Mathematical Proof That the Cosmos Could Have Formed Spontaneously From Nothing 612
KentuckyFC writes: "One of the great theories of modern cosmology is that the universe began in a Big Bang. It's backed up by numerous lines of evidence, such as the cosmic microwave background and so on. But what caused the Big Bang, itself? For many years, cosmologists have fallen back on the idea that the universe formed spontaneously; that the Big Bang was result of quantum fluctuations in which the universe came into existence from nothing. But is this compatible with what we know about the Big Bang itself and the theories that describe it? Now cosmologists have come up with the first rigorous proof that the Big Bang could indeed have occurred spontaneously and produced the universe we see today. The proof is developed within a mathematical framework known as the Wheeler-DeWitt equation. Heisenberg's uncertainty principle allows a small region of empty space to come into existence probabilistically due to quantum fluctuations. Most of the time, such a bubble will collapse and disappear. The question these scientists address is whether a bubble could also expand exponentially to allow a universe to form in an irreversible way. Their proof (PDF) shows that this is indeed possible. There is an interesting corollary: the role of the cosmological constant is played by a property known as the quantum potential. This is a property introduced in the 20th century by the physicist David Bohm, which has the effect of making quantum mechanics deterministic while reproducing all of its predictions. It's an idea that has never caught on. Perhaps that will change now."
If you make this a proof of God... (Score:5, Funny)
... I will punch you in the face.
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If you make implementation details about the initial condition of an universe proof that such an universe has no superior level, you are already so ridiculous that punching people in the face is probably the best you can do.
Re:If you make this a proof of God... (Score:4, Interesting)
"superior level"???
Why not talk about about the great Matma, an inferior level, the mysterious Wumpus, or the Flying Spaghetti monster instead?
Re:If you make this a proof of God... (Score:4, Insightful)
Let's simplify.
Conway's game of life creatures became sentient.
They discovered they are made of cells.
They said "Look, THE INFINITESIMAL CELL is always created from NOTHING. If things happens FROM NOTHING, there is NO NEED FOR A CREATOR, so THERE IS NO CREATOR, and besides NOBODY ever witnessed something different THAN THE DETERMINISTIC APPLICATION OF RULES. How smart are we?"
So the guy at the PC said to himself "Thank you for nothing, guys" and went making himself coffee.
Re:If you make this a proof of God... (Score:4, Interesting)
So the guy at the PC said to himself "Thank you for nothing, guys" and went making himself coffee.
Well, what else were they supposed to do? They're DETERMINISTIC. Their entire existence is based on THE DETERMINISTIC APPLICATION OF RULES, right?
So if the guy at the PC is butthurt, maybe he should have picked different rules or different initial conditions, right? Because once you hit 'run' you can't really blame the process for giving you its output.
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Not if he gave them free willl, meaning even the ability to do things that were "outside" of the creator's will/temperament.
Can you explain what that means within the context of "THE DETERMINISTIC APPLICATION OF RULES", please? Because otherwise you are making zero sense whatsoever.
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Let's simplify.
Conway's game of life creatures became sentient.
They discovered they are made of cells.
They said "Look, THE INFINITESIMAL CELL is always created from NOTHING. If things happens FROM NOTHING, there is NO NEED FOR A CREATOR, so THERE IS NO CREATOR, and besides NOBODY ever witnessed something different THAN THE DETERMINISTIC APPLICATION OF RULES. How smart are we?"
So the guy at the PC said to himself "Thank you for nothing, guys" and went making himself coffee.
And the creatures were sensible. After all, if the guy at the PC wanted the creatures to figure it out he could easily have programmed the game with elements that blatantly break the rules of the game. Perhaps he could have made indestructible walls the shape of a guy sitting at a desk with a computer on it. The creatures would eventually have mapped it and marveled at the mysterious pattern.
