A Skeptical Look At The Multiverse 139
sjanich writes "The NY Times has a short, interesting article on multiverse theory. The author, Paul Davies, writes: 'This idea of multiple universes, or multiple realities, has been around in philosophical circles for centuries. The scientific justification for it, however, is new.' It is quite an interesting read. The author is a Physicist and pretty good science writer." Davies is not kind to the multiverse theory.
The Multiverse FAQ (Score:5, Interesting)
I guess he didn't like the Matrix either... (Score:4, Interesting)
I mean, what's the problem with this? Until we find evidence to the contrary, it remains a distinct possibility. And it borders on the realm of so-what. Is the knowledge that you're actually a participant in a very large simulation going to change how you live your life?
I mean, are you annoyed that when you fall, you accelerate at exactly 9.8 m/s^2 (in a vacuum) towards the center of the earth, without fail? Those unimaginative programmers...
Re:I guess he didn't like the Matrix either... (Score:2, Insightful)
(1) If the multiverse theory is correct, there are a lot of "universes" that are the product of simulations run by intelligent beings.
(2) If (1) is true, then our "universe" might be the product of a siumulation run by intelligent beings.
(3) I do not believe that it is possible that I live in a universe that is the product of a siumlation run by intelligent beings.
(4) The nature of the universe corr
Re:I guess he didn't like the Matrix either... (Score:2)
#6 does not follow from #5 unless we could prove that #1 is "all" universes rather than "a lot of" universes.
Plus he's saying "I do not believe" and "beliefs about nature of reality". Believe is not proof, simply opinion.
I could probably pick it apart further but I'll stop there.
SB
Re:I guess he didn't like the Matrix either... (Score:2)
Believe in something? Wanna convince me? Ok, prove it
I have these kind of arguments with religious people all the time...
SB
Re:I guess he didn't like the Matrix either... (Score:2)
Re:I guess he didn't like the Matrix either... (Score:2)
But - and here's the caveat - you can't use personal belief in a
Re:I guess he didn't like the Matrix either... (Score:2)
Just be careful of people using the same standards with you. It's important to note EVERYONE believes in something impossible to prove, and I think that was the parent's point. It's no longer science when you are trying to prove causation or intent. Science answers "How?" not "Why?".
I believe in giant invisible rabbits that jump on people'
Re:I guess he didn't like the Matrix either... (Score:2)
P1) There is no god
H1) There exist multiple universes
H2) Some of these multiple universes have capacity to simulate more universes
H3) These simulated universes thus have a "creator" or "god" which is in conflict with the original premise
Thus RAA: there are no multiple universes
Only, AFAIK if you get an RAA you can only safely reject your
Re:I guess he didn't like the Matrix either... (Score:2)
You're correct re RAAs. I was actually structuring the argument slightly differently, and leaving out a few steps.
Ahh, for the good ole days of undergrad logic classes.
Re:I guess he didn't like the Matrix either... (Score:2)
No. That's stupid. Go research Currying and the commutativity of conjunction.
/set/ of assumptions to a contradiction. Then, you find the assumptions that are neither provable nor consequences of assumptions you've stated at t
Cliff notes: RAA is based on reducing a
Re:I guess he didn't like the Matrix either... (Score:2)
Let me revise my brain-in-the-vat assertion: there is no known way to prove that you're not a brain in a vat.
But it is an interesting argument (Score:3, Insightful)
I think the real point is, not that he finds the idea of us living in a "simulation" abhorrent or impossible, but that any theory from which such a conclusion logically follows is something that cannot be considered scientific - such a theory is exactly equivalent to a religious doctrine in which unexplained events are attributed to the supernatural (unexplained "miraculous" events in our universe could be just defects in the simulation, or even deliberate effects caused by t
theory that makes no predictions is meaningless (Score:5, Insightful)
This is a good general point. Solipsism is uninteresting. Subjectivism & deconstructivism are often taken to similar absurd extremes by stupid people, including respected critics.
