Why the Infinite Universe is not Evolving

Every portion of the Infinite Universe is evolving, but the universe is not.

Glenn Borchardt
2 min readNov 27, 2023

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Thanks to Anon for this question:

“You said ‘the Infinite Universe does not evolve over time, with only its individual parts doing so,’ for this to occur as a whole are you suggesting that there is an exogenous or endogenous force that purposely ensures that the Infinite Universe does not evolve? That Universal “cancer” could not take place, or that natural evolution which is seen in all things on earth remains static for the Infinite Universe? How does the Infinite Universe not evolve?”

[GB: Let me state the answer in a few different ways:

1. According to the universal mechanism of evolution, univironmental determinism, what happens to a portion of the universe depends on the infinite matter within and without. That mechanism does not apply to the Infinite Universe because it has no “without.”

2. Another way of looking at it is this: Evolution is motion. Motion involves a change in distance with respect to some other thing. There is no thing outside the Infinite Universe that exists as a referent. Only a finite universe could evolve. That is probably why neo-Darwinists favor the Big Bang Theory, although the discovery of “elderly galaxies” at…

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Glenn Borchardt

Dr. Borchardt, scientific philosopher and theoretical physicist, has advanced Infinite Universe Theory as the ultimate replacement for the Big Bang Theory.