Re:If you make this a proof of God... (Score:5, Insightful)
Nothing that breaks the rules can be proven as breaking them, from the inside. What if the exception is part of the rules?
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Nothing that breaks the rules can be proven as breaking them, from the inside. What if the exception is part of the rules?
That is only true in a strict sense of the word "rules". If say 99.9999% of space obeys a certain set of rules and 0.0001% breaks them then any intelligent being (intelligence being pattern recognition among other things) would stare at the other 0.0001% and wonder.
For example if someone produced an indestructible toast with the face of Jesus, or Mohammed, or Buddha, I and many other atheists would be lining up outside whichever church, mosque or temple we were lead to.
Re:If you make this a proof of God... (Score:4, Insightful)
Hmm. Experience suggests the intelligent beings would stare at the 0.0001% and either deny the evidence for it, deny its relevance, or try to destroy it. Inconvenient facts are inconvenient.
You want a piece of toast with the face of Jesus? You already had a man with the face of Jesus, and look what happened to him.... What chance does some toast stand?
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Given the fact that I use the same logic to make the (in)existence of any God irrelevant to my living, I would actually applaud those game of life beings for coming up to the same conclusion. They can't observe me, and unless I start intervening (and then be observed), it makes no difference to them if I exist or not, no matter how much I bitch that they don't worship me or give me credit for their existence. I know I pressed the "Run" button. They have no way of knowing that. They can philosophise that som
Re:If you make this a proof of God... (Score:4, Insightful)
They are absolutely correct, there is no creator, he doesn't exist inside their universe. Within the context of their universe, the existance or nonexsitance of this creator is essentially meaningless to them.
I really think the clock in a black box metaphor for scientific theories is the best. If someone gives you a watch and you have no way to look inside.... you can make observations, you can model its behgaviour, you can make theories which make predictions.... but unless you can open it, any gears you postulate, no matter how accurately they may model the output, can never be proven to be what is inside.
Until you can devise a test based on observations that seperates one theory of whats inside form another, then the claim of which predictive theory with equivalent results is better has no basis.
So until a theory of a creator produces a testable hypothesis, its really nothing special at all.
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Re:If you make this a proof of God... (Score:5, Interesting)
I've always been surprised at people who give consideration to the simulation argument, but none to God. If we're living in a simulation (which I think is decently probable, relativity and wave/particle duality being emergent properties of programming kludges to save cycles), then this simulation was created by someone. That someone would be omnipotent and omniscient with regards to this reality, exists outside of this reality, and created this reality. That's the definition of God. God is the Programmer.
Re:If you make this a proof of God... (Score:4, Insightful)
That someone would be omnipotent and omniscient with regards to this reality
These are very loaded words. What exactly is meant by "omniscient", for example? The capability to find out anything about our universe, or the ability to find out everything about this universe? Or the ability to predict either anything or everything that hasn't happened yet? At one point, you're assuming a being whose complexity would be greater than the complexity of its own creation. Much like, e.g., we understand everything about a crankshaft but fail to understand many of our own computer simulations. There are a lot of people (like me) who don't strictly denounce the possibility of an "external" (or "transcendent") creator or simulator, but aren't buying the "our universe (or human bodies, or whatever) is too complex so it needs a creator" nonsense.
Re:If you make this a proof of God... (Score:5, Interesting)
, I could easily design a better and more just system
For some value of "better." You have no idea what the Programmer's motive and design goal is. We simulate un-perfect worlds all the time. This could all be a game of World of Warcraft for higher dimensional beings. Azeroth is a pretty fucked-up place because if it were all peaceful and just the game would be boring. We would have no more understanding of the Programmer than my WoW character has of me.
We simulate our own universe, too, to try to understand it better. This could just be a much, much more high-fidelity simulation of the Programmer's universe.
It could even be an experiment to see if simulated beings, shown a perfect paradise and expelled from it could, left to their own devices, re-create that same paradise after being shown an example of perfect love and sacrifice. In that case, Jesus was the Programmer's avatar in this reality, and Christianity is true.
