Cosmology speaks, almost without exception, of “the universe” as if it were a thing.
It is treated as:
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a system with properties,
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an entity with a state,
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an object that evolves over time.
This language feels unavoidable.
It is also conceptually misleading.
The claim of this essay is simple:
The universe is not an object in the sense required by physical theory.
This is not a denial of reality.
It is a clarification of what kind of reality cosmology actually engages.
1. What an Object Is
In physics, an object is not merely “something that exists.”
It has a more specific structure:
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it can be individuated from other objects,
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it can be assigned properties,
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it can, in principle, be observed or measured,
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and it exists within a framework that distinguishes it from its surroundings.
An object, in other words, is something that appears within a system of relations.
It is defined by its place in that system.
2. The Boundary Requirement
Every object presupposes a boundary.
To treat something as an object is to distinguish it from what it is not.
This distinction is not optional.
Without it, individuation fails.
In ordinary physics, this is straightforward:
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a particle is distinguished from other particles,
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a system is separated from its environment,
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a region is defined within a larger space.
But the universe includes all such distinctions.
There is no “outside” relative to which it could be bounded.
3. The Failure of Individuation
If the universe has no external boundary, then it cannot be individuated in the same way as an object within it.
It is not one thing among others.
It is the totality within which “things” are distinguished.
To call it an object is therefore to apply a concept outside its domain of validity.
It treats the totality as if it were a member of the set it contains.
4. The Illusion of Global Properties
Cosmology often attributes properties to the universe:
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its curvature,
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its expansion rate,
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its energy content.
These appear to be properties of a single object.
But on closer inspection, they are not intrinsic features of a bounded entity.
They are parameters within models that organise relations among observable phenomena.
They do not describe the universe as an object.
They describe structures within cosmological description.
5. The Observer Problem Returns
The idea of the universe as an object also reintroduces a familiar difficulty.
Objects are, in principle, observable.
But as established in Part I:
the universe cannot be observed from the outside.
There is no standpoint from which it could appear as a whole.
The notion of the universe as an object therefore presupposes a perspective that does not exist.
6. The Persistence of a Metaphor
Why, then, does the language of objects persist?
Because it is inherited from the domain in which physics first developed.
Classical physics deals with:
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bodies,
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systems,
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and objects interacting in space.
Cosmology extends this language to the totality.
But the extension is metaphorical.
The universe is treated as if it were an object, because our conceptual tools were built for objects.
7. What Cosmology Actually Engages
If the universe is not an object, what is cosmology about?
It is not about describing a thing.
It is about organising a network of relations:
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correlations across spacetime,
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constraints among observables,
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patterns that hold across different scales.
These structures do not belong to an object.
They are what cosmological theory articulates.
8. The Category Error Completed
At this point, the full pattern becomes visible.
Cosmology inherits from classical physics a set of concepts:
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state,
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initial condition,
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object.
It then applies them to the universe as a whole.
But each of these concepts depends on conditions that fail at the cosmological scale:
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a state requires an external framework,
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initial conditions require a given temporal structure,
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objects require boundaries.
None of these are available.
The result is a systematic category error.
9. A Different Orientation
Once this is recognised, the language of objects can be replaced with something more precise.
Cosmology does not describe a cosmic object.
It articulates:
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relational structures,
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patterns of constraint,
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and coherent models that organise observation.
The universe is not a thing with properties.
It is the totality within which such structures are defined.
Final Statement
The universe is not an object.
It is the horizon within which objects, systems, and properties are constituted.
To treat it as an object is to extend a local concept beyond its domain.
And at the cosmological scale, that extension no longer holds. 🌌🔥