model. Everytime I read someone claiming that geocentrism is erronious, it assumes that such a one uses the heliocentric model as an absolute frame.
Alec
evolutionpages.com
Andre