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You have no idea what the Programmer's motive and design goal is. [...]
We would have no more understanding of the Programmer than my WoW character has of me.
And yet, some people go around proclaiming that they know all about The Programmer's goals, motivations and rules just because somebody handed them a "programming for dummies" book.
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Ever think we might be a Beta release?
Re:If you make this a proof of God... (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm never sure if I want there to be an afterlife or not. And I'm Catholic. I have faith in God, but I can never know.
Really, what bothers me more than anything is the concept of hell. The exact nature of hell isn't really laid out in the Bible. It's described as being cut off from God and his goodness, permanently, which would be torment to us who were created by Him. But that doesn't tell you if it's really lakes of fire and demons with pitchforks (which was really just Dante's depiction that inspired everyone who came after), or if it's just some shitty shanty town...or if it's this reality we're in right now. But, if it is the whole 'torturing forever' thing, first thing I'm doing when I get to heaven is I'm tugging on God's cape and saying, "hey, can we get those people out of there?" I have no idea how I'm supposed to party forever in heaven with Jesus if there's even one soul suffering in hell.
While I have faith in God, I also kinda hope I'm wrong and there's simply nothing after death, because I would rather have there be nothing for me than torture for anyone.
Re:If you make this a proof of God... (Score:4, Insightful)
Let's simplify.
Conway's game of life creatures became sentient. They discovered they are made of cells. They said "Look, THE INFINITESIMAL CELL is always created from NOTHING. If things happens FROM NOTHING, there is NO NEED FOR A CREATOR, so THERE IS NO CREATOR, and besides NOBODY ever witnessed something different THAN THE DETERMINISTIC APPLICATION OF RULES. How smart are we?"
So the guy at the PC said to himself "Thank you for nothing, guys" and went making himself coffee.
Note that the guy at the PC doesn't care what happens to the sentient creatures, doesn't interact with them in any way after he starts the universe, and doesn't take any portion of the sentient creature with him for all eternity.
You have it wrong, anyway. The vast majority of these creatures would say that they were Created. Some would simply accept this, having been taught so ever since birth, specifically with the knowledge that questioning their beliefs is one of the worst things they could do. Some others would look at the rules and realize that, had the rules been different, they would not have existed at all. They would see that as proof as a Creator and (through some further leap of logic) the rest of their beliefs, even though such a "proof" of the former does not in any way imply the latter. Still others would simply take Pascal's Wager and hope that their particular religion is the correct one.
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Re:If you make this a proof of God... (Score:5, Funny)
So the guy at the PC said to himself "Thank you for nothing, guys" and went making himself coffee.
Actually the guy at the computer decided to torture those little fucks for the rest of eternity for being so presumptuous, because he loved them unconditionally.
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Such a limited view of justice, such that justice doesn't exist except your version of justice, which by definition isn't justice but revenge. Which is how you view others definitions of justice, and thus, is exactly what you typed here.
Simply put (because I realize you probably can't understand the above), your view of "god" is limited because you can't (don't) believe in one. Because you don't believe, it jades your viewpoint in such a way to support your view.
Here's a thought, any god that forces people
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Perhaps, but the excessive use of CAPITAL letters, does not help his case much.
The trouble is not mathematics though, it is philosophy, which some argue is a ridiculous thing as their version of science trumps all philosophy. A perhaps untenable philosophical position.
As one who believes in the existence of a creator, I am unsure I find his arguments convincing on a philosophical level. Deism is functionally indistinguishable from agnosticism or outright atheism..
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So we see evidence of a seeming Miraculous event in the universe. One that seems to defy logic. And you use it as a time to get angry at people who believe in God.
Is your atheism so week, that you fall back on violence if confronted with evidence that seems to force you to realign your belief structure.
So tell me again how atheist are better than religious people?
