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| Tags: anthropic, principle |
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#1
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The so-called anthropic principle points out how finely tuned the
universe is to support life. However, is there any reason to believe this is the only universe that exists or ever existed? Or is it likely or possible that there could be an infinite number of other (less anthropic) universes that co-exist woth this one or have existed throughout eternity? |
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#2
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abracad wrote:
The so-called anthropic principle points out how finely tuned the universe is to support life. However, is there any reason to believe this is the only universe that exists or ever existed? Or is it likely or possible that there could be an infinite number of other (less anthropic) universes that co-exist woth this one or have existed throughout eternity? Life is finely tuned to exist in the universe. There is no anthropic principle. Sentience exists because the universe cannot be bothered with doing the fine stuff... and enjoys a little critical feedback to guide its hand. Reality also has a foul sense of humor - the misanthropic principle. -- Uncle Al http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/ (Toxic URL! Unsafe for children and most mammals) "Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?" The Net! |
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#3
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abracad wrote:
The so-called anthropic principle points out how finely tuned the universe is to support life. However, is there any reason to believe this is the only universe that exists or ever existed? Or is it likely or possible that there could be an infinite number of other (less anthropic) universes that co-exist woth this one or have existed throughout eternity? Remove the parts about other universes co-existing simultaneously and the answers become yes, and yes, "there could be other anthropic universes that have existed"... (and will exsist). It is probable that the constants which require intelligent human life were and will-be carried forth to a higher order in an evolutionary universe. Like Al says though, there ain't no tellin what that reality might be at the next level, so there's no guarantee that intelligent life will be the order of the day to fulfill the same need in the next universe. It may however be significant that the evolution of the universe defines the same process which allows humans to evolve in an entropic universe. Call it, the "Ratchet Theory" entropy results in greater order on a universal scale, where high-energy photons convert negative mass, (ghost particles/virtual particles) into real massive particles at the expense of increased tension between the vacuum and ordinary matter. This leads to an evolutionary leap as the universe evolves into a higher order of entropic efficiency, where a leap results in another big bang which carries constants that derive the so called, "Anthropic Principle" perpetually forward through time. The process of which is speak is proven he The -1th law http://groups.google.com/groups?q=is...al.net&rnum=33 |
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#4
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Uncle Al wrote: Life is finely tuned to exist in the universe. There is no anthropic principle. Sentience exists because the universe cannot be bothered with doing the fine stuff.. The Weak Anthropic principle has validity. It the universe were not a certain way physically then we would not have evolved. The nature of the universe must be such that life like ours can evolve in conditions that existed and exist on Earth. If the universe did not have stars that exploded and produced the elements of which we are composed we would not be here. As Carl Sagan used to say " We are all made of sturrr stuffff, the stuffff of bilyuns and bilyuns of sturrrs" Bob Kolker |
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#5
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Robert J. Kolker wrote:
Uncle Al wrote: Life is finely tuned to exist in the universe. There is no anthropic principle. Sentience exists because the universe cannot be bothered with doing the fine stuff.. The Weak Anthropic principle has validity. It the universe were not a certain way physically then we would not have evolved. The nature of the universe must be such that life like ours can evolve in conditions that existed and exist on Earth. If the universe did not have stars that exploded and produced the elements of which we are composed we would not be here. As Carl Sagan used to say " We are all made of sturrr stuffff, the stuffff of bilyuns and bilyuns of sturrrs" Bob Kolker Al isn't denying it's existence, only its relevance. I hope that it interests you that this was my argument for the relative strength of the weak argument per my take on it. In terms of strength, I'd say bout a hundred proof... ![]() ~ http://groups.google.com/groups?hl=e...%40sundial.net Kevin A. Scaldeferri wrote: In article abergman-841B1F.01014824112003@localhost, Aaron Bergman wrote: Nobody likes the anthropic principle. Not even Lenny. But that doesn't mean it's wrong. It would suck if it were correct I would have replaced "correct" with "necessary" and "wrong" with "unnecessary". At least in it's weak form, as I usually think of it, the anthropic principle is tautologous. All it says it that there exists a data point, which is that we exist, and that nature must be consistent with this. There are various stronger formulations, but they are all philosophy or religion. I disagree only if given that the underlying direction of all action in a big bang induced expanding universe is ultimately entropic. Any occurrence within the system is, therfore, a result of the tuning of the constants that were set at t=10^-43 . This includes humans in all their glory, and the weak argument would support this via the fact that it is observationally proven that the human is one of nature's more preferred methods for satisfying the second law of thermodynamics. Humans represent a very efficient path of entropic action, and so the need for human efficiency has pre-existed since the big bang occurred, and there is nothing philosophical about that. In fact, it would require an unfounded faith-like philosophical assumption to conclude anything else." |
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#6
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In article ,
island island_in_the_stream@earthlink wrote: Robert J. Kolker wrote: Uncle Al wrote: Life is finely tuned to exist in the universe. There is no anthropic principle. Sentience exists because the universe cannot be bothered with doing the fine stuff.. The Weak Anthropic principle has validity. It the universe were not a certain way physically then we would not have evolved. The nature of the universe must be such that life like ours can evolve in conditions that existed and exist on Earth. If the universe did not have stars that exploded and produced the elements of which we are composed we would not be here. As Carl Sagan used to say " We are all made of sturrr stuffff, the stuffff of bilyuns and bilyuns of sturrrs" Bob Kolker Al isn't denying it's existence, only its relevance. I thought he was making a joke. "Misanthropic principle". It got a little giggle from me, at least. -- "When the fool walks through the street, in his lack of understanding he calls everything foolish." -- Ecclesiastes 10:3, New American Bible |
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#7
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Gregory L. Hansen wrote:
I thought he was making a joke. "Misanthropic principle". It got a little giggle from me, at least. Well, it does include the right amount of Al's necessarily painful irony, so I'd guess that you're probably right!... ))) |
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#8
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Uncle Al wrote in message ...
