One of Many 196
sam_handelman writes "The nytimes has another astrophysics article up. Free subscription etc. It talks about how inflation predicts multiple universes, this week. Dennis Overbye wrote the article, which is nice if lightweight. More info on the theory of inflation. Inflation, which is harebrained on first examination, actually predicts stuff, giving it credibility. Want to be the Right Pinky of God? It may yet be possible."
What about...? (Score:4, Funny)
You can be the pinky.... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:You can be the pinky.... (Score:2)
Inflation != Multiple Universes (Score:3, Interesting)
In fact, Dr. Guth said, "Inflation pretty much forces the idea of multiple universes upon us."
I read the article. Can anyone see where he justifies this statement with anything resembling logic?
I accept inflation and the 'anthropic principle' as well argued theories. Inflation=multiple universes is not (or not here).
Re:Inflation != Multiple Universes (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Inflation != Multiple Universes (Score:5, Informative)
I didn't see the explanation in the article, but from what I've heard the explanation is pretty simple. I think I read it in A Breif History of Time [google.com] or something like that. I probably don't remember it correctly but here goes nothing...
The trick is that the collapse from an inflationary situation to normal spacetime can't happen instantaneously. By the time the collapse has happened and created a universe of normal spacetime, the inflation has already created more than enough (inflating) space/spacetime/cosmicstuff to replace it. So there will always be inflating stuff left over. Eventually this new inflating stuff will start collapsing into pockets of normal spacetime, creating new universes each time. The point is that the inflating stuff inflates too quickly to be consumed by the collapse process, so the process continues indefinitely.
Re:Inflation != Multiple Universes (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Inflation != Multiple Universes (Score:2, Interesting)
Granted everything we know in science is only a good guess and nothings is known as an absolute fact, but it's pretty demonstratable that particle physics is dealing with single particles, building blocks so to speak....
Besides... I'd would be darn horrible to find out that we have been preforming planicide on entire civilizations and races every time a cyclotron or particle accelerator is fired up.
Re:Inflation != Multiple Universes (Score:3, Insightful)
The laws of physics as we know them are the laws of physics for this universe and this universe alone. A different universe would have different laws of physics altogether.
The theories and the article both state this very clearly. That's one of the fascinating things about our universe: that it's laws are so precise as to allow stars, and subsequently life, to form. Only a narrow range of laws allow such formations, and our universe is one of the few (although possibly infinite) number of universes with laws capable of creating and sustaining life.
Re:Inflation != Multiple Universes (Score:2)
I have been saying this to everybody that I have talked to for a few years now... but, I'm only 18 so it's not like anybody would take my thoughts seriously...
Anyway, from this, I came up with a theory to explain why our explanations of our universe are so frekin complicated... and answer is somewhat simple...
Quoting myself from my own personal website: "Our own existance deviates so much from the actual physical and chemical existance of the universe in whole that we have come up with theories and laws that only apply to us... and not to the universe."
So all our theories and physical laws are only partly true. Sure, they work, but it's like trying to figure out a computer by talking about the plastic casing on the keyboard....
This is why I stopped trying to ponder the existance of the universe, why I stopped trying to figure out how the hell we got here... because I realised that, from our standpoint in this universe, it is impossible...
Re:Inflation != Multiple Universes (Score:3, Interesting)
It certainly, IMHO, means that the laws we know break. Very probably it means the laws we can conceivably test also do not apply.
This does not mean there isn't any generalization of the basic theories which do apply. In fact physicists predict properties such a theory must have, which may lead to hypothesis of this kind.
wether such hypothesis are true, or can even be tested, again, is a leap of faith IMHO.
If I lived on a proto-planet then I would be a creature that was much smaller than an electron and therefore must be made up of things that don't apply to the current physics
Here I think you may have a misconception of the notion of size. General Relativity tells us you cannot directly compare sizes over great distances. This means that the world we live in is a Riemann manifold ( a patchwork of local non congruent euclidian approximations )
What all this means, is that comparing sizes inside a black hole (the above approximations break on the way) and outside is not only impossible, it is meaningless. It does NOT mean the laws of physics must be different in flat areas inside. (or that they aren't)
Besides... I'd would be darn horrible to find out that we have been preforming planicide on entire civilizations and races every time a cyclotron or particle accelerator is fired up
wrong. this may have conceivably been possible if current experiments would heve been close to the plank scale. However we're many many orders of magnitude away from achieving such cataclysmic energies.
