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06-24-2003, 01:07 PM | #21 |
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a) How do we know that there isn't life in every single solar system? We don't
b) If we exist in a universe that supports life, how do we know that life is unlikely? We don't c) If life only exists in a universe that supports life (this seems to be necessarily true), any universe that contains life will necessarily seem "lucky" to the life that exists to examine such a situation. The multiverse is irrelevant. |
06-24-2003, 01:30 PM | #22 | |
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Suppose you know that you are the product of an automatic in vitro fertilization machine that's supposed to randomly pick a frozen sperm and frozen egg, unfreeze them and allow them to fertilize, and then incubate the resulting embryo in an artificial womb for 9 months. Unfortunately the machine is malfunctioning, so on 99.999% of its runs it can be expected to do something which will prevent a baby from being created, like bring together two sperm cells instead of a sperm and an egg, or like keeping the artificial womb at 50 degrees instead of 98.6 degrees. You also know that at some point after it was turned on, it broke down completely. Armed only with the knowledge that you were a product of this machine, would you think it more likely that it had gone through many runs before breaking down, or only a small number, perhaps even one? Of course your answer to this question should depend somewhat on your a priori beliefs about the probability that such a machine would run X number of trials, but assuming you don't rate it as too unlikely a priori that it ran quite a few times before breaking down, the additional knowledge that you exist and were a product of one of those runs should lead you to conclude it's more likely that the number was large. |
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06-24-2003, 01:37 PM | #23 | |
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c) If life only exists in a universe that supports life (this seems to be necessarily true), any universe that contains life will necessarily seem "lucky" to the life that exists to examine such a situation. You assume this universe is one of the first to exist, when this universe could of possibly existed in hunderds of thousands of billions of trillions of different forms before ours, and we are the only ones to notice how "lucky" we are because we are alive and in a universe that supports life. If there were that many prior universes (or infinitely many), any chance above 0 for life existing in a universe (which is clearly above 0 since we exist) will have a good chance of happening. |
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06-24-2003, 02:09 PM | #24 |
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c) If life only exists in a universe that supports life (this seems to be necessarily true), any universe that contains life will necessarily seem "lucky" to the life that exists to examine such a situation. But if there is only one universe, it may be extremely unlikely that there is any life to examine anything. Your statement is a bit like if the person who had been created by the baby-making machine I described above said "if adult minds can only be created on successful runs of the machine, then any intelligences able to comprehend their situation will observe they were the result of a very luck run." True, but I'd say it doesn't change the fact that such a person should say that their own existence makes it more likely that the machine ran many times than that it only ran once (assuming the a priori probability of running many times is not too fantastically low)--do you agree or disagree? Normal: You assume this universe is one of the first to exist, when this universe could of possibly existed in hunderds of thousands of billions of trillions of different forms before ours, and we are the only ones to notice how "lucky" we are because we are alive and in a universe that supports life. What are you talking about? My whole argument was to support the idea that the observed anthropic coincidences make it more plausible that our universe is not the only one, and that there are a large number of other ones. I was responding to your claim that "the multiverse is irrelevant"--I think it is relevant, because observing anthropic coincidences makes it more likely that there are other universes or other regions of space with different, less "lucky" values of physical constants. |
06-24-2003, 02:18 PM | #25 | ||
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My point was that if our own universe is in a constant state of expansion-collapse, and has been so "timelessly", then the multiverse is irrelevant and all that needs to exist is our own universe. Any chance above 0 for life existing (it is clearly above 0), will mean life will eventually exist. |
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06-24-2003, 02:31 PM | #26 | |
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The probability calculated deals only with life as we know it. If the universal constants were different, yes, life as we know it might not exist - but that doesn't mean life would not. Another way of looking at this is goldfish... I wish I knew who to accredit this parable to.. goldfish grow to suit their environment; the larger the bowl, the larger the goldfish. The goldfish looks at the bowl that it's grown to fit and says 'this bowl fits me too perfectly to be simply chance, it must have been designed JUST for ME.' Not so, it's just some plain ordinary goldfish bowl that it's grown to fit. Life's like that, it adapts to it's environment; if there were a different environment, there might be different life. So in summary, unless we can calculate every possible combination of universes and life within those universes, you and I are really not qualified to give anything but an 'I don't know' as to the odds of life occuring. |
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06-24-2003, 02:32 PM | #27 |
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My interpretation of the "multiverse" was that it entailed numerous universes existing simutaniously in parallels. I think this detail is extraneous and that the only universe that needs to exist is our own. My point was that if our own universe is in a constant state of expansion-collapse, and has been so "timelessly", then the multiverse is irrelevant and all that needs to exist is our own universe. Any chance above 0 for life existing (it is clearly above 0), will mean life will eventually exist. OK, I gotcha. I'd consider expansion-collapse-expansion with different constants each time to be a sort of variation on the multiverse, just like the idea of a spatially infinite universe in which different regions (separated by domain walls) have different constants can also be considered a variation on it. I think the "bouncing universe" idea, where each collapse leads to a new big bang, has fallen out of favor among physicists, although chaotic inflation is similar in some ways. |
06-24-2003, 02:46 PM | #28 | |
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06-24-2003, 03:04 PM | #29 | |
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06-24-2003, 03:55 PM | #30 | |
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