In the "baby" universe that is the original one spawned, when it reaches "now" relative to our universe could they attempt to enter our universe and somehow interfere with our "past"?
In the "baby" universe that is the original one spawned, when it reaches "now" relative to our universe could they attempt to enter our universe and somehow interfere with our "past"?
Zachary Smith
Your ideea is based on so many fantasy/improbable assumptions, that you could just as well say that you're using magic to create the appearance of time travel into the past.
Indeed, and yet ideas such as the "Big Bang", which purports that EVERYTHING popped into existence from NOTHING (or from primordial elements the existence of which is unaccountable) or the Bubble Universe concept that suggests our reality is an off-shoot from another, which is an off-shoot from an other and so on and so until one forgets completely to ask where the ORIGINAL might have come from, contain no "magical" elements at all, do they?
I haven't seen any theories in this thread. Your speculations are certainly an interesting topic of discussion... but they ain't science.Clearly, I am a VERY naughty theorist.
TeknoNurd said:Quantum stuff hasn't been demonstrated to affect the "real world". If it did, we couldn't count on chemical reactions to occur the same every single time, down to as many decimal points as we care about.
Zachary Smith
The big bang is backed up by serious observational evidence.
String theory and M theory are not supported by experimental evidence, but at least they have mathematical coherence.
You speculations have neither.
Indeed, and yet ideas such as the "Big Bang", which purports that EVERYTHING popped into existence from NOTHING (or from primordial elements the existence of which is unaccountable) or the Bubble Universe concept that suggests our reality is an off-shoot from another, which is an off-shoot from an other and so on and so until one forgets completely to ask where the ORIGINAL might have come from, contain no "magical" elements at all, do they?
Did you just accuse the big bang theory of being "magical"?![]()
Indeed, and yet ideas such as the "Big Bang", which purports that EVERYTHING popped into existence from NOTHING (or from primordial elements the existence of which is unaccountable) or the Bubble Universe concept that suggests our reality is an off-shoot from another, which is an off-shoot from an other and so on and so until one forgets completely to ask where the ORIGINAL might have come from, contain no "magical" elements at all, do they?
Did you just accuse the big bang theory of being "magical"?![]()
"Watch me pull a rabbit out of a hat!" vs "Watch me create an entire universe out of a primordial singularity, the origin and existence of which I cannot account for but is the KEY component in actually explaining why I'm not creating EVERYTHING from NOTHING.
"Something from NOTHING" = "magic". Until and UNLESS cosmology can account for the ORIGINAL source material, the ESSENCE from which the universe was born, it MIGHT AS WELL claim "magic".
So all the matter and energy in the universe was condensed into a single point prior to the Big Bang and we were all borne of that. Nice.
Where did that original POINT come from? Well, we expanded out from another universe? Where did THAT universe come from?
The point was the remnant of an "earlier" version of OUR universe! Really, where did THAT universe come from?
YES. ABSOLUTELY! Past a certain point, believe it or not, the SCIENCE FAILS. There is NO "observational" data to consider. There is merely SPECULATION and in the end, you can only resort to admitting "we don't KNOW" how it ORIGINALLY came to be and "magic" is as good an explanation as any.
The truth, I believe is that the fundamental origins, not just THIS universe, but where the game actually began (NOT the "Big Bang" but whatever precipitated the big bang and so forth) is BEYOND our experience and the objective truth may well be so fundamentally alien to our understanding of how things do, should and CAN work that perhaps even the claim of "magic" would seem reasonable next to it.
So, yeah, magic.
Unless you can tell me where the stuff the Big Bang was born from started out. Otherwise, you're just pulling a universe out of a hat. "Magic"
...(emphasis mine) is downright upsetting. No one says that. Why do you think they do?Ah, the average plebeian mind can't wrap itself around the concept of "something" appearing from "nothing" or how "events" can unfold when "time" doesn't yet exist
This is not a philosophical meandering. There is an objective causal set of events that created the universe and there was an objective causal set of events which led TO the events that created the universe. The only alternative is that there really WAS no "essential" beginning and there has been this eternal shifting of matter and energy and form throughout various guises and constructs forever. And, that is as VALID a consideration as any, despite the fact that something existing without having ANY origin is a violation of basic common sense and unprecedented by ANY other example we've ever observed.
...are basically analogous to a Matryoshka Doll version of the universe. Further, it seems like your definition of time suffers from Russell's Paradox.How can that which has no origin, "be"? How can something that was never created exist?
Hmmm.... you want entire universes to be identical in every respect when you cant even find identical snowflakes???
....the universe is more chaotic than you think....
Maybe you just need to travel further than you think to find that identical snowflake.
It might be worth considering that you take a big step BACKWARD in terms of perspective. "Chaos" may be a local phenomenon that disappears on the cosmic scale, exactly the same way the APPARENT random scattering of stars take the shape of galaxies when you look from a more distant perspective. The random "splatter" of galaxies form galactic "bridges" and "bubbles" when you back up further. "Chaos" may well be nothing more than an illusion resulting from the use of too narrow an observational viewpoint. A butterfly flapping it's winds in Beijing causing a typhoon in Fiji might have EXACTLY the same obvious correlation as a lever lifting a stone; IF you have suitable means to assess ALL the possible variables, crunch the numbers and predict the outcome. WE might not be able to do it due to our inherent limitations and inability to observe and collect the relevant data but that doesn't mean the cause/effect process does NOT occur in predictable patterns. The limitation is OURS--not the Universe's. We simply term it "chaos" when the level of complexity of possibility rises beyond our ability to assess the variables. After all, all variables are NOT equally likely. If they were, NOTHING would ever happen--all possibilities would be fighting to occur and thus NONE could. What happens, however unlikely it seems to us, IS the MOST likely outcome or it would NEVER happen at all.
In the end, this seems a sound scientific principle: take the same materials under the same conditions and perform the same actions, you SHOULD get the same results, right? Therefore, most likely outcome = identical results = identical universes (assuming matching starting conditions and essential energy/materials).
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