He makes the analogy between theology & these scientific non-explanations. Religion is personally very meaningful, but metaphysics isn't science. Consequently a classic metaphysical question, "How many angels can dance on the head of a pin?" is the canonical meaningless question.
The word that springs to mind is sophomoric. It reminds me of High School, when one friend asked another "What if you're really insane & just dreaming all of this?" The answer was of course, "So what? You've gotta pretty much live your life the same way anyway."
Re:theory that makes no predictions is meaningless (Score:3, Insightful)
only in current practice. This is a crucial
distinction between a physical and a metaphysical
theory. The Higgs boson, when postulated, was
an hypothesis unfalsifiable in practice. But
clearly it is a physical, rather than a metaphysical,
hypothesis.
Now suppose that someone, let's call him Zweistein,
proposes a theory of multiple universes which
is incapable of producing a falsifiable prediction.
We may say that the good Zweistein's theory is a
metaphysical theory.
Re:theory that makes no predictions is meaningless (Score:3, Insightful)
I might also add that "somebody might figure it out in the future!", as a theory, is also untestable, except by waiting for said theory, at which point we can just evaluate the theory directly, so "somebody might figure it out in the future!" is not useful.
Re:theory that makes no predictions is meaningless (Score:2)
Put differently, it's like burning all sci-fi books that don't make falsifiable claims. The smart thing to do is to look at some of the dreams and see if you can make them happen.
-l
Re:theory that makes no predictions is meaningless (Score:2)
There is actually evidence FOR multiverses.
Consider the twin slit experiment. You shine single photons through the slits, and they arrive in a single photon in a well defined location.
And yet there are places where it never arrives. These places suggest that single photon has somehow travelled through BOTH slits and destructively interfered on arrival. Essentially all generally accepted interpretations of QM say that this is what happened in fact
Re:theory that makes no predictions is meaningless (Score:2)
The alternative (and more mainstream) QM interpretation which explains the appearance of a just one single result from the quantum event as being due to the collapse of the wave function - that one is kn
Re:theory that makes no predictions is meaningless (Score:2)
Many Histories says we got here by many prior paths that coallesced. That much is essentially certain. Many Worlds says that here isn't the only point- there are many other parallel universes out there too that we can't reach.
Most top physicists agree with Many Histories; it's more or less a consensus position. Many Worlds is a bit more controversial.
What's nice about multiple worlds: (Score:2, Interesting)
This seems less arbitrary to me... Copenhagen's interpretation makes a big assumption about the role of the observer.
Re:What's nice about multiple worlds: (Score:2)
If we take the Copenhagen interpretation to be meaningful then we have to ask what exactly constitutes an "observer", i.e. an observer capable of collapsing the wave function. Does it have to be conscious? What is "conscious"? Is a frog conscious? A worm? A paramecium? Or can any instrumentation do it? What constitutes "instrumentation" exactly?
Even if we were to accept the controversial position that "observer" status can be afforded onl
Re:theory that makes no predictions is meaningless (Score:4, Interesting)
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I had a friend like that (Score:2)
Re:I had a friend like that (Score:2)
Killing/torturing you may be one of the questioner's favorite fantasies.
Maybe that's potentially the correct answer and result for you. But I wouldn't assume that for everyone. Not even you - I'd more likely assume you're mistaken.
angel on pins & needles (Score:2)
The phrase appears to originate in ridicule of St. Thomas Aquinas. To say that Aquinas was addressing matters of conciousness in general is generous. He wrote in particular about the nature of angels.
