Page:Relativity (1931).djvu/145

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

PART III
CONSIDERATIONS ON THE UNIVERSE AS A WHOLE


XXX

COSMOLOGICAL DIFFICULTIES OF NEWTON’S THEORY

APART from the difficulty discussed in Section XXI, there is a second fundamental difficulty attending classical celestial mechanics, which, to the best of my knowledge, was first discussed in detail by the astronomer Seeliger. If we ponder over the question as to how the universe, considered as a whole, is to be regarded, the first answer that suggests itself to us is surely this: As regards space (and time) the universe is infinite. There are stars everywhere, so that the density of matter, although very variable in detail, is nevertheless on the average everywhere the same. In other words: However far we might travel through space, we should find everywhere an attenuated swarm of fixed stars of approximately the same kind and density.

125