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07-01-2003, 02:13 PM | #41 | |
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if there was anything about the universe that seemed designed but was not necessary for the existence of intelligent life (like if you wrote some physical constant in binary and treated it as an ASCII code, and it turned out to give the exact text of the Koran or something), then that would be a strong argument for a designer. But life-generating properties can equally well be used to support some sort of multiverse model. |
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07-01-2003, 07:34 PM | #42 |
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Ah - but in a multiverse model, there needs to be a number of universes that approaches infinity. That's an awful lot of universes. Intelligent design seems a simpler explanation than a near-infinite number of universes.
Where would all the stuff to form or define these near-infinite number of universes come from? And then you have to ask, how did the multiverse come to be? These universes probably have some sort of connecting structure, if they come from the same source. Who or what created that structure? And, if there are other universes, then they would have their own time streams - thus you would have multiple dimensions of time, and you would have a dimension of time that encompasses the start and end of universes as well. Thus, some of these extra dimensions of time would be parallel or perpindicular to our time dimension, and they would all be nested inside the outer time dimension. When you start thinking about nested dimensions of time, you get into some pretty crazy cause and effect possibilities - including something that causes itself. If there is a creator (which is not necessarily the same thing as an all powerful God as envisioned by many people), that creator would have to operate in the outer time dimension(s). Hmmm... or.... perhaps we don't exist! That would seem to be the most logical conclusion from all of this. |
07-01-2003, 07:47 PM | #43 | |
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07-01-2003, 08:13 PM | #44 |
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Ah - but in a multiverse model, there needs to be a number of universes that approaches infinity. That's an awful lot of universes. Intelligent design seems a simpler explanation than a near-infinite number of universes. I think a multiverse model is actually simpler theoretically than a single universe, even without an intelligent designer. A single universe will contain all sorts of arbitrary aspects which just have to sort of be taken as brute facts, while a multiverse that encompasses "all possible X's" (whether X represents 'universes with our exact laws of physics', 'universes with the same basic laws but varying constants', of even 'universes with any laws that can be described in terms of some mathematical rule') will contain no more information or arbitrariness than the basic description of "X" itself. Having all possibilities realized is more symmetrical than just having one possibility realized...which set do you think is "simpler", {13, 702, 1284} or {1, 2, 3, 4, ...}? Based on historical experience, I'd also say that Occam's razor generally seems to be a useful guide when stated in terms of theoretical simplicity, but not when stated in terms of economizing the number of physical entities postulated by the theory; in terms of actual physical entities, the reverse is often true, with the more "extravagent" theories trouncing the "simpler" ones. Certainly it's quite extravagent to imagine that each star is a sun in its own right, in a vast universe in which our own solar system is just a tiny speck, while the old view that said the stars were just lights on a dome surrounding the earth required a lot less physical entities. But theoretically, the "each star is a separate sun" view is more economical. The same may be true of multiverse theories. |
07-02-2003, 04:57 AM | #45 | |
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Ichneumon wasps. Rickettsia prowazekii, which causes epidemic typhus. Ebola Zaire. Lion males eating the cubs of a deposed male. Plasmodium falciparum. Elephant seals battling for beach (and hence female) supremecy. Neonatal ophthalmic gonococcal infection. Hookworms. Vibrio cholerae. Kills three children under five years old per minute. Enough for now? TTFN, Oolon |
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07-02-2003, 05:53 AM | #46 | |
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