Or is it that you are just as human as the rest of us, and will strongly hold onto our belief structure and get very angry when something dissuad
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Is your atheism so week, that you fall back on violence if confronted with evidence that seems to force you to realign your belief structure.
What evidence?
So tell me again how atheist are better than religious people?
You seem to be taking your dislike for the one you replied to and generalizing based on that. Nice job.
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What evidence?
I'm filing this one under "if we mangle these numbers hard enough, they support our hypothesis." I would say that I'd be open to changing my mind if someone explained it to me, but I doubt it's possible for non-physicists to really understand it to begin with.
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"And you use it as a time to get angry at people who believe in God."
When people believe in gods that can't invent wireless camera phones and used the most inefficient method to communicate "his" message regardless of religion (christianity, islam, etc). People have every right to look down at believers in old gods with their ancient texts (which are full of errors).
If gods of our ancestors were so all powerful, why do they seem to have a messaging problem? Note that there are over roughly 30,000 differen
Re:If you make this a proof of God... (Score:5, Funny)
Can create vast amounts of items but has trouble communicating his views to others? God is a Geek!!!
Just be glad that he's not very good at messaging. Then God would be from Marketing. The Lord of All Creation coming from Marketing? Not that would be scary!
Re:If you make this a proof of God... (Score:5, Funny)
When people believe in gods that can't invent wireless camera phones
Yeah, because if it suddenly started raining iPhones in 5 A.D., that totally wouldn't have turned anybody into gibbering lunatics.
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:If you make this a proof of God... (Score:4, Funny)
If you make this a proof of God... I will punch you in the face
Of course not. If He wanted you to believe, God would have showed you his birth certificate.
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Re:If you make this a proof of God... (Score:4, Informative)
Many, many, MANY people have claimed that God wrote the Bible.
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One of my favorite explanations actually comes from science fiction writer Isaac Asimov in the short story "How It Happened [sumware.com]." Let's assume for a second that God really did tell Moses and Aaron what to write in the Bible, He would obviously need to give an allegorical account of what happened in the past and not a literal one. No human could write out a literal blow-by-blow history of the Universe and no human could ever read such an accounting. (Of course, my personal belief is that the Bible is a moral
Re:If you make this a proof of God... (Score:4, Informative)
Yes, with the genocide [skepticsan...dbible.com] and the slavery [wikipedia.org] and the misogyny [blogspot.com] and the mock executions of sons by their fathers [wikipedia.org], what a fine world it would be if we followed the moral example of the Bible.
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Thing is if God did have a direct hand in the Bible, or dictate the Koran as is claimed, he did a pretty terrible job. For a guy who is supposed to be super smart and all knowing he didn't make his wishes and intentions very clear, and arguably ended up doing far more harm than good.
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A mainline Protestant would argue that the Bible is sufficient for grace. it doesn't have to be totally accurate, or directly dictated by God, to lead souls back to God. It just has to have enough in it that people end up being saved. Some denominations hold that the reason for this is so God doesn't interfere with free will in giving the writers inspiration, or even in letting the readers make up their own minds. Other denominations don't take any particular position on why it was done that way. I can see
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Something at some point only had to come into being spontaneously from nothing if there as ever a point where it did not exist.
We know that the universe itself is a finite age, and it did not always exist.... we can only make a similar claim about God by extrapolating from what we know about the universe, but extrapolating from a data size of one is mathematically invalid and can easily produce flawed conclusions.
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No, not really. Time is a property of the physical universe, so saying "universe did not always exist" is an ill-defined concept - it's referring to a point in time before time began. And since time is governed by General Relativity, which is incompatible with out current theories of quantum mechanics, saying anything certain about how it behaved in an early universe is extremely difficult.
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So we can say that the universe always did and always will exist, yet still has a beginning and ending point? Sweet.
*mind blown*
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The special pleading knows no bounds. No matter what, idiots are always going to claim their sky daddy is an exception to the rules they say the universe is logically subject to.
