Yes, if it didn't it couldn't function.
The question does not make sense.
Some things in the universe that don't make sense include dark matter, black holes, and the concept of time dilation in relation to the theory of relativity.
Question does not make any sense.
The most common element in the Universe is hydrogen.
It would make sense that the capital should be in the center. But since the universe has no edge, it has no center, which means that no matter where you are in the universe, the view is the same. So the most central location in the universe is the entire universe.
G-K- Chesterton The Apostle of Common Sense - 2000 The Universe and Other Little Things 6-3 was released on: USA: 25 September 2011
"Cosmic" means "related to the Universe"; so this question doesn't really make much sense.
Object of Preposition
If we were to assume that the universe was created in a single place and time ( the big bang) then it makes sense. Because everything was concentrated near the central point and is exploding outwards like fireworks.
Many people like to believe that they have some instinctive or built-in understanding of the world which infallibly leads them to make correct conclusions based on intuition and common sense, but this is an illusion. There are many things in this world that cannot be understood merely on the basis of common sense. The results of quantum mechanics, for example, fly in the face of what we expect on the basis of common sense. The actual complexity of the universe exceeds what we are going to pick up on the basis of our normal, mundane lives. People who depend upon common sense are often wrong, sometimes catastrophically wrong.
Common sense will serve you well. Without it you are doomed to make mistakes that even an uneducated person with common sense will avoid.
He had said that citizens, not kings and queens, should make laws.