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03-01-2002, 04:45 AM | #21 | |
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You do know that in quantum physics there can be effects with causes, right? "Not only is the universe stranger than we think; it is stranger than we can imagine." -Albert Einstein [ March 01, 2002: Message edited by: Corey Hammer ]</p> |
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03-01-2002, 08:10 AM | #22 | |
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-Albert Einstein "And that beenbag robot bloke in the wheelchair". -Albert Einstein |
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03-01-2002, 08:24 AM | #23 |
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I don't think that quote is from Einstein, Cory.
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03-01-2002, 09:25 AM | #24 |
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"Not only is the universe stranger than we think, it is stranger than we can think." --Werner Heisenberg
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03-01-2002, 09:32 AM | #25 | |
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03-01-2002, 09:57 AM | #26 |
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This is the quote as I found it in my resaerch. Just put your original quote into a search engine...I used Yahoo
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03-31-2002, 09:41 AM | #27 | |
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Does the Heisenberg principle really allow for the possibility (however vanishingly small) for a dog to pop out of nothingness? Or is this a misunderstanding/misapplication of the Heisenberg principle - a situation where the layman has oversimplified what it means, and accidentally created a non-supportable claim? Thanks. |
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03-31-2002, 10:10 AM | #28 | |
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By Echidna:
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Yours, Antti (the layman) |
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03-31-2002, 07:30 PM | #29 | ||
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of Quantum Mechanics</a>. The main feature of his theory is that causality can be maintained within quantum mechanics if you will just look at things differently. I don't know string theory well enough to know if it is consistant with causality in all respects, but I do know that it unifies relativity (which is entirely causal) with quantum mechanics (which has at least some interpretations where causality is not maintained). Frankly, I would far prefer if causality were fundamental rather than an emergent quality at higher levels of reality. But I may not get my preference when the final Theory of Everything (ToE) is formulated. Until then, I continue to preach causality even at the quantum level, based upon ideas taken from Cramer and others. And I continue to believe that what appears to be acausal within quantum mechanics will eventually be seen to be fully causal, once all of the inputs and outputs are fully understood. And as for other universes, the Theory of Everything (ToE) will cover them too. == Bill |
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03-31-2002, 07:40 PM | #30 |
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As I read through this thread, I see a basic confusion here over word usage. Both sides of the debate over whether or not the "universe" can emerge from "nothing" are correct. They are just using different definitions for the words "universe" and "nothing."
Some people use the word "universe" to refer to only that space/time continuum which emerged from the so-called "Big Bang." When those people speak of the space/time continuum out of which the "Big Bang" emerged, and the possibility of other (parallel) space/time continuums existing, they use the word "multiverse" to refer to that possibility. On the other hand, people like myself will frequently use the word "universe" to mean what most people take it to mean: "all that exists." In this sense, the "Big Bang" space/time continuum is most assuredly not "the universe" because it is clear that a plethora of other space/time continuums can exist, and that at least one other space/time continuum most certainly does exist (the one out of which the "Big Bang" emerged). The word "nothing" also invokes a similar confusion. To a philosopher, "nothing" connotates the ontological state of non-existence. To a physicist, the word "nothing" connotates a quantum vacuum. Strictly speaking, a quantum vacuum cannot truly be the "nothing" of the philosopher because that quantum vacuum state exists within a space/time continuum. The existence of that space/time continuum allows for the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle to operate, and that principle allows for quantum fluctuations to occur within the state of quantum vacuum, and it is just such a fluctuation (within the state of quantum vacuum) which the authors of the article in Discover are referring to. However, that fluctuation most certainly did not occur within "a state of non-existence" (the philosophical "nothing") because the quantum fluctuation requires at least a state of quantum vacuum to exist, and that in turn requires an entire space/time continuum to exist. Hopefully, after reading through all of this, you will now undertand the confusion which has beset this thread, and we can be on to better understanding the realities with which we ought to be dealing here..... == Bill |
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