AFAIK we know pretty well the basics of what is happening in the sub-TeV scale.
Re:Inflation != Multiple Universes (Score:2, Funny)
Imagine all the legal ramafications if lawyers find out about even the possibility.
Re:Inflation != Multiple Universes (Score:2, Interesting)
If you take the universal constants c (speed of light in m/s), G (gravitational constant in m^3/s^2kg), and h-bar (Planck's constant in kgm^2/s), and you arrange them so that the units cancel out except for one, you end up with the Planck units.
So to get the Planck time, you multiply G by h-bar to cancel out the kilograms, getting a number in units of m^3/s^5. Now divide by c^5, and you're left with a number in units of s^2. Take the square root, and you're left with a number in units of seconds. That is the Planck time, sqrt(Ghbar/c^5).
With G being 6.673x10^-11, h-bar being 1.054x10^-34, and c being 2.998x10^8, you end up with Planck time being 5.389x10^-44 seconds.
The same can be done for Planck length (= c times Planck time = 1.616x10^-35 meters) and Planck mass (= h-bar over c over Planck length = 2.176x10^-8 kg).
From that you can derive Planck density, which is something like Planck mass divided by the cube of the Planck length, which turns out to be something like 5.154x10^96 kg/m^3.
A reasonable interpretation of these measures is that Planck length is the smallest possible length (i.e. indivisible), Planck time is the smallest possible time (i.e. indivisible) and Planck mass is the largest possible mass able to fit into one Planck space-time unit.
This gives a sort of layman's explanation for the inviolability of the speed of light -- in order to travel FTL, you'd have to travel one Planck length in less than one Planck time, and since Planck time is indivisible, this is not possible. It also implies that at speeds lower than c, one either moves at c or not at all, since you can't travel a less than a Planck length in one Planck time. That is, speed is just an average between moving at c and moving at 0.
You could also add into the mix the electric constant of free space to obtain a Planck charge. That's left as an exercise for the student
--Rob
Re:Inflation != Multiple Universes (Score:2, Interesting)
Individual histories won't communicate in most cases because they'll be very far apart (further than the light horizon) in space, due to inflation. There is a theoretical possibility of the histories "meeting". So an "earth where hitler won the war" might correspond to "go 10^10^10^10^10^10^10^10^10^10^10^10... light-years that way"
Re:Inflation != Multiple Universes (Score:2, Funny)
I have enough trouble worrying about economic inflation to give a rats ass about the inflation of multiple universes (universi?). For me, the existence of multiple universes(i, whatever) means one thing: somewhere, out there, another me is having sex with another Natalie Portman and another Janet Jackson AT THE SAME TIME.
Why harebrained? (Score:5, Informative)
It was originally proposed to address one of the big problems in the old big bang theory, namely that parts of the universe visible from Earth, that were so far apart that light couldn't have travelled between them since the big bang, looked pretty much the same. For this too happen, they must have been some sort of communication between them at some point in the past, but a fixed, unbreakable speed of light prevents this happening. This assumes that the universe has always been expanding, with the expansion being slowed by gravity only.
Inflation just says that if the universe initially expanded much much faster than the current rate suggests it did, then those parts of the universe that are too far apart to communicate now, might have been able to communicate in the past. All of the complexity of the theory is in producing the physics that allows for, and causes the inflation.
Re:Why harebrained? (Score:3)
With a limited set of circumstances, it's trivial to imagine a limited set of detectable outcomes, particularly if the laws of the universe are, well, universal. Stars too hot would have burned out billions of years ago; stars too cold we could not see. That leaves this very narrow region we're able to detect, and unsurprisingly everywhere we look we see the same thing. When there's something else, we're either too late or blind.
Even this logic is unnecessary, though -- given that the visible regions were once part of the same singularity, all the "information" they'd ever need to remain related could have been exchanged at the point of the Big Bang itself. Absolutely identical output is theoretically justifiable, if there's a quantum level pseudorandom number generator at work. (Oddly enough, if there was, we'd never be able to tell, except through its occasional bugs...like entanglement, perhaps.)
