 Originally Posted by Dthoughts
Hey Frank. I too some of your ideas and i eventually stumbled upon this paper (2010).
I thought you and others might find it interesting. A New Cosmological Model for the Visible Universe and its Implications.
It's a marvelous paper, I thought it reaffirms some of ur ideas such as, ...
Or this, ...
I think it reaffirms some of these ideas as well. Mainly, that spherical objects have gravity/inertia balance. And the article blatantly states that the earth is at the absolute center of the universe. A logical next step for me is to consider that each and every object is at the center of the universe. Including our eyes/body center of attention, if you know what I mean.
Just spreading the word 
Here's a link to the whole thing:
Spherical Shell Cosmological Model and Uniformity of Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation
And as far as I am able to follow that paper - it is meant to explain the uniformity of space without Inflation Theory.
Back when it was written - the ultimate proof for Inflation was yet pending and people doubted it.
This year, though, the gravitational waves, which were predicted by Inflation Theory have been found:
http://www.dreamviews.com/science-ma...nal-waves.html
Again as far as I understand matters - all models, which are based on something other than Inflation, are out the window by now.
I can't see any connection to DiMeglio's "theories" either, to be honest.
Interesting, how you come up with such papers - where did you find it?
Looks like a valid attempt to explain matters - just unfortunately not quite right.
Imagine it like this - if you were on a ship in the ocean, and you maybe climb up the mast, so that your horizon is even a bit wider - looking in all directions - the sea looks the same. Just as if you were at the centre of the world, which is visible to you.
The earthly horizon depends on where you stand to look and the curvature of the earth - quite easy to calculate, actually.
Same with the event horizon - just how far away from us it is, is defined by the speed of light.
Things, from which the light didn't have enough time yet to arrive here can't be seen by us.
If you look from somewhere else - you'll have different things to look at in your scope - aliens far away from us can see stars, which are invisible for us, so to speak.
So it looks, as if we were at the centre, naturally - and that we find uniformity in all directions can be explained with the inflationary expansion after the Big Bang.
Please correct me anybody, if I got physics wrong here - posted from the top of my head.
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