UrbanXrisis said:
ahhh, I understand what you mean.
Is the space being "stretched" or "created"?
If it was being created, then I don't see how that would expand the space between this galaxy and another. If space was expanding, then it would only create more space. Unless it was actually stretching it. Which then brings to the point of the big bang and how there has to be space already there for it to be stretched.
Now THAT is a very astute question, and it leads logically to a couple of concepts:
1) If the space between our galaxy and another distant galaxy is expanding, do the units of space-time between us expand to suit the expansion? If not:
2) Is the fine texture of space-time set in fixed units, so that space-time has to constantly be created to fill the gaps?
The viability of these concepts have some very real consequences for the life of the standard cosmological model, especially in its treatment of redshift, constancy of speed of light, and a lot of other fundamental things.
In science, the assumptions that accompany any cosmological model have effects on the way that we interpret observational data. Sometimes interpretation tends to support theory and vise versa, even though the theory can be wrong, and that dynamic can stifle real scientific progress for long periods of time.
As scientists, we have to understand the principles of epistemology and learn to apply it rigorously. Epistemology requires that we examine how each "rule", "law", etc has come into existence and re-evaluate it as new knowledge becomes available. If we cannot question the validity of the assumptions behind each rule or law, science is dead - it is no better than religion or superstition. I won't bore you with Einstein's quote on the subject, but if you'd like to read it, let me know and I'll zap a copy over.