(March 11, 2014 at 7:18 pm)Heywood Wrote: The end points do have significance in that we can't observe smaller than the planck length and we can't observe beyond the boundary of the observable universe.
If you go to 10^-16 in the app, you'll note a range given with the label "lengths shorter than this are not confirmed".
What that means is nobody has observed anything smaller than that. Which means the end points of the observable universe are +26 orders of magnitude, and -16 orders of magnitude. The midpoint of the observable universe is then 10^5 meters, or on the order of the distance light travels in a second. This is nowhere near human scales.
So, once again, you are wrong.
![[Image: extraordinarywoo-sig.jpg]](https://i.postimg.cc/zf86M5L7/extraordinarywoo-sig.jpg)