Greta wrote: ↑Wed Oct 24, 2018 6:39 am
The Everett MW is a different kind of multiverse, separated by something other than space, where they peel off from this reality into new ones. Don't like it, never have.
Yeah, but isn’t the
MWI a prime example of how total nonsense can be inferred from the maths?
In which case (and just out of curiosity), why don’t you like what the maths have to say about multiple worlds from the perspective of Everett’s theory, but seem to have no issue with what the maths have to say about multiple worlds from the perspective of string theory?
Greta wrote: ↑Wed Oct 24, 2018 6:39 am
The 10^500 posited other universes are spatially separated - other big bangs, other zones of reality. It is far from preposterous, as you claim.
Let’s get something straight. I do not think that the existence of 10^500 other universes is preposterous (in truth, to me that number is too small).
However, what I do think is preposterous (as I mentioned earlier) is that just to avoid any hint of intelligence being involved in the creation of our universe, some humans are willing to accept theories that are infinitely worse in terms of logic and plausibility.
Yeah, yeah, I know – “...but it’s all there in the maths...”
But like I said, the maths also lend credence to the Everettian codswallop.
The problem (as I see it) is that we are sitting in the midst of a mystery that not only has us scratching our heads as to where the pre-Bang (“seed-like”) kernel of compressed matter came from...
...but also how it (the “sprouted” seed) managed to self-arrange its constituents into a state of order that defies our comprehension.
Yet the proponents of certain multiverse theories simply want to compound that mystery by applying it to a near infinity of other “seeds” (most of which are duds according to the theories)...
...none of which, btw, takes into account how the essence of life and consciousness fit into the picture (other than the lame ideas associated with the anthropic principle).
In other words, the maths are thoroughly blinkered when it comes to factoring-in the most important aspect of reality (again, the essence of life) – an aspect that would render all of reality completely meaningless if it were missing.
Greta wrote: ↑Wed Oct 24, 2018 6:39 am
You wonder how universes without "stars, planets, and life" can qualify to be called a "universe''. No true Scotsman wears a chastity belt under his kilt. No true universe exists without stars, planets and life?
However,
"stars, planets and life" make up approximate 5% of the universe. There most certainly could be universes consisting only of the majority "dark stuff" that's in our universe, with molecular clouds in conditions that don't allow atoms or other emergent phenomena to form. Also note that for about 300,000 years our universe had no celestial bodies or, obviously, life, but it was still a universe.
Just to highlight the problem of your downplaying of life’s role in the context of reality...
...imagine a situation where all of the universes, and all of the stars and planets, and all of the “dark stuff,” and all of the molecular clouds, etc., are all gathered together into one location, and then give me a single visualizable scenario where any of it would have any reason or purpose whatsoever for existing if life and consciousness did not exist to confer meaning on it.
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