--Dan
Re:Why harebrained? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Why harebrained? (Score:4, Informative)
Due to the way in which the universe is currently expanding, extrapolating the motion of those two points back to the big bang shows that the two points were always further apart than ct, the maximum distance that light can have travelled since the big bang. The question then is: Why are two points in space, that can never have been in contact at the exact same temperature?
Inflation answers the question by saying that when t->0 the expansion of the universe was so fast that the two points 2ct apart now were closer than ct.
Re:Why harebrained? (Score:2)
Re:Why harebrained? (Score:1)
Re:Why harebrained? (Score:1, Informative)
Like a snowflake (Score:2)
Flat universe (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Flat universe (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Flat universe (Score:4, Informative)
Google: no registration (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Google: no registration (Score:2)
Google story [nytimes.com] "Many Universes, Several Theories."
Times story which I posted. [nytimes.com] "A New View of Our Universe: Only One of Many."
The one on Google appeared in the times weeks ago - remember the Slasdot discussion on Branes? In spite of the URL assigned by google (which includes todays date,) the free (as in privacy) story is not current.
Multiple universes? (Score:3, Interesting)
This is one of my pet hates. By the very definition of the word [m-w.com], there can only be one universe. Or are the definitions now being changed?
Cheers,
Ian
Re:Multiple universes? (Score:5, Insightful)
Whether it is meaningful for physicists to talk amount these regions as _seperate_ universes comes down to what you think universe means, and what the values of the cosmological parameters are this week.
Re:Multiple universes? (Score:2, Insightful)
Unfortunately, the big-brained ones have now copped onto the Sci-Fi idea of these alternate universes (small 'U') and have seen that using a model such as this explains (and hence predicts) some of the observable behaviours, and, better than that, it seems to be a tighter fit that the previous ideas.
Sorry Bud, but it looks like they just changes the (dictionary) meaning of Universe ...
Re: You've got it backwards. (Score:5, Interesting)
I think you have a wrong picture: although the notion of different choices and their consequences is an ancient one, the notion of parallel universes came from science (everett interpretation, feynman-multiple-path approach to quantum mechanics) to SciFi and philosophy.
As usual, the ideas flow from science to science-fiction. I asume this is because usually, nature is more bizare than what our imagination can predict. (and also because the best scientists are among the most creative people
Re:Multiple universes? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Multiple universes? (Score:2)
<span accent="glasgow"> Aw, that's no very nice. Dinna mock the afflicted.</span>
Re:Multiple universes? (Score:5, Insightful)
By the very nature of the word, an atom cannot be divided.
Re:Multiple universes? (Score:1)
Yes and no - MW lists three meanings for atom, only the third of which describes the atom as a particle (which may be split). It's true that the other senses of the word preclude splitting any further, but they are other senses of the word.
Cheers,
Ian
Re:Multiple universes? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Multiple universes? (Score:2)
It is silly to say that it is wrong to use a word to mean something if it isn't in the dictionary. I'm sure terms like superconductor, Internet, and world-wide-web, were used years before they made it into a dictionary. A dictionary is nothing more than a documentation of how language is ALREADY used. The purpose of a dictionary is to make it easier for somebody who is new to a region or dialect or field of study to converse with those who are already within these groups.
If the idea of multiple universes gains universal acceptance and the word universe is used in this manner in the general public, then after a few years you'll go to dictionary.com and find the definition has been modified. Why? Because people will only continue to buy from Merrian Webster as long as it is relevant - and documenting english as it existed in the 1800's isn't being relevant...
Re:Multiple universes? (Score:2)
The best online explanation of the etymology of the word atom seems to be at a Geocities page [geocities.com]. I cannot believe I just made a link there. (If you see me recommending AOL and hotmail, please have me committed.)
Re:Multiple universes? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Multiple universes? (Score:2)
Take a closer look at the definition you linked to. Not a single one of the five different senses of the word gives even the suggestion that there can not be more than one. As I read it, all five imply that there can be more than one and/or that there is "suff" which is not part of it.
