Why the Universe is not Expanding
Einstein’s Untired Light Theory is at the root of cosmology’s most myopic embarrassment.
The Infinite Universe cannot expand because it is already full — it exists everywhere and for all time. There is no real evidence for universal expansion — the average distance between galaxies has not changed over time. Nonetheless, that realization escapes today’s cosmogonists who still surreptitiously assume the universe had a beginning. As I have pointed out many times, the Infinite Universe forces us to make fundamental assumptions about it.[1] The universe is either finite or infinite, although there never will be a complete proof for either assumption. In tune with their subconscious assumption of finity, cosmogonists mistakenly interpret the cosmological redshift as solid evidence for universal expansion. It is no such thing.
There are two possible interpretations of the cosmological redshift:
1. Hubble’s “Tired Light Theory.”
2. Einstein’s “Untired Light Theory.”
The first is correct and the second is not. The claim constantly repeated by cosmogonists that “Edwin Hubble discovered the universe was expanding” is false. He denied that until his dying day.[2]