Why would a creator be subject to the rules of his creation? Is a painter subject to the rules of his painting? Is a musician subject to the rules of his music? Is a programmer bound by the rules of his programming?
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Because I am stick of hearing the "how can something come from nothing" argument from creationists. Whether or not something could come from nothing has nothing to do if there is a god or not and proving it can does not prove there is a god. Any rational person can see this, but I would never accuse a creationist of being rational.
Sounds like you need some cheese....
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Isn't the whole point of quantum physics that the condition - "something has happened" - is in itself a fractional number? For example, a photon does not go through one slit or another, but both, and these histories interfere with each other to produce the interference pattern on the wall.
Which, of course, is the answer to the qproblem about apparent causality violations in quantum mechanics:
Re:Interestingly enough... (Score:4, Informative)
At some point it becomes illogical to ask "what caused it" or "what comes before". Both these questions postulate the prior existence of time. If time itself came into being, then asking "what caused this" or "what happened before this" is meaningless since both questions imply a time based causation which could not have happened in the absence of time itself.
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Nothing (Score:2)
Its not nothing (Score:2)
Quantum fluctuations are something. The question should actually be "Where do quantum fluctuations come from" to which a physicist will probably reply - "they just happen". Which is feck all use to anyone as an answer. Might just as well say the universe just happened or the God/The Sphagetti Monster created it.
If physicists don't have a proper answer to "Why is there something rather than nothing" then they should stop pretending they do by the deceit of changing the definition of "nothing".
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There's a lot of things in physics, that when you get down deep enough the only answer we've got is "it just does."
Tell me, how does the force of electric attraction or repulsion work in general? We can describe the way the force works. Opposite charges attract, like charges repel. We can calculate the magnitude of these forces. But when you really get right down to it, why this force exists and what creates this motive force from apparently nothing is unexplained. We can describe the force, saying "it's li
Re:Nothing (Score:5, Interesting)
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Quantum fluctuations != nothing (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Quantum fluctuations != nothing (Score:5, Interesting)
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You'll note that change is time, and energy and space are explicitly mentioned.
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- "why there is something rather than nothing?"
- "because this can happen according to this newfangled model"
- "cool, and what made the universe should follow this newfangled model?"
- "because another newfangled proof makes anything else illogical"
- "cool and what made the universe forcibly logical? all you did so far is to prove the universe can't help but follow the same logic that you derived from the behavior of the universe itself."
The End.
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I think most college students would agree that zero everywhere is a compelling solution for differential equations.
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This is an abuse of the word "nothing", which is a universal negation "not anything". But quantum fluctuations in the quantum vacuum are something, and not nothing. The research might be interesting, but it does nothing for the question the philosopher is asking when he is wondering "Why there is somerthing rather than nothing?"
Exactly. Lawrence Krauss and others are trying to redefine "nothing" for there own personal theories and world view (he's an atheist). I guess that's understandable from that viewpoint, but you can make a lot of interesting theories if you redefine terms to fit your own meaning.
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Yes. Same goes for modeling the properties of 'nothing'.
The claim in the headline is phrased that way presumably because it is attention-seeking 'scientific journalism' (web hits are good).
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For there to be "fluctuations" there has to be something to actually fluctuate.
Wait What??? (Score:3)
Heisenberg's uncertainty principle allows a small region of empty space to come into existence probabilistically due to quantum fluctuations
I don't remember that in the principle when I took physics. I think they are skipping quite a few steps in the summary.
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No, he's suggesting the summary doesn't reproduce every *crucial* detail of the thing it's summarizing, making it a poor summary.
