Showing posts with label cosmological expansion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cosmological expansion. Show all posts

Thursday, 18 September 2025

Against the Expansion of Space

Cosmologists tell us that space is expanding. Galaxies recede, the universe stretches, and the very fabric of spacetime swells like a cosmic balloon. The image is seductive: space as a thing that grows, carrying everything along with it.

But this is a metaphor that misleads. Space is not a substance to expand; it is a relational system of events. Galaxies do not drift apart because space stretches beneath them; they separate because the network of relations among events is reconfiguring. Expansion is not a property of space but a description of how potentials are phased and aligned across the unfolding of the universe.

To speak of “stretching space” is to smuggle in a backdrop where none exists. The relational cut shows us that what we observe is not a pre-existing medium being pulled apart, but the continuous actualisation of relations that define distance, alignment, and interaction. The universe does not expand; the relational order of events scales.

So we can state it sharply:

Space does not expand — only the relations between events do.