Robert Thibadeau
1 min readDec 28, 2022

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Where do you define "universe" and "infinite" operationally? How do you measure the "universe"? How do you measure "infinity"? Why does "an infinite universe" cause a measurement to have a plus or minus (translational variance)? Indeed why is a scalar measurement such as the statement "this "e" is the letter "e" have a "plus or minus"? Where does the "big bang theory" say the universe (whatever that is) is not "infinite" (whatever you mean by that)? It seems to me that big bang theory says nothing about the universe and the infinity you are imagining.

Here is the computational cognitive neuroscience behind that:

https://medium.com/liecatcher/https-medium-com-rhtcmu-fiat-lies-are-genocide-on-the-human-race-a4d76b093530

It would be interesting to take your "because" statement above to the Internet Court of Lies to see what other people think of it if dissected as a possible lie.

www.liecourt.com : anybody can see what other minds think of claims of truth.

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Robert Thibadeau
Robert Thibadeau

Written by Robert Thibadeau

Carnegie Mellon University since 1979 — Cognitive Science, AI, Machine Learning, one of the founding Directors of the Robotics Institute. rht@brightplaza.com

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