abracad wrote: The so-called anthropic principle points out how finely tuned the universe is to support life. Life is finely tuned to exist in the universe. There is no anthropic principle. Uncle Al's got it. What universe is this anthropic principle looking at? The one which is 80-something percent composed of "dark matter" and "dark energy" which is finely tuned to be completely ununderstandable and imperceptible to us (except as necessary to balance our ambitious equations -- more of a 'precise throwing up the hands in defeat' than an intellect-friendly universe), plus being 99.astronomicalnumbersofnines percent unsupportable of our living bodies? We're hiding in a 'corner', a sweet tit of a gravity well which is by nature temporary and by the relative scales under discussion UNBELEIVABLY BRIEF! I think this anthropic principle is more of a vague 'final cause' thing to suppose that because we exist, there must be some special place for us in the heart of the universe, it must have planned to 'have' us all along. Just so happens I agree with that........ doesn't mean, however, that part of our 'special place' isn't to be wiped out suddenly with no chance to compose our swan song and beam it into space to be inevitably received by some intelligence who can appreciate it. We can't imagine an end or beginning to our collective existence so it has to stretch to the beginning and end of the universe to keep us from screaming. Fine, build that, but keep in mind that it's a will-to-power...... that's an IDEAL we'd like to CREATE...... and we CAN create it, but not by pretending that's the way it....... IS, without us........ MAKING it. The Stark Fist of Removal is ready at any time to cancel our show, and if we don't have an exit strategy we can kiss our eventually-'always-already'-anthropic-universe dreams goodbye. |
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#9
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"Ad Absurdum" wrote in message m... Uncle Al wrote in message ... abracad wrote: The so-called anthropic principle points out how finely tuned the universe is to support life. Life is finely tuned to exist in the universe. There is no anthropic principle. Uncle Al's got it. What universe is this anthropic principle looking at? The one which is 80-something percent composed of "dark matter" and "dark energy" which is finely tuned to be completely ununderstandable and imperceptible to us (except as necessary to balance our ambitious equations -- more of a 'precise throwing up the hands in defeat' than an intellect-friendly universe), plus being 99.astronomicalnumbersofnines percent unsupportable of our living bodies? We're hiding in a 'corner', a sweet tit of a gravity well which is by nature temporary and by the relative scales under discussion UNBELEIVABLY BRIEF! I think this anthropic principle is more of a vague 'final cause' thing to suppose that because we exist, there must be some special place for us in the heart of the universe, it must have planned to 'have' us all along. Just so happens I agree with that........ doesn't mean, however, that part of our 'special place' isn't to be wiped out suddenly with no chance to compose our swan song and beam it into space to be inevitably received by some intelligence who can appreciate it. We can't imagine an end or beginning to our collective existence so it has to stretch to the beginning and end of the universe to keep us from screaming. Fine, build that, but keep in mind that it's a will-to-power...... that's an IDEAL we'd like to CREATE...... and we CAN create it, but not by pretending that's the way it....... IS, without us........ MAKING it. The Stark Fist of Removal is ready at any time to cancel our show, and if we don't have an exit strategy we can kiss our eventually-'always-already'-anthropic-universe dreams goodbye. As I see it there is a detailed record that tells anyone that wishes to take a look that from time to time fecies occurs on this little ball.. Volcanoes erupt, rocks fall from the sky, sun burps yada yada yada .... And a new environ is created and if conditions allow new form of life develop.. From a human perspective there is only one way to maintain human evolution, however modified, forever. Find a way to get off this ball..... Sooner or later what has happened before will happen again and there is only so much technology can do to mediate the inevitable... This place we call home is a tiny fraction of one tick of the cosmological clock... We are a little mold covering a chemical soup on a non-descript ball spinning about a un-impressive star on the far edge of a common place galaxy.... But the mind of man wishes for grandiose vistas, To find reason in why he's here at this place and time.. Well I'm here to answer that ..... Fecies Occurs..... And it could occur in a billion places and life in variations we would not recognize as life can form in a blink of a cosmic eye and be over and gone in the same flash... Only when any life finds a way to spread their genetic signature across vast distances will it survive longer than a cosmic second..... Paul R. Mays ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- - Some where within the Quantum State Http://Paul.Mays.Com/story.html http://paul.mays.com/mayday.html http://paul.mays.com/rainy.html "Science commits suicide when it adopts a creed." - Thomas Henry Huxley |
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#10
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"abracad" wrote in message
om... The so-called anthropic principle points out how finely tuned the universe is to support life. The anthropic principle doesn't do any such thing. Apparent fine tuning leads some to resort to the anthropic principle. However, is there any reason to believe this is the only universe that exists or ever existed? Or is it likely or possible that there could be an infinite number of other (less anthropic) universes that co-exist woth this one or have existed throughout eternity? For the anthropic principle to apply to the fine tuning of physics to allow our existence, it basically has to be the case that there were lots of trials, either elsewhere or elsewhen. Sort of like having a multitude of uninhabited planets for each one with intelligent life. Mark Folsom |
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