Phrase origin at: [straightdope.com]
http://www.straightdope.com/classics/a4_132.html
Thomas Aquinas on _Whether an Angel is Altogether
Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:2, Interesting)
Well, this is one to ponder, granted that you consider life to be basically an earthbound form or entity. It always amuses me that there is talk about whether this place or that could support life. Just because we, as earthbound beings, rely on certain conditions to live, who is to say that other lifeforms would live in something that we'd consider completely destructive to our own very nature. How do we know that there are
Re:Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:5, Interesting)
To take a simple example at the grossest level: imagine a universe in which symmetry broke in such a way that instead of three macroscopic spatial dimensions resulting, there were only two. A two-dimensional universe would be incapable of hosting structures of very significant complexity such as multicellular lifeforms. There would be strict limitations on size becaues a 2-D lifeform cannot possess any kind of internal transport system for alimentation or circulation - it would simply fall apart (try drawing one and see how internal channels effectively divide the creature into pieces).
Four dimensional universes (and higher order dimensional spaces) also have topological problems which would make life difficult though you'll have to look those up for yourself.
Even in three dimensional universes, very slight modifications to the relative strength of the four fundamental post-symmetry-breaking forces would make the universe appear very different.
There will be universes composed entirely of radiation - but radiation does not interact well enough to form structures spontaneously.
There will be universes where stars shine but never explode, thus elements heavier than helium are never released from their cores - and you can't get interesting chemical reactions from just hydrogen and helium.
There will be many dark universes where star-sized agglomerations of matter simply do not ignite at all, thus energy cannot be concentrated sufficiently enough in any one place to fuel a biosphere.
Even if you had hot stars and an interesting array of elements it may still be devoid of life if there was no possible *simple* (and thus common) combination of those elements available to provide a molecule like water - slightly more than weakly polar, which remains liquid at a range of useful temperatures (warm enough to enable chemical reaction at a significant rate, cool enough to allow stable reaction products).
It's all very well to postulate "energy beings" or Horta-style silicon-based lifeforms but basic physics just doesn't make these very likely. There are strong practical reasons why all life on Earth is based on water and carbon compounds. There may be other constellations of physical laws which could generate a universe complex enough to support life, but there are far, far more that couldn't, no matter how good your imagination is.
Re:Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:2)
Re:Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:2)
Yes it is. You made a ludacris number of false statements and assumptions.
Two-dimensional organisms for starters: Just because you can't have a conventional mouth-alimentary_canal-anus is no evidence that you cannot have a complex multicellular organism. (Not that life needs to be multi cellular, or even cellular at all). Even if we take the silly assumption that life requires a "conventional" digestive system it could still u
Re:Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:2)
Well a
Re:Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:2)
You claimed to give reasons 2-d life was impossible. I proved that claim false with counter examples. I never claimed that those are the systems 2-d life would actually use. The point is that there are a wide variety of ways life could overcome each of your objections. Life is far more "creative" at problem solving than I am and it would probably come up with far better systems than I described.
But
Re:Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:2)
Five? I'd genuinely like to hear the details of these mechanisms. If you can model processes in five-dimensional spacetime in your head you must be the cleverest person on this planet. Either that or not actually from this planet.
OK, I follow you...
Re:Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:2)
I'd genuinely like to hear the details of these mechanisms. [mass at some distance from a star in 4-d]
Unstable orbits can be maintained as a stable orbit when an aditional force enters the picture. Some of these "unstable" orbits can be maintained with an amazingly small small additional force. For example in 3-d there are five lagrange points. Three of them are "unstable" points of exactly this type. It only takes
Re:Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:2)
Sure, extra forces can be applied on purpose to rectify the orbit but there is no way for those forces to just handily appear all by themselves and give a little push at just the right point in spacetime with just the right vector.
The many-body example fails precisely because of the lack of stable orbits it is meant to address. The particles in Saturn's rings each have a stable orbit of their own to go to; in 4-spac
Re:Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:2)
I'm afraid I was disappointed by your examples... no way for those forces to just handily appear all by themselves
I don't think you understood what I meant. Maybe I didn't explain it well enough. I was talking about forces that would in fact be inherent in the system. We were talking about a sun/planet type system. Radiation pressure is part of that system. Solar wind is part of the system. Bodies in that system will aquire a charge
Re:Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:2)
That used to happen to me a lot back in my Netscape 4 days. Current Mozilla (since at least 1.2) is a hell of a lot more stable.
