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For what it's worth from Wikipedia
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"They reasoned that an object situated at the center and related equally to the extremes in every direction can have no impulse to move in any specific direction. In fact, they compared the situation of such an object with that of a man violently but equally hungry and thirsty, standing at the same distance from food and drink and unable to decide in which direction to move." - Aristotle |
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You're right, many worlds is the idea that because quantum mechanics involves a particular mathematical way of evolving wave functions in time, measurements "have to" yield all possible results and therefore spawn "many worlds". The multiverse is an idea that our universe is only one part of a larger one with statistically distributed values of the fundamental parameters. So that's not the same thing. But they do share a similar flavor, in that they are both efforts to "explain" without resorting to experiment. In that sense, they both treat an "explanation" as if its job was to generate a sense of cognitive resonance, rather than as a way of organizing data in a way that could lead to predictions for new experiments. In short, they are both efforts to insert what we might call "reality" into a larger milieu that is unconstrained and untested, just to resolve certain "pesky issues" about the reality we find. To me, it makes a lot more sense to simply recognize the pesky issues, than to think of them as in need of resolution using the information we have at hand. Why change reality just to make our minds like it better? It doesn't seem very scientific at all.
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The discovery of a Multiverse or layered universes would still only make 1 single entity if tested and shown to be true.
The unification theory by name itself would explain EVERYTHING, which in turn would just make our universe different, but complete. Still JUST ONE. One of something more than we had observed up to now. |
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Wonderful thread. I just saw Universe (Multiverse stuff) on the history channel and thought of y'all. They seemed so sure of themselves. I would guess it isn't the fame factor, but that they have been this scientigous for quite some time.
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Even the Church was interested in observations to support their religious views! The Jesuits were some of Kepler's best friends, and he was Lutheran.
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Lighten up! This is a stellar board! Author: duh. "The Sun, with all the planets revolving around it, and depending on it, can still ripen a bunch of grapes as though it had nothing else in the universe to do..." Author: Galileo supposedly. |
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But we know we can't observe the multiverse, our instruments could not even function in an environment with those parameters. There is no way we could ever "discover" the multiverse, its existence will always be like Shangri-La. A nice place to imagine exists if not knowing why our universe has its parameters is keeping you up at night.
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If the universe had difference constants, perhaps other forms of life would exist, and they'd be thinking, "Hey, if the physical constants were just a little different, we couldn't exist. There would be no electromagnetic tendrils for us to live around and attract our magnetic monopole food. There'd be no quark-gluon plasma to swim through. Pshaw! Life couldn't exist without quark-gluon plasma!"
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If we don't play god, who will?-James Watson I never think of the future, it comes soon enough.-Albert Einstein The large print giveth and the small print taketh away.-Tom Waits |
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I don't know....We'd really like to understand what becomes of the matter and energy that find themselves inside the event horizons of black holes (assuming that such horizons do actually form, but that's another question.). Such an understanding would likely (being optimistic) have profound implications on what we can actually observe on this side of the event horizon (but I forget what the status is of the bet/debate between Thorne and Hawking re. information loss in black holes). Doesn't even the mere existence of black holes have something to say about the universe we live in? Is the multiverse concept so much further removed from that of black holes in at least this sense?
Last edited by Spaceman Spiff : 27-March-2008 at 02:39 PM. Reason: small addition |
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Yet, there does not seem to be much of an appropriate term that identifies and puts conjecture in its place. "Theory" should be reserved term. I can see why everyone wants to use it as a tag to their ideas, but if another term were well established to qualify these incipient theories, then they should be less prone to try to abuse the "theory" term. [Added: I entered "Multiverse Theory" in Google and got 25,000 hits.] Every dog wants in the house when it's raining, but build them a dog house and they can stay out where they belong. ![]()
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Lighten up! This is a stellar board! Author: duh. "The Sun, with all the planets revolving around it, and depending on it, can still ripen a bunch of grapes as though it had nothing else in the universe to do..." Author: Galileo supposedly. Last edited by George : 27-March-2008 at 03:15 PM. Reason: gramm |
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I would use the example of "image charges" here. We know that if you put a charge near a conductor, the conductor will impose a boundary condition that lets you figure out the electric field near the charge. This you can determine without knowing what is actually happening inside the conductor, and indeed you can model it by replacing the conductor with an "image charge" that serves to create the same boundary condition. If you never do observations inside the conductor, the image charge approach is a fully successful model of the reality where you do the experiments, and your scientists would never be the wiser that conductors do anything different. If you do experiments inside the conductor, you find it is not a sufficient model. But with black holes, the latter never happens, so we need not distinguish what is "really happening" inside a black hole from the image it leaves on the outside. The connection to multiverses is that there we have the worst of both worlds-- we never do the observations on the "other side", but they also don't establish any conditions that are relevant here. They don't help us calculate or predict anything happening here, they don't put any constraints on the physics here. They are purely a philosophical tool to give a sense that there is not a mystery where there in fact is a mystery. It's classic magical thinking-- the inclusion of an untestable mechanism to replace our discomfort and powerlessness about mystery. That's a valid approach for some things that humans do, but science was expressly designed to get us away from that-- how ironic the ways it tries to sneak back in, like a wolf in sheep's clothing. |
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to exist in this reality outside of the mathematics of GR or that we could ever study them even if they did, I doubt you'd find many takers. |
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![]() An incipient theory could stumble into something that would validate it as a legitimate theory, but [until then] some special term should exist to minimize the confussion or expectations. Quote:
Here is one suggestion for an incipient theory.... Thark. It is a theory that is just bark, thus no bite. "The multiverse thark", hmmm, maybe not. "The Mulitiverse Theific". Theific -- if it were a theory, we'd call it theory. IOW, too ify to qualify as a theory for now. "The Multiverse Theison". Theison -- You can go ahead and do a thesis on it, just don't call it a theory. My usual fee for this effort applies, of course. ![]()
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Lighten up! This is a stellar board! Author: duh. "The Sun, with all the planets revolving around it, and depending on it, can still ripen a bunch of grapes as though it had nothing else in the universe to do..." Author: Galileo supposedly. Last edited by George : 27-March-2008 at 07:44 PM. Reason: "often" as it might make a pun, gramm |
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By the way, I agree whole heartedly with everything you've said on this thread. Thanks, John M. |
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