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If this is ELI5, we hang around very different kinds of five year olds :-)

Joking aside, thank you for the deeper explanation. The idea that spacetime isn’t fundamental is a very non-intuitive concept given how we’ve evolved to interact with the world. Any suggested reading on this topic for laypeople?



> Any suggested reading on this topic for laypeople?

Carlo Rovelli is a bona fide theoretical physicist, very involved in the development of Quantum Loop Gravity (one of the attempted approaches to bridge GR and QM). Turns out he is also a good pop-sci writer, so I would begin there. His book "The Order of Time" deals with the nature of time, which is not about the nature of space, but then again reading it you see that the mental gimnastics are similar.

I also found useful contributions from regular contributors at /r/cosmology (thank you /u/jazzwhizz) but it's less straightforward and alas, Reddit has its own issues.


I find /r/cosmotology a hairy subject hard to swallow...

I think they push string theory too much, and try too hard to braid it into the fabric of our societies, with their little shops and what not... It gets everywhere, and tomorrow is their favorite day "Friday"!


ChatGPT to the rescue!

let's think about space like a giant, invisible playground. Normally, it's flat like your bedroom floor, where you can measure how far your toys are from each other with a ruler straight across. That's like when there's no gravity in space.

But guess what happens when something really heavy, like a big bowling ball (that's like a star or planet) comes into your playground? It makes everything around it bend and curve. So, the distance between your toys is no longer a straight line. It's like when you throw a ball, it doesn't go straight, it goes in a curve.

This bending is what a really smart guy named Einstein explained in a thing called General Relativity. He came up with a way to measure how space bends around heavy stuff.

And you know what else? There's this really weird stuff called Dark Energy that's everywhere but we can't see it. It makes space grow bigger and bigger, not because of heavy stuff, but because there's a lot of empty room. Scientists are still trying to understand this, but it's like blowing up a balloon: even though there's no heavy stuff inside, the balloon still gets bigger!




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