[orbital mechanics with various forces propitiously balancing 4d gravity etc.]
Now I do see what you mean. But the inverse cube law for gravity in 4-space means that everything would have to be a lot closer. Don't know what this would mean for orbital angular momentum - everything whizzing about madly? I
Re:Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:2)
is it physically possible to make a replicator out of waves
You're still being blinded by assumptions based on human experience. I'm sure you're familiar with the basic concepts of quantum mechanics, there is no difference between particles and waves. Light behaves like a particle. Electrons behave like waves. "Waves" are a high level emergent phenomena. They don't exist!
Quantum mechanics and relativity are "hard" and "confusing" e
Re:Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:2)
I'm well aware of all that but I don't draw the same conclusions, obviously.
Also you kind of glossed over the answer to my question about whether waves could be used to make replicators. I see nothing proven about this.
Your speculations about mass,energy,space,time etc are only half right. For starters, mass != energy. There is an equivalence but not an equality. Otherwise there would be no distinction. If your mass were to suddenly become indistinguishable from energy we'd all be
Re:Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:2)
You're pretty knowledgable about science, I guess I assumed you were more familiar with the "oddities" of quantum mechanics.
Two "waves" of light that can in fact interact. We don't see this effect in everyday life because visible is far too low in energy to equal even the lightest stable mass. Two high energy photons can collide resulting in matter and antimatter
Re:Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:2)
Your arguments, where they attempt to rely on physics, are strictly pop-sci, littered with implausible and incorrect layman-friendly analogies and accompanied by several diversionary straw men. (I'm trying not to say 'barely sophomoric', but you do tend to labour the most basic points w
Re:Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:2)
Ahh, that explains the problem.
"Anyone who is not shocked by quantum theory has not understood it." - Niels Bohr
"I think I can safely say that nobody understands Quantum Mechanics" - Richard P. Feynman
quantum mechanics bizzare [google.com] 8910 hits. If you don't think QM is bizarre then you're only familiar with simplified and erroneous pop-sci explanations of QM.
Your arguments, where they attempt to rely on physic
Re:Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:2)
Re:Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:2)
Re:Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:2)
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Re:Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:2)
I hate being patronized more than almost anything else.
My comment was intentional minor dig, you were far more patronizing to me in your previous post. I understand you were frustrated having to re-write the post from scratch, but you did let it slip in.
Sorry if I over did it with the "basic physics" and links, you accused me of "attempting" to be based on physics, "pop-sci", "implausible and incorrect layman-friendly analogies". You thought I wasn't talking valid science so I atte
Re:Forget Science (Score:2)
I will admit I've been largely influenced by mainstream thinking on this subject.
Insofar as any professional consensus exists, it would be that the there is an underlying set of laws common to all universes. These include various branches of mathematics such as statistics, number theory, information theory and so on. As it happens th
Re:Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:2)
a) Life in a 2D universe has to expend much more energy to function due to all the constraints put on it that 3D life does not have. For instance the comlicated set of valves and thingies that one poster envisioned simply takes more effort, and therefore energy, to develop and to operate inside the lifeform. This may not preclude life but it may preclude very complicated life and would at the least make it more difficult to develop. Just as there is more life in
Re:Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:2)
You are carrying in many assumptions based on human-centric view of life and physics.
Lets look at the energy levels available to run human life processeses. We run off of the chemical energy available from food, a couple of joules per gram.
But the available chemical energy is only a small fraction of the thermal energy enviornment. Thermal energy at room temperature is a co
One question (Score:2)
Since my imagination can think of an infinite number of variations on any set of physical laws, how do you quantify "more"?
Re:One question (Score:3, Insightful)
Why will the statistics follow cardinality? (Score:2)
What makes the situation worse is that "the set of all possible universes" doesn't look to me like something that can be constructed with the axioms of set t
Re:Why will the statistics follow cardinality? (Score:2)
Re:Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:2)
Re: Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:4, Interesting)
> > Why is nature so ingeniously, one might even say suspiciously, friendly to life?
