Jump to content

Inertial Gravity and Cosmology: Difference between revisions

From Natural Philosophy Wiki
Imported from text file
 
Imported from text file
Line 13: Line 13:
==Abstract==
==Abstract==


If inertial effects are merely gravitational effects (the Berkeley-Mach hypothesis), and if the laws of nature are the same everywhere (the costnological principle), it seems probable that (1) the universe is infinitely great, is not expanding, and is neither open nor closed (2) the cosmic redshift is not a Doppler effect (3) the hypothetical big bang did not occur. Two important words: seems probable.[[Category:Scientific Paper]]
If inertial effects are merely gravitational effects (the Berkeley-Mach hypothesis), and if the laws of nature are the same everywhere (the costnological principle), it seems probable that (1) the universe is infinitely great, is not expanding, and is neither open nor closed (2) the cosmic redshift is not a Doppler effect (3) the hypothetical big bang did not occur. Two important words: seems probable.
 
[[Category:Scientific Paper|inertial gravity cosmology]]


[[Category:Gravity]]
[[Category:Gravity]]

Revision as of 12:33, 1 January 2017

Scientific Paper
TitleInertial Gravity and Cosmology
Author(s)Lee Coe
Keywordsgravity and inertia, theoretical cosmology, origin and formation of the universe, redshift, big bang
Published1988
JournalPhysics Essays
Volume1
Number1
Pages33-44

Abstract

If inertial effects are merely gravitational effects (the Berkeley-Mach hypothesis), and if the laws of nature are the same everywhere (the costnological principle), it seems probable that (1) the universe is infinitely great, is not expanding, and is neither open nor closed (2) the cosmic redshift is not a Doppler effect (3) the hypothetical big bang did not occur. Two important words: seems probable.