Finite spacetimes can expand just as well as infinite ones. There is no need for them to expand into anything and no need for anything to be outside it. Things just get farther apart, is all.
Put differently, the length of the shortest straight-line trip around the universe (analogous to circumnavigating the Earth along the equator or another Great Circle) increases. — andrewk
"If the universe is finite, then what's outside it? What does it expand into?"
You might be in a state of delusion, or an artificial construct in a more subtle reality etc. — Punshhh
According to current cosmological theories there cannot be such a [finite] spacetime. If it is flat it must be infinite — andrewk
We don't know any of those things. I'll consider them one by one.I'm confused by this. Let's take the observable universe as an example. Surely it's flat (parallel lines never cross, the corners of cubes will always make right angles, etc.), finite, homogenous, isotropic, and spherical (given three spatial dimensions of equal distances)? — Michael
Quite, we are not aware of what this maths is, what it is showing us about what exists, existence, or how it comes to exist(etc.etc...) — Punshhh
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