> Well, this is one to ponder, granted that you consider life to be basically an earthbound form or entity. It always amuses me that there is talk about whether this place or that could support life. Just because we, as earthbound beings, rely on certain conditions to live, who is to say that other lifeforms would live in something that we'd consider completely destructive to our own very nature. How do we know that there aren't life forms out there that don't depend on breathing molten gold in the same way we need to breathe oxygen? Or to take it even farther, who says they need to breath at all?
Also, when people start arguing that the universe is uniquely suited for life it is useful to ask them what percentage of the universe is actually hospitable to life AWKI.
A thin crust at the surface of a few planets, out of the entire volume of the universe? It looks to me like the universe was "designed" for something else altogether, and life found a few rare, small cracks to hide in. As well to say that the lobby of a fine hotel was designed to harbor dust particles.
Re: Life? What exactly IS life, anywho? (Score:2)
Run for you lives! The maid is coming!
Sorry. Just couldn't resist.
-- MG
How ridiculous, (Score:5, Interesting)
quote:
Life would probably be impossible with more (or less) than three dimensions to work with, so our seeing three is then no surprise. Similar arguments apply to other supposedly fixed properties of the cosmos, such as the strengths of the fundamental forces or the masses of the various subatomic particles.
Why exactly is life impossible with more than 3 dimensions? He subscribes to the fundenmental flaw that all science fiction writers subscribe to: all alien life forms breath, walk on legs, and "see" through eyes. Sure, it's hard to change a human actor on a movie screen by too much, but the world of books and pages ought to be able to create something better.
I also agree with the other post that says, paraphrased, if we live in a giant simulation, does that make existance different? If you can't get out of, or control the simulation, what difference does it make? I, for one, am not worried about hyperintelligence alien giants looking at me showered naked, and the like.
Along those same lines, if we can eventually create computer simulations with sentiant beings, why can we not create a universe with different parameters and force life to exist within it?
Lastly, if we can't get out of this universe into another one, what difference does it make? And if we somehow break the barrier and jump universes, the link between them makes them one universe with localized properties doesn't it?
Re:How ridiculous, (Score:2)
You need to read better science fiction.
Re:How ridiculous, (Score:2)
Re:How ridiculous, (Score:2)
Re:How ridiculous, (Score:2)
I haven't read any Niven (I've been meaning to, it's on the list, somewhere), but the other books you mention all involve species that breathe, walk on legs, etc. The communal-mind creatures in _A Fire Upon the Deep_ were basically normal wolves with intelligence and ultrasound telepathy. Pretty much all SF I've read, especially hard SF, sticks to three co
Re:How ridiculous, (Score:2)
Re:How ridiculous, (Score:2)
Re:How ridiculous, (Score:2)
Re:How ridiculous, (Score:2)
Re:How ridiculous, (Score:2)
Wouldn't such a simulation actually be a universe? After all, the universe is generally described as everything which is observable. If you created sentient computer programs in a virtual evironment, would this not be a universe in its own right? If you were ambitious and the computer had sufficient power you could ev
Re:How ridiculous, (Score:2)
You have some interesting thoughts on the subject, many of which I have also been thinking from time to time. The more I think about it the more I start wondering. What is existence actually? It seems to me there must be different definitions of existence. In physics existence means it exists in our universe. In mathematics it means aproximately that it can be described and is not inconsistent with itself. The two
Re:How ridiculous, (Score:2)
No, that is not "reasonable to assume". It just means earth-like life could not exist. If the laws of physics are radically different isn't it reasonable to expect the life would be radically different?
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Re:How ridiculous, (Score:2)
No, that is not "reasonable to assume". It just means earth-like life could not exist. If the laws of physics are radically different isn't it reasonable to expect the life would be radically different?
You can still set bounds on it.
The poster you are replying to understated the case - in universes with dimensionality other th
Re:How ridiculous, (Score:2)
Life is a more or less stable, more or less orderly pattern within a sufficently complex sysem.
