From: BURT on
Space was an aether hypersphere that began and is now forever
expanding.
Hypersphere cosmology was started by Albert Einstein. The original
term was Friedman space. Now it is hypersphere. Hawking has said
something similar.

Mitch Raemsch

From: tue on
On Jun 29, 9:30 pm, BURT <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
> Space was an aether hypersphere that began and is now forever
> expanding.
> Hypersphere cosmology was started by Albert Einstein. The original
> term was Friedman space. Now it is hypersphere. Hawking has said
> something similar.
>
> Mitch Raemsch

what is a hypersphere and how do you
know is not a hypercube?

how can anything be discovered at the
bigbang, by whom???

From: BURT on
On Jun 29, 12:52�pm, tue <tu...(a)dcemail.com> wrote:
> On Jun 29, 9:30 pm, BURT <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> > Space was an aether hypersphere that began and is now forever
> > expanding.
> > Hypersphere cosmology was started by Albert Einstein. The original
> > term was Friedman space. Now it is hypersphere. Hawking has said
> > something similar.
>
> > Mitch Raemsch
>
> what is a hypersphere and how do you
> know is not a hypercube?
>
> how can anything be discovered at the
> bigbang, by whom???

There was an Absolute Beginning of the universe that is called
hypersphere. It is 4 dimensionally round. Einstein said that the
universe is closed.

Mitch Raemsch

From: Desertphile on
On Tue, 29 Jun 2010 12:30:01 -0700 (PDT), BURT
<macromitch(a)yahoo.com> wrote:

> Space was an aether hypersphere that began and is now forever
> expanding.

Appear Mental.


--
http://desertphile.org
Desertphile's Desert Soliloquy. WARNING: view with plenty of water
"Why aren't resurrections from the dead noteworthy?" -- Jim Rutz

From: BURT on
On Jun 29, 3:22�pm, Desertphile <desertph...(a)invalid-address.net>
wrote:
> On Tue, 29 Jun 2010 12:30:01 -0700 (PDT), BURT
>
> <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
> > Space was an aether hypersphere that began and is now forever
> > expanding.
>
> Appear Mental.
>
> --http://desertphile.org
> Desertphile's Desert Soliloquy. WARNING: view with plenty of water
> "Why aren't resurrections from the dead noteworthy?" -- Jim Rutz

I am dealing in the principle of two time gravity.

Mitch Raemsch