Etymology: Latin universum, from neuter of universus entire, whole
It is perfectly acceptable usage to use it to reffer to the entirety or whole of everything which is "connected". It is possible that there were multiple big bangs in parallel, possibly an infinity of them. If there is no contact between them, and never can be, then each is a seperate whole, another universe.
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Re:Multiple universes? (Score:3, Interesting)
1 : the whole body of things and phenomena observed or postulated
ie. everything. Can't have more than one of those. If more 'things' are being postulated that match what previously we called the universe, then by definition they are subsumed into the current universe and we need a different word to describe what we used to have.
Cheers,
Ian
Re:Multiple universes? (Score:3, Interesting)
And then of course there is everything that has NOT been observed or postulated. So that usage does clearly imply that "universe" is not "everything".
Including everything "postulated" is not a requirement of all usages of the word. In most cases it is a pretty poor usage. You usualy don't want to consider non-existant things that have been postulated to be part of the universe.
In this case we are talking about something that has been postulated but not observed. It is not part of our universe because it can never be observed. It is part of a seperate whole.
Considering all of the "universes" to all be part of one universe is A valid usage, but it is not the only one.
The different senses listed pretty much revolve a "whole body" of things that are in some way connected. If there is a second "whole body" of things that are connected with each other, and there is no connection between the two "whole bodies", then they can be reasonably be called two universes.
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Re:Multiple universes? (Score:1)
Parent I was replying to said he saw no instance that precluded there being more than one universe.
I actually quite like the universe/Universe idea in one of the other replies - that seems to fit nicely. I'd prefer calling these things something else though - continuums perhaps? Maybe that's taken.
Cheers,
Ian
Re:Multiple universes? (Score:2)
This is one of my pet hates. By the very definition of the word [m-w.com], there can only be one universe. Or are the definitions now being changed?
I would suggest getting over it. Merriem-Webster does not have the final word in what the term 'Universe' means, not in colloquial speech ("we the people" decide that through our use of language, and most people I know have become very comfortable with the notion of multiple universes a long time ago, even if said universes are merely relegated to the 'universe of what is real' vs. 'the universe(s) of what is fictional'), nor in scientific terminology, in which cosmologists like will have the final say.
Our knowledge of what is, and what may be, has far outstripped dated definitions of 'universe'
I'd give you less than 50% odds that your preferred definition is the one that ultimately prevails, but you never know.
Re:Multiple universes? (Score:2)
As is discussed at length in the article, the definition of our Universe is controversial. The two alternatives are:
1 Everything that is theoretically possible for us to ever observe
2 Everything that exists
This discrepancy was of little consequence up until twenty odd years ago, when researchers started to realize that these two might not be the same. I think many physicists prefer defintion 1, leading to terms such as 'multiverse' and 'multiple universes' to cover 2. It is also a good idea to say 'observable universe' to emphasize definition 1.
Tor
Drat, Multiple Universes.... (Score:2, Funny)
Only to find out there may be more out there like me.
Damm you Slashdot!!
Re:Drat, Multiple Universes.... (Score:1, Funny)
Bubbles, Bubbles, Bubbles (Score:2, Funny)
Or what if our bubble universe was just a small bubble trapped in another huge Whammo Bubble universe? Sure hope those giant kids are careful while they are waving their magic bubble wands around...
Alan Greenspan (Score:4, Funny)
Don't tell Alan Greenspan about the inflationary universe. He'll try to control it with interest rates.
Re:Alan Greenspan (Score:4, Insightful)
Stay tuned for more predictions... (Score:1)
My, my... When I think that only last week it predicted a unique universe! ;@)
That Explains A Lot (Score:2, Funny)
Multiverse Schmultiverse (Score:5, Informative)
He theorised that all of the universe's parameters (light, gravity, strong and weak nuclear etc) were self-tuned in much the same way that life is tuned for survival. Universes where the gravity was too strong, or the charge of a particle was too weak, didn't develop black holes. Our universe appears to have thousands of black holes, and we know for a fact our universe is tuned to support life, ergo, our universe will have "off-spring", with black holes being the mothers.
He's basically doing what Creationists do - merging biological evolutionary theory with cosmological evolution, something which most scientists are quick to separate. I think he might be onto something...
