I believe you are mistaken. As I said, the picture of the universe expanding forever is the picture that the great majority of evidence suggests. This picture is the current scientific consensus. You may not like this picture of the fate of the universe, but that has exactly zipp to do with whether it's actually true or not. The evidence is the important part.
Of course it's a vague term. We have no idea what dark energy is. All we know is that something is making all the space in the universe expand. So when a I, or a physicist, is talking about dark energy, it's just a shorthand way of saying "The whatever that seems to be pulling the universe apart." The fact that something is pulling the universe apart (and not at a steady rate but actually an accelerating rate) has been very conclusively shown to be a reality. Even if there wasn't dark energy, in a flat universe we would expect the universe to expand outward but slowly lose it's speed and eventually become stagnant and die of heat death all the same. So even without dark energy, the fate of our universe wouldn't be much different. The fact that something is pulling the universe apart makes it even more of a sure thing that the universe is going out with a whimper.And the term "dark energy" irritates me. It is mostly a vague term used to fill in holes in relativity. Don't get me wrong, it definitely is labeling something that exists, but I'm not sure we are anywhere close to understanding it or it's relationship with pulling apart the universe.
But none of this should depress you. The human race will almost certainly be long gone before any of this would worry us. We have plenty of time to enjoy our life. We have much greater things to worry us, like the human race killing itself off due to nuclear warfare, biological catastrophe, or environmental hazards.
Also, as I think Yesno alluded to, we have no idea if our observable universe is all there is anyway. This could just be one bubble in an infinitely large foam of universes. If this is the case, our universe growing cold and dying is no more important than a puddle full of little bacteria drying up. There is still a whole world of puddles and bacteria out there, so the one drying up and dying isn't such a big deal--unless you're those bacteria of course. Multiple universes is a fun thing to think about, but ultimately it's all speculation. Actual beliefs should be based on evidence, regardless how bleak the evidence suggests the outcome is.





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if you continue on this course. 