Physics is all about predicting the future from the past, but inflation seems to sabotage this. When we try to predict the probability that something particular will happen, inflation always gives the same useless answer: infinity divided by infinity. The problem is that whatever experiment you make, inflation predicts there will be infinitely many copies of you, far away in our infinite space, obtaining each physically possible outcome; and despite years of teeth-grinding in the cosmology community, no consensus has emerged on how to extract sensible answers from these infinities. So, strictly speaking, we physicists can no longer predict anything at all! — Tegmark
Infinity Doesn’t Exist — Tegmark
Consider, for example, the air in front of you. Keeping track of the positions and speeds of octillions of atoms would be hopelessly complicated. But if you ignore the fact that air is made of atoms and instead approximate it as a continuum—a smooth substance that has a density, pressure, and velocity at each point—you’ll find that this idealized air obeys a beautifully simple equation explaining almost everything we care about: how to build airplanes, how we hear them with sound waves, how to make weather forecasts, and so forth. Yet despite all that convenience, air of course isn’t truly continuous. I think it’s the same way for space, time, and all the other building blocks of our physical world. — Tegmark
Not only do we lack evidence for the infinite but we don’t need the infinite to do physics. Our best computer simulations, accurately describing everything from the formation of galaxies to tomorrow’s weather to the masses of elementary particles, use only finite computer resources by treating everything as finite. So if we can do without infinity to figure out what happens next, surely nature can, too—in a way that’s more deep and elegant than the hacks we use for our computer simulations. — Tegmark
Our challenge as physicists is to discover this elegant way and the infinity-free equations describing it—the true laws of physics. To start this search in earnest, we need to question infinity. I’m betting that we also need to let go of it. — Tegmark
But, for a spacefaring civilization to not care, or having a prime-directive against intervention--I feel that any technically-advanced civilization would also be morally-advanced, and would want to help us. ...because it would be grossly obvious to anyone, even aliens, that we're badly in need of help here. — Michael Ossipoff
I also don't share your desire for them to solve our problems for us. Seems to me they are as likely to make things worse as better. — T Clark
Maybe Tegmark has good justification, now, for saying that it isn't. — Michael Ossipoff
I seem to remember from Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance that rhetoric is regarded as one of the lesser arts. Reasoning for the purpose of winning an argument is inferior to reasoning for the purpose of discovering truth. If I understood all that correctly. — fishfry
I seem to remember from Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance that rhetoric is regarded as one of the lesser arts. Reasoning for the purpose of winning an argument is inferior to reasoning for the purpose of discovering truth. If I understood all that correctly. — fishfry
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