_______________
Re:Multiverse Schmultiverse (Score:2)
Mothers of what, planets or new universes? I don't think black holes have much involvement in the formation of stars, etc. True, they hold galaxies together, but that is simply because they have mass. I suppose if it was unstable mass, then it would radiate away and scatter mass and galaxies would not stay together very well. But that is kind of an indirect issue.
There is some speculation that the reason they can't find a simple fundimental model of physics is that the smallest particles are really similar to DNA. Look at those weird "string theory" diagrams, and tell me that does not look biological. A 10-dimensional DNA, kind of perhaps.
However, selection for reproducing universes is not necessarily the same as selection for life-bearing universes. Either we are just a statistical fluke (anthropic principle, which does not require "unlikely"), or life forms in these kind of universes tend to find a way to trigger new universes with the same or similar parameters by setting off inflation in parallel dimensions. In that sense there indeed could be "creators" of sorts. However, "Universe triggeror" is probably a better term since they did not build the raw material. They probably don't give a sh*t about our prayers either, unless they really have too much time on their hands. Why is it that all the Earth gods allegedly give favors if you beg hard enough?
Odd stuff. Darwin meets Q.
Re:Multiverse Schmultiverse (Score:2)
He is not "merging" these theories, he is simply making an analogy... though I agree, it is a very appealing one. However, I don't see what this has to do with creationism, since creationists tend to reject biological evolutionary theory. I really don't see how claiming that God created the (singular) universe ~6,000 years ago is equivalent to, or even compatible with, the idea of "merging biological evolutionary theory with cosmological evolution."
Why oh Why!!! (Score:3, Funny)
thanks slashdot!
Re:Why oh Why!!! (Score:1)
Re:Why oh Why!!! (Score:1)
Einstein said - (Score:1, Funny)
Looks like He just blows bubbles with it.
Or maybe He's making a giraffe. In the end we may find out we exist inside of a cosmic balloon animal. God! I hope we're not a snake hat.
How dense can you get? (Score:3)
Erm, could someone explain to me just how dense 1094g/cm^3 really is? I'm trying to picture a bag of sugar and a small cube of steel here... and I'm thinking maybe there's a scaling problem somwhere...
Re:How dense can you get? (Score:1, Informative)
There are a lot of messed up exponents in that article (missing minus signs especially), though it is very interesting overall.
Re:How dense can you get? (Score:2)
Infinite universes?... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Infinite universes?... (Score:2)
an example we can all understand (Score:5, Funny)
Load of bs... (Score:2)
If there is evidence of there being multiple universes and they interact with eachother, than they simply make up one Universe and we have our terminology wrong. And if there are multiple universes that do not interact with eachother, than there's no scientific foundation for it to begin with which makes it a load of bs. You can apply this to any other article that discusses "universes" or even "parallel dimensions".
Re:Load of bs... (Score:2, Informative)
The Times article does say that these universes are "theoretically" reachable from one another, in the sense that there's no wall between them, no freaky "separate dimension" problem or anything like that. But inflation basically causes so much space to come into being between them so quickly that they are further apart than light (or any force or interaction) could have travelled in the time since their creation.
What this implies is that they are not physically separated from one another, but their physics are separated from one another. They are so far apart, and so completely incapable of any interaction bridging the sheer gap of inflation between them, that they could have radically different rules of physics, different speeds of light, and so on.
That isn't equivalent to saying that different galaxies are different universes (as the parent post says). It is saying that two radically different portions of the one big massive *everything* are different "universes" in some sense, and maybe that is a silly and stupid thing to say given the pure meaning of the word. But the point is that, given a common colloquial understanding of what a/the "universe" is, this theory says there are more than one.
Re:Load of bs... (Score:2)
In summary, if we can't see it, and we can't interact with it and we cannot detect any effects of it, then there can be no legitimate scientific theory for it to exist. And on the other hand if we CAN detect it then it DOES interact with our Universe which means that we SHARE the same Universe. There simply is no such thing as universes. Anyone who uses the term is either not following the scientific method or simply does not understand the term.
Re:Load of bs... (Score:2, Insightful)
But kevlar's point above is a much more important one, namely, at what point does science become philosophy or religion or whatever, but no longer science.