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Newtons First Law of Motion allows a small region of empty space to come into existence probabilistically due to quantum fluctuations
The Pythagorean Theorem allows a small region of empty space to come into existence probabilistically due to quantum fluctuations
"Proof" (Score:4, Insightful)
This is not a "proof that the universe could have formed spontaneously from nothing". As is common in popular versions of science (and often even in peer-reviewed articles by scientists), there is a confusion between modeling reality and reality itself. All this proves is that the current most accurate (in terms of making predictions that we can measure) mathematical model of reality does not contradict the claim that the universe spawned from nothing (and of course the term "nothing" here is tenuous at best--it certainly isn't philosophical nothingness, because something did indeed exist, i.e. a state in which quantum fluctuations were occurring, such a state is not nothing, it is something... perhaps by "nothing" they mean a vacuum, but again, a vacuum is something since it is still governed by laws). And let's not forget that though QM has a lot of predictive power as a model, it is still just that, a model.
Re:"Proof" (Score:5, Informative)
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Note that the words "could have" are used, which makes your point moot. They are not claiming that the Universe formed spontaneously from nothing, they are claiming that such claims cannot be refuted (yet). Or, alternatively, they're claiming that theories involving from-nothing Universes do not refute existing results; unlike, say, a theory which allows faster-than-light travel, which *would* refute existing results, and therefore have a much larger burden of proof (ie. it would have to be able to replace
"Something from Nothing" is not science (Score:3, Interesting)
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"I wish the physicists would stop playing in the philosophical and theological sandbox."
Of course you do. Theologians have already had their sandbox reduced by scientists, and you wouldn't want it to shrink any more than it already has.
Quantum Fluctuation (Score:3, Insightful)
So "nothing" has quantum fluctuations (Score:5, Interesting)
I have zero apples, which one will produce an apple seed to grow a tree.
Note: The article itself doesn't imply what the summary says, but the summary here makes the article seem like nonsense.
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While extremely unlikely, given a long enough timeline an apple seed will spontaneously form due to quantum fluctuations. So the zeroth apple will produce that seed.
We still have turtles all the way down. (Score:3)
So there could be many universes.?1?1 (Score:2)
Mathematics is a language, not a science (Score:3)
E=M*(C cubed)
But that doesn't mean it is 'right'. The correct formula is E= M*(C squared) and it doesn't matter how many times I write any other formula.
As such, math can describe ANY internally consistent theory. (and even some internally inconsistent ones). It is only through practical testing that we can determine if the math is right.
Not possible (Score:3)
Or rather not applicable. Physics is not accessible to mathematics, Mathematics is just a tool physics uses on formalized abstractions of physics. These abstractions _always_ introduce inaccuracies, and hence no mathematical proof can ever apply to physics directly or absolutely. Mathematics can just not bridge these transformation steps. That is the tasks of Physics.
Spontaneous self-generation? (Score:2)
So 1 + -1 = 0 (Score:2)
However do what you like to zero - you're not getting any other value from it unless you have another value -ie something non zero - to begin with. This theory does nothing to explain how something arose from nothing.
As If (Score:2)
Quantum fluctuations (Score:2)
I have some basic understanding on a non-physicist level of what quantum physics is all about, the weirdness that is involved with it and how it scales to the world I can see, but this I simply cannot fathom.
How can quantum fluctuations occur in absolute nothingness?
What is a "proof" that something "could" happen? (Score:2)
Mathematical Proof That the Cosmos Could Have Formed Spontaneously From Nothing
What does this mean, really? Either a thing did or didn't happen. What does it mean to have proved that it could have happened?
Is there room for someone to come along later and prove that it couldn't have happened for reasons not yet understood?
What if we discover the universe didn't form spontaneously from nothing? Would that disprove this "proof"?
Car analogy time: if I see a car at a certain place, and I measure its speed at 60mph, then I could claim to have "proven" that it could have been 60 miles away
Probability (Score:2)
More likely it's the result of the infinite improbability drive. I just hope that the Universe and Arthur Dent never meet.
