Re: The Multiverse Conundrum
Posted: Sat Oct 27, 2018 6:00 pm
I suggest that if you haven’t ruled it out yet, then perhaps you haven’t fully explored its implications. See this post here – (viewtopic.php?f=23&t=22474&start=75#p323870).Greta wrote: ↑Fri Oct 26, 2018 5:55 am It's true that math can create both real and unreal models.
However, it a mischaracterisation to say that the Everrett interpretation came from the math. In truth, it's a way of trying to explain observation effects of the double slit experiment. I think it is fanciful but, reality is so bizarre, I wouldn't even rule that out.
Yes, we only have one trifling example of life thus far, however, you have failed to provide one single reason for the existence of a solar system, or a galaxy, or a universe if life and consciousness did not exist.
You’re preaching to the choir, Greta, - not to mention an out of character preaching at that - for you never seem to come across as someone who likes to “...range well beyond physics and the other natural sciences...”
Again, the choir here....for I would never ignore such things. I simply don’t attribute their existence to chance.
Therefore, I’m just going to assume that you’re making a rhetorical statement (of which I whole-heartedly agree with, btw).
seeds wrote: ↑Thu Oct 25, 2018 2:55 am 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.
And yet everything that happened in that first 300,000 years, along with everything subsequent to that period, seems to have been impregnated with the teleological impetus to create the perfect setting upon which life could then effloresce from the fabric of the setting itself.Greta wrote: ↑Fri Oct 26, 2018 5:55 am I cannot speak for others but, as far as I know, I never had a reason for existing. However, the conditions were right that an entity such as me could exist, as opposed to your example of a collapsed universe.
Just as atoms played no part in the first 300,000 years of the universe until they emerged, life seems to have played precious little part in the subsequent period (unless there are some thrilling discoveries awaiting us).
It’s as if the primordial processes of the universe somehow knew how much life would enjoy the taste of strawberries and chocolate while gazing at a glorious sun that is gently setting over golden fields...
...(cue Sting – https://youtu.be/Dnj1zshmTE0).
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