The standard philosophy of science answer is that a theory is scientific not when there is evidence supporting it, but (and the difference is slight, but not inconsequential) when it is falsifiable. Basically this means when you can describe an experiment that would create evidence that could (depending on the results of the experiment) contradict and invalidate the theory. (Philosopher Karl Popper came up with this defition of a scientific theory, and it is still widely used.)
In other words, if something can't ever possibly be proven wrong, it isn't science. If it could be, it is, even if you haven't yet done the experiment, or even lack the technology (as opposed to pure science) to do it. (Yes, this does create a grey area, since some experiments may not ever be realistic, or not in the next several centuries . . . .)
Many theories in physics and astrophysics have been put forward without empirical evidence to back them up at the time of their creation, and then later, improved technology has made it possible to do the experiments that either falsify them or else support them. Particle accelerators are the prototypical example. Others are observations of the effects of gravity on light (by viewing stars during an eclipse), or careful examination of small variations in planetary orbits, both of which were understood as providing potential falsifying evidence of general relativity well before they were able to carried out. (Of course, both have since been conducted, and neither did provide falsifying evidence.)
Note that this understanding of science means that nothing is ever really definitively proven true. More and more empirical evidence can support a theory, but you never know when some other observation will provide falsification. Here, the obvious example is Newtonian physics, which sure looked good for an awful long time, but now we can observe exceptions at extreme speeds and energies that demonstrate the need for relativity.
So (to get back on topic), does this mean that this theory is absolutely unscientific? Well, let's do something radical, and look at the article.
Here are a couple of specific examples which the author calls confidence builders, but which are in fact potential falsifiers. So, at least in principle, it is scientific.The problem is that there are other theories which work with the same sets of observable scientific results which are, potentially, much simpler and less messy. So now you get into an Ockham's razor issue, which let's you argue that this is a lousy scientific theory, but not that it is unscientific.
Re:Load of bs... (Score:2)
Re:Load of bs... (Score:2)
Re:Load of bs... (Score:2)
Re:Load of bs... (Score:2)
The cosmos cares not a wit for our terminology.
Big theories and every bigger gaps (Score:1)
For example back in 1998 when studies of distant supernova gave thorough evidence of an increase in the speed [indiana.edu] of the universes expansion. Now, this one still seems to be giving headaches to most all the theorists, and it seems to me that working around, or flat out ignoring that fact when building the "big theory" leaves a bit to be desired. Now enter Dark Matter [queensu.ca]. The lack of a comprehensive understanding of either A) the particle composition of the universe in the order of about 88% or B) an understanding of gravity to a power of 10 gives us yet another piece of the puzzle we're basically clueless about. Now, I understand that the purpose of these kinds of theories is just that, to test out hypotheses against what we do have in terms of fact and go from there, but it seems like maybe we should shelve the Big Theory Of Everything and work a little harder on the Theory of Very Specific Things That We Know We Don't Know.
That being said, IANA(astromomer/cosmologist/physicist) so please, jump down my throat and tell me what *I* don't know because I for one am willing to admit that I don't have it all figured out quite yet.
Re:Big theories and every bigger gaps (Score:2, Interesting)
This is so incredibly scary... (Score:5, Funny)
Multiverses?
You mean this might mean that somewhere in the multiverse there might be a universe comprised entirely of "people" that look exactly like Lance and Britney?
Excuse me while I (and the rest of the "me's" in the multiverse) go out and hang ourselves....
Re:This is so incredibly scary... (Score:2)
Our universe only has One of Many Seven of Nines....
Humanity's egocentrism (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Humanity's egocentrism (Score:3, Informative)
Why do you think scientists make this assumption? The quantum scale I think you're referring to is approximately 30 orders of magnitude (10^30) below the scale we are familiar with in every day life. The size of the observable universe is 30 orders above our scale. And no one is saying that's the end - you can easily construct models, which are consistent with observation, in which the final volume of the universe is infinite. As for the smallest scale, there is a natural length scale in nature. It's the only length you can make by combining the fundamental constants in nature (Planck's constant, the speed of light, and the gravitational constant), and it's the very short quantum scale I referred to above. We *do* think something special happens there, but it may or may not preclude shorter lengths from being a meaningful concept.