Get something about math proofs. (Score:5, Interesting)
I remember reading about an European mathematician who set out to prove that Euclidean geometry was the only possible geometry. He came up with lemma after lemma, conjecture after conjecture, but no matter how hard he tried he could not prove non-Euclidean geometry could not exist. All those proofs, lemmas and work on conjectures formed the mainstay of the branch of non-Eucledian Geometry.
So all the math proof tells you is, if you make a set of assumptions, cosmos could be created spontaneously.
wrong (Score:2)
Heisenberg's uncertainty principle allows a small region of empty space to come into existence probabilistically due to quantum fluctuations.
Ok, so this entire premise is refuted by this one statement.
This statement assumes there was "Space" prior to the big bang. There was neither time or space prior to the big bang... in fact, there WAS NO PRIOR TO THE BIG BANG. It would be like arguing that "This triangle rolled across the floor while it was a circle"
Secondly, it also assumes that the universes physical laws like quantum mechanics still applied prior to the big bang. There were no universal laws, and once again there is no "Prior to the big b
How often? (Score:2)
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Huh? (Score:2)
I'm afraid my poor little brain is ill equipped to understand this.
So, if there was 'nothing', WTF is there to be 'quantum fluctuating'?
A fluctuation of nothing produced everything?
Sometimes (okay, often) ... when people speak of quantum mechanics I have no idea of WTF they're saying or how it translates into reality.
Did They Really? (Score:2)
After reading the article, it sounds like they have a good theory about what happened during the Big Bang, but I didn't see anything in the article that offered proof that
Ex nihilo nihil fit (Score:4, Insightful)
This proof, while impressive, does not proof that the cosmos could have formed spontaneously. It only shows that the big bang was not the start of the cosmos and something early and yet unknown pre-existed it. The old axiom that "ex nihilo nihil fit" (nothing can come from nothing), still holds, because if there were nothing, no matter, no energy, no anything, then there couldn't be quantum fluctuations to spontaneously form the universe.
As such, the big bang must not have been the start of universe, but probably very, very, very close to the start of the universe.
Platonic Ideal Science Fiction... (Score:4, Informative)
Sheesh. I mean, I'm a theorist. I love theory. But let us not lose sight of the difference between metaphysical speculation and "proof". All that has been done is that it has been shown that -- subject to a whole slew of prior assumptions (premises, axioms) that may or may not be correct (and that cannot be verified or sorted out either way) -- that a particular kind of "empty" Universe could consistently give rise to a vacuum fluctuation that grows a la big bang. Of course, there is a big difference between an "empty" Universe subject to all sorts of quantum rules and nothing -- as nothing tends to come without anything, including a set of rules quantum or otherwise.
So let me summarize the argument. If the Universe already existed, complete with a set of physical laws, but just happened at some point in meta-space and meta-time to be empty, then if those probably non-unique laws had parameters within some almost certainly non-unique range, then mass-energy could have poofed into existence in a big bang as a quantum vacuum fluctuation that grew. It is proven that all of this could have happened.
And we are now precisely as knowledgeable as we were before. We already knew that it could have happened because it did. We still know absolutely nothing (more) useful about the state of the Universe before the bang, because the bang erased the prior state in a blast of cosmic entropy and all of our ability to make inferences comes from weak extrapolation of observation of its visible state "now" (that is, into the distance-mediated past). We cannot use the "proof" to make any useful predictions that can be tested (either verified or falsified).
Don't get me wrong, I think it is a lovely result, and it may prove useful in some indirect way by providing an incentive to reformulate quantum theory in ways that are at least consistent with the big bang, just as quantum theory ultimately proves useful when discussing things like black holes. But it is still theoretical metaphysics, not physics.
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Exactly. Maybe I'll believe it when I see an actual universe.
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while (true)
{
<-- right here
}
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Millions of college students writing empty 500-word essays
Students don't write anymore . . . they cut & paste from the Web . . .
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Something from nothing? (Score:5, Funny)
So that's why huge amounts of Wikipedia have gone missing!
Re: (Score:2)