Serendipper wrote: ↑Mon Apr 09, 2018 2:58 am
It's a system of government in which priests rule in the name of God.
Where, in the last 1500 years, have "priests" ruled? And have they ever so out-batted the secular authorities that we would really say they "ruled"? I can't imagine.
It's still going on to some extent: "In God we trust"
Heh. That's hardly evidence of a Theocracy. It's hardly evidence of anything more than a residual, cultural nod to Theism. I think most Americans use their money without ever thinking, "Gee, I'd better trust in God if I'm going to spend this."
and we have many laws of morality: drugs, gambling, prostitution, etc making the police essentially armed clergy.
Police as "armed clergy"? Wow. What religion do they serve?
Yup, but that's making a lot of assumptions however.
Not too many. All we have to assume is that the rates of things like the speed of light have remained calculable. That's what made scientists so sure by the middle of last century that the cyclical model was actually dead.
Maybe the process can be better-described by "growing" rather than "exploding"
That's not going to do it as an explanation, I'm afraid. "Growing" already assumes the existence of a living, replicating system, and doesn't even bother to explain it. The great mystery is why there's any order at all, living or not. If the balance of forces within an atom, for example, were marginally different than they are, even things like stars wouldn't form. Matter itself would lack coherence.
or sterile terms like "inflating", especially if order is implied. We could say a plant is a spontaneous ejection of organics from the ground and then pose ourselves the question of how it became ordered.
Maybe the universe grows so large that it disappears then begins again by some process that we don't understand.
Maybe unicorns turn it around. We wouldn't understand that process either; but I wouldn't hold out for it.
No, I think our best scientific evidences are the observable regularities we already have, not the postulating of yet-to-be-found properties that nobody has ever yet discovered. That doesn't mean that what you're suggesting is ultimately utterly impossible, but that it's so improbable as to be about on the level of a wild guess.
What I mean is are there things existing somewhere that had no possibility of existing in our universe? Are those part of "everything"?
If we could ever discover them then they would be another part of our "uni-verse" by definition.
The idea hinges around this universe, so all things that have a probability of happening in this universe, but do not happen, must happen in another universe, but what about the things that had no possibility of happening here, but had a possibility of happening in other universes?
Well, a) we have no evidence of "other universes" even existing, and by definition, can never have any. As I say, if we had evidence of it, then it would just be an extension of the one universe we do know. b) The idea that "other things happen" in universes we can never see or know about has...well, limited utility, shall we say, for us, and c) The idea of science is this: it's a methodology, a way of working within the material "laws" or "regularities" that we do know, not of speculating against that methodology and those material laws, so as to subvert them. Once we do that, we are, by definition, outside of any science. In fact, we wouldn't even know how to use logic or reason in a universe that was different from our own on the ontic level, if such a thing were to exist -- how would we know those same faculties would even apply there?