So certainly no practicing scientist who thinks about these issues would make the assumption that there's anything special about human scales - in fact, precisely the opposite. One of the powerful principles of modern cosmology is the idea that we do *not* live in a special time or place, and therefore that we have to explain why the conditions we inhabit are generic.
Re:Humanity's egocentrism (Score:2)
semantical contradiction (Score:1, Interesting)
This theory, according to the summary, suggests that there are other realms of things.
Logically, those other realms would still be subsets of the universe.
As such, it is a semantic contradiction to say there are "other universes."
$0.02
First you catch a rabbit... (Score:2, Insightful)
Show me "an ounce of vacuum", and I might start taking you seriously.
First into my personal philosophy (Score:2)
More ambitious multiverses (Score:3, Interesting)
His idea is that all possible mathematical structures exist, and that we live in one of them! At some level, physics can be considered a branch of mathematics. Hence our universe can be considered as an enormously complicated mathematical structure. The question is, why this structure instead of some other?
His answer is that all mathematical structures exist, but that most of them are unsuitable for life. The paper linked above analyzes many different possibilities in terms of numbers of dimensions, numbers of time dimensions (yes, you could conceive of a universe with two-dimensional time), various other parameters, and he shows that structures that we would think of as living would have a hard time existing in universes much different from our own.
The Tegmark model can be thought of as the simplest possible physical theory. If physics is reducible to mathematics, then saying that all mathematical structures exist can be put more simply: Everything exists.
A similar model based on computation is proposed by Juergen Schmidhuber [idsia.ch]. Rather than Tegmark's mathematical structures, Schmidhuber proposes that all computations exist. Given that any mathematical model of a universe can be simulated by a computer program, these two formulations are roughly equivalent.
But Schmidhuber's approach has the advantage that it provides a natural way to say that some universes are more probable than others: namely, universes with short programs have more "measure" than universes with long programs. It follows that our universe probably has a relatively short program, which therefore explains why we observe that physical laws are mathematically simple.
It's pretty heavy stuff, but certainly exciting to see that researchers are (somewhat reluctantly) beginning to entertain multiverse models. The more ambitious "everything exists" theories are still too extreme for the mainstream, but I suspect that they, too, will get increasing attention over the next few decades.
Big Bang is just one possible explanation (Score:2, Interesting)
It actually turns out to make some very good points about the rise of Big Bang cosmology. In a nutshell:
- The earliest incarnation of the Big Bang theory was posited by a Belgian priest, Georges-Henri Lemaitre, in his "primeval atom" theory, based on Einstein's equations and supported only in observation by the Hubble redshift (expansion). This theory very conveniently supported the Christian dogma of creation "ex nihilo" (out of nothing).
- The revision(s) of this original theory had only tenuously been supported by observed phenomenon. Contemporary cosmology relies quite heavily on mathematical deduction; trying to make the universe fit the theory (faith) as opposed to the other way around (scientific method); a conflict which is apparent through the history of science and which Lerner pounds soundly into your head.
- The Big Bang is only one of many solutions to Einstein's equations and has been persued mostly out of a desire to seek the most beautiful and sleek solutions (and remember - beauty is in the eye of the beholder, or beer-holder, but I digress)
- The current paradigm supports the assertion that the universe must be closed with a cosmological constant (a self-confessed afterthought by Einstein) near or equal to one. This assertion demands that there must be much more matter in the universe than we have observed, ultimately sending particle physicists on the hunt for so-called "Dark Matter" (which has yet to be confirmed or observed). In the meantime, other theories exist that have no need to inflate the mass of the universe artificially and can explain formation of structures at the observed mass density (a density that adjusts the cosmological constant to about
- Alternate theories that are based on observation have been summarily dismissed by the 'status quo'. These theories have arisen from the assertion that the laws of physica in the universe behave the same way as they do here on earth (and where we can observe) and that self-similarity is a tool that can be used to model structures in the laboratory (or in-silico) to explain structures and processes on the universal to the sub-microscopic level.
- Big Bang theory posits a great many bizarre phenomena that can only be mathematically verfied and have not been observed or duplicated. Cosmology has moved far away from the realm of scientific method, instead relying on the exotic world of mathematics (nothing wrong with math, unless you are trying to explain the universe without confirming by observation)
And on and on... he does a far better job of explaining it all (full disclosure: I'm not a cosmologist) -- read the book (or don't).