This does not occur without inverse square force rules
I assume you'll agree that in a 4-d universe (one that is otherwise similar to ours) that matter will collapse into some sort of bodies? Call them planets, stars, neutron stars, whatever. They collapse int
Re:How ridiculous, (Score:2)
By the arguments outlined in my previous message, any such collection would have a very disorganized internal structure, that would actively resist attempts at organizing it and rapidly degrade should any organizati
Re:How ridiculous, (Score:3, Insightful)
Ditto
By the arguments outlined in my previous message, any such collection would have a very disorganized internal structure
Have you seen the incredible high-res photos of the sun that were on slashdot a few months ago? The sun contains higly complex structures. Complex, organized, and and stable structures often arise out of highly disorganized and disruptive lower level processes. Virtual par
Re:How ridiculous, (Score:2)
One of the largest lakes on earth lies 4km below the arctic ice sheet. It is about 10,000 square km and nearly a half kilometer deep at places. Biologists believe that because the lake has been cut off from the rest of the planet for 15 million years or more - well before the human race evolved - microbial [bbc.co.uk]
Re:How ridiculous, (Score:2)
Perhaps I had some mental bleed-over from another thread in this discussion.
You don't need a conventional solar system in order to have energy flow and active complexity. If you agree that life can be based on any suitably complex (and active) system then our entire "argument" is a mirage
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Everett interpretation (Score:4, Insightful)
diversity is only one kind of "multiverse" theory.
In it, all of the various universes are embedded
in a larger space. Such theories are not therefore
unscientific, in the sense of being intrinsically
unfalsifiable, or unverifiable: Because the various
universes have topological relation to one another,
there is a continuum of existence connecting them,
and they may interact in yet unforseen ways. Our
current inability to design experiments to detect
such interactions is merely an artifact of
ignorance.
But there are many other forms of ontological
multiplicity which do not involve topological
continuum. The outstanding example is the
Everett interpretation of quantum mechanics.
In that theory, rather than the actual state of
affairs in the universe being the sole real
instantiation of the phi wavefunction, created
by the act of observation (as in the classical
Copenhagen interpretation of Bohr et al), the
quantum wave function is considered to be a
representation of the distribution of an infinite
multiplicity of alternatives, all equally "real".
I find the Everett interpretation to be much
preferrable, on several grounds, not the least
of which is that it is consistent with the
mathematical concept of probability distribution
in a way which the Copenhagen interpretation is
not, but others disdain
it because it implies the real existence of
entities which are not, so they say, in principle,
detectable. Again, this complaint fails because
it is an argument from ignorance: The current
inability, at a given level of human understanding
and technology, to design a verifying or falsifying
experiment, does not relate to the truth or falsity
of the hypothesis. Cophenhagenists are quite
comfortable supposing that unseen cats are undead,
and any truth not currently known is not yet true.
I think this is a much larger leap of faith than
is needed to create a working understanding.
Re:Everett interpretation (Score:2)
That is, any space-time event will be sensitive to future events, and will "choose" its quantum state based on information that flows BACKWARDS in time to it via photons. This allows for a continuous-probability universe that is nonetheless "discrete" and "real".
Or something like that
In a parallel universe... (Score:4, Funny)
The NY Times has a short, interesting article on universe theory. The author, Paul Davies, writes: 'This idea of single universe, or single reality, has been around in philosophical circles for centuries. The scientific justification for it, however, is new.' It is quite an interesting read. The author is Physicist and pretty good science writer." [nytimes.com] Davies is not kind to the universe theory.
Re:In a parallel universe... (Score:2)
hmm... (Score:2)
Rebutal to the article from a non-physicist. (Score:2, Interesting)
He claims multiverse theories are all by nature unverifiable. Hogwash. Off the top of my head, I can think of at least one type of multiverse theory that would be. Scientists now speculate that we may live on a higher-dimensional 'sheet' or brane, as
the multiverse does help us understand things (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:the multiverse does help us understand things (Score:2)
Better article in the May issue of SciAm. (Score:5, Informative)
The May issue of Scientific American contains a much more in-depth article on parallel universes, which has enough points in common that it might have inspired the op-ed piece.
