J
JimG
Guest
Current thinking in cosmology considers the universe to be a closed expanding spherical system, wherein the “surface” of the expanding sphere is ordinary 3D space. Such a universe has no ‘center’ in a geographic sense, any more than the surface of the earth can be said to have a center. The internal center of the expanding sphere represents that point some 18 billion years ago at which the universe began its expansion. There is a lot of scientific evidence for such a view, philosophy aside.This is not science. This is philosophy. But as I stated before, the lines are blurred.
A geocentric universe is a philosophical ideal, as is a heliocentric universe. The fact is that no one, except God himself, truly scientifically knows what the center of the universe truly is because we do not control it and we didn’t create it.
Our religious faith teaches that God considers each of us to equally be “centers” of the universe.
A ‘geocentric’ worldview might be conceivable for a much smaller universe in which stars were much smaller objects. But the universe is not small. The earth, rather, is small compared to stars and galaxies, and intergalactic distances.