-t_kiehne
Re:Big Bang is just one possible explanation (Score:2, Informative)
What the author fails to mention is that EVERY solution so far explored, other than the currently adopted one, fails at observation time. Every one.
Heck, Godel himself came up with a rotating solution for the Universe, but the while the laws of physics would've remained the same, the APPEARANCE of those laws would've been dramatically different (think constantly moving frame of reference magnified).
Sorry, but don't feel too bad, I thought it was a good book too, until I did the research on it.
Re:theory, schmory (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:theory, schmory (Score:1)
Re:theory, schmory (Score:1)
So is Quantum Theory, and that doesn't get taught at universities because it's just a theory, does it?
I wasn't saying thory is useless - far from it. My point was whilst a theory may predict behavour in a systm, the behavour may be caused by totally different reasons. Edison (I think) believed in 'electric fluid'. The theory was wrong, but it offered an explaination of how static electricity worked.
Re:theory, schmory (Score:5, Informative)
Moreover, "fact" doesn't mean "absolute certainty"; there ain't no such animal in an exciting and complex world. The final proofs of logic and mathematics flow deductively from stated premises and achieve certainty only because they are NOT about the empirical world. Evolutionists make no claim for perpetual truth, though creationists often do (and then attack us falsely for a style of argument that they themselves favor). In science "fact" can only mean "confirmed to such a degree that it would be perverse to withhold provisional consent." I suppose that apples might start to rise tomorrow, but the possibility does not merit equal time in physics classrooms.
Evolutionists have been very clear about this distinction of fact and theory from the very beginning, if only because we have always acknowledged how far we are from completely understanding the mechanisms (theory) by which evolution (fact) occurred. Darwin continually emphasized the difference between his two great and separate accomplishments: establishing the fact of evolution, and proposing a theory - natural selection - to explain the mechanism of evolution.
- Stephen J. Gould, "Evolution as Fact and Theory"; Discover, May 1981
Re:theory, schmory (Score:1)
First off, Darwin did not provide nearly sufficient evidence for his proposed theory of evolution to be elevated to 'fact' status. It wasn't till many years of reasearch by other generations of scientists before the theory of evolution started being taught more as fact than theory.
Secondly it is important to define which parts of evolution are considered 'fact' and which are still considered theory. Micro-evolution,Macro-evolution,Common descent. All of these have rather different strength from supporting evidence. It's tempting to claim them all as fact but to do so prematurely can blind future generations to other possibilities and often set back scientific research for awhile as everyone chases a dead end. For all we know common descent could later be looked back on as our modern day equivalent of the world is flat. Although it appeared the right answer from the evidence we've found thus far, future research could show a very different answer. Genetic research is still a very long ways from having an even nearly complete understanding of how DNA works. With so many unknowns we need to be really careful before calling a theory a law.
Re:theory, - Moderators what are you smoking? (Score:1)
Re:theory, schmory (Score:2)
Re: theory, schmory (Score:5, Insightful)
> 50 years from now high school physics students will laugh at us. "Ha, these idiots believed in all sorts of kooky stuff".
Do today's highschool physics students laugh at the scientists of 50 years ago?
> This theory is just that, a theory.
And that's all a theory is supposed to be.
Re: theory, schmory (Score:2, Funny)
They might, if they could count to 50. Kids these days...
Re: theory, schmory (Score:2)
"Ether, hahaha, how stoopid."
Laughing at science less than 100 years old can be dangerous. Witness this student of 20 years ago, laughing at something then 50 years old:
"The cosmological constant, hahaha, how stoopid."
Oops.
Personally, I laugh at science of last week:
"Branes, hahaha, how stoopid."
I figure I won't be proved wrong until after I'm dead.
Re:JUSES FAKING CHRISTO!!! (Score:4, Funny)
Because we're mind control experts. We know you hate us, but we just love to have you around telling us how much you hate us, so we force you to come back. insert obligatory "all your base are belong to us" joke here
Re:Baby universes? (Score:1)
Re:Silly Humans (Score:3, Funny)
We're still grappling with the galactic pickle matrix.