Teaser for the article is here [sciam.com]. To get the whole thing, you either have to have a subscription or wait until next month.
The gist of it is as follows:
In principle, these other "universes" can interact with our own, but in practice they're far enough away that it doesn't matter. Physical laws are likely similar.
Re. an infinite universe, the article states that a finite universe would leave artifacts in the cosmic microwave background that weren't seen.
These parallel universes are utterly unreachable, as the space between them a) exists in a different coordinate system that puts it in our past from our point of view, and b) is expanding exponentially quickly, dragging other universes away from ours at mind-boggling speed.
As far as I understand it, interaction between these universes wouldn't be possible without violating some of the ground rules involved (the history tree could be thought of as a state transition diagram for all possible states of a closed system; if it's closed, it can't interact with anything else).
If you call this a "real" universe, then Everquest and the reality hosting the United Federation of Planets are also real universes. It depends on your point of view (and what you mean by "real" in this context).
The existance of "universes" of the first type is certain if the universe is infinite, from information theory arguments. The infinite or non-infinite nature of the universe is something that can be empirically tested (though the final test - waiting for every part of it to come within our observation horizon - is impractical).
The existance of the second type of universe hinges on the nature of the scalar fields proposed in the various inflationary models. In principle, this is testable, either by recreating the energies required or by observing distant parts of the universe that are undergoing inflation.
The existance of the third type of universe is not testable, due to the requirement for closed systems. So it's pretty much a moot point.
The existance of the fourth type of universe is a metaphysical question, whose answer depends on what you mean by "exist".
The full article has a lot of additional discussion, and pretty pictures. By all means pick up a copy, if the topic interests you.
Re: Better article in the May issue of SciAm. (Score:3, Interesting)
> The May issue of Scientific American contains a much more in-depth article on parallel universes
Just finished it. (Love that day every month when I drop everything and browse the new issue!)
> The first type of "parallel universe" is just another part of this universe. Because the universe appears to be infinitely large, any configuration of matter - be it Earth, our galaxy, or our entire currently-observable universe - must be duplicated somewhere out there.
I didn't get his calculations. He gi
Re: Better article in the May issue of SciAm. (Score:2)
And from the fact that the universe consists of more than just protons, yes. I think (or at least ho
Paul Davies is looking to push religion (Score:5, Interesting)
But Davies' favored alternative is a much less viable option. To explain away the existence of our world with something that's even more complicated, such as God, is no explanation at all. Explanations reduce complex things to simple things. And if God can create something as complex as the universe, he must clearly have at least that much complexity within Himself.
We've seen this conflict before. Look at these well designed humans! How could they have possibly arrived upon this Earth? Surely only a being as complex as God could have accomplished such a wonderful feat! This was the great argument of the last two centuries, and the consensus is that evolution and natural selection form a much better explanation than divine creation.
And I guess not much has changed since then. Look at this well designed universe! If things were only slightly different, no life could have been formed at all. Surely there is a divine influence at work! But whenever you drop something like God into your explanation, you've only made your job harder. Now instead of explaining life or the universe, you have to explain the existence of this vastly powerful and mysterious creature that made it all take place.
The other possibilities, though possessing many flaws, are much more plausible. It's much more plausible to think that many universes were created, and that only those suitable for life actually developed life, than it is to think that there is only one universe, whose existence can only be explained though divine creation.
Re:Paul Davies is looking to push religion (Score:4, Informative)
> Paul Davies is a religious person.
Some may find it useful to google for "paul davies" creationism.
> But whenever you drop something like God into your explanation, you've only made your job harder. Now instead of explaining life or the universe, you have to explain the existence of this vastly powerful and mysterious creature that made it all take place.
Moreover, the existence of an all-powerful agent that acts on its whim of the day is compatible with any observation, and thus is absolutely useless as an explanation for anything. One universe exists? God wanted it that way! An infinite number of universes exist? God wanted it that way!
The only things incompatible with the "theory" of creation by a willful omnipotent agent are the things the believers in that agent don't choose to believe (such as biological evolution, in much of the USA).
Re:Paul Davies is looking to push religion (Score:2, Interesting)
A creator is certainly a valid theory, although it does not simplify things because a creator is also a complex thing with an unknown origin. If God always existed, then it is also possible that the "seed" for the Big Bang also existed, but did not fire until 15 billion years ago. Similarly, God waited for some reason also to create this universe if we go that route.
I think cosmologists are relunctant to add a creator(s) to the list of possibilities because it opens u
Re:Paul Davies is looking to push religion (Score:2)
Would this not also imply that in one of those universes there must be a being who created a smaller sub-universe which contains other beings debating about whether a being could exist outside of their universe and could be responsible for its creation?
If there ar
Re:Paul Davies is looking to push religion (Score:2)
here is the article verbatim (screw registration) (Score:2)
By PAUL DAVIES
New York Times, April 12, 2003
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/04/12/opinion/12DAVI. h tml?pagewanted=print&position=top [nytimes.com]
SYDNEY
Imagine you can play God and fiddle with the settings of the great cosmic machine. Turn this knob and make electrons a bit heavier; twiddle that one and make gravitation a trifle weaker. What would be the effect? The universe would look very different -- so different, in fact, that there wouldn't be anyone around to see the result
Obviously ... (Score:2)
Dr. Gene Ray, Cubic (Score:2)
Schrodingers Cat proves it. (Score:2)
In Schroedinger's experiment, there is a cat in a box that is either killed or not killed depending on the result of some test of quantum superposition. The cat remains in this hybrid state of being dead or not dead until someone opens the box to 'observe' the event. I think most scientists believe this - and it's being demonstrated right now in things like Quantum Computers.
That's
Re:Schrodingers Cat proves it. (Score:2)
The cat of course does not exist in an unresolved state just because there is no human around to know whether it's currently dead or alive.
Likewise the universe is not pending resolutions to human observation and be in a kind of "unresolved" state before humans observe something. Because: the unive
The Multiverse Theory of Auto-Repair (Score:2, Insightful)
The No-Reg link (Score:2)
Old News? (Score:2)
Hoping for parallel universes (Score:2)
I just happen to live in the one in which the wave functions collapsed into a solution of cant-do-hard-math. That sucks for this one of me.
Re:Warning: Not a Science article (Score:5, Informative)
It's the opinion of a well-known scientist, who isn't particularly kind to the Creationist argument either (he calls it unsatisfying and unscientific in the article, if you would notice).
Man do you know anything about this guy? Check out his home page: http://aca.mq.edu.au/pdavies.html [mq.edu.au]. He is a professor of Natural Philosophy. You don't seem to be familiar with this term, however it's the simply the old name for what we now call Science. It does not in any way make him a "philosophy professor". This guy has done much work (and written books about) cosmology, gravitation, and quantum field theory. He's published 25 books and over 150 papers to places like Nature and The Journal of Physics. Pretty hard core. Don't be so quick to dismiss someone because you don't understand their title.
Also, as a previous post pointed out, he hinted at a basic problem with multiverse theories: many are unfalsifiable. Unfalsifiable theorys cannot be tested, and are thus scientific. So yes, maybe some fantastic equations someone gets imply there may be other universes out there, however if they are completely separate from ours, then we cannot test whether or not they exist. It's like asking if God exists or not, no experiment can disprove his existence (or indeed prove it), and thus it's not science!
This article was his scientific opinions of a theory which deals with cosmology, which is one of his primary areas of study. Maybe you don't agree with what he has to say, but it is clear cosmology is something he knows at least a little about!