This is the most sophisticated OP I've seen in the eleven months I've been here. — jgill
I'm curious about the images; where did they come from? — jgill
I see analogous phenomena in dynamical systems in CC: attracting fixed points and repelling fixed points, then there are indifferent fixed points that may combine the features of the two. I wonder if there are cosmological similarities of the latter? — jgill
I'm extremely worried that it might be read as a theory in itself, whereas it's meant more as an illustration that on-going, high-profile research in a field that is itself a tad loosey-goosey shows that there is a lot of obvious potential for massive paradigm shifts in some pretty fundamental areas. — Kenosha Kid
Yes, you start off with the implication that you're going to discuss determinism, and by the end all I got were several different theories of big bang cosmology. =D — Philosophim
The idea that black holes sucked up the universe, then exploded into a big bang again has been around for decades at least. I suppose what is exciting is the actual science to back up the theories? What is the major cosmology shift you see in all of this? — Philosophim
Penrose is one of many theorists who have concluded that they are the same arrow of time. — Kenosha Kid
Just because both arrows point in the same direction does not mean they are the same. — EnPassant
I just finished reading Carlo Rovelli's book The Order of Time which is an attempt to argue that time is a function of entropy. His arguments are very weak and confused. — EnPassant
According to Penrose’s conformal cyclic cosmology, the universe goes through an infinite series of “aeons,” each of which starts with a phase resembling a big bang, then forming galactic structures as usual, then cooling down as stars die. In the end the only thing that’s left are evaporating black holes and thinly dispersed radiation. Penrose then conjectures a slight change to particle physics that allows him to attach the end of one aeon to the beginning of another, and everything starts anew with the next bang.
This match between one aeon’s end and another’s beginning necessitates the introduction of a new field – the “erebon” – that makes up dark matter, and that decays throughout the coming aeon. — Sabine Hossenfelder
I can’t comment on the science, but the idea of a cyclical cosmology has an ancient provenance; it’s reminiscent of Hindu cosmology which has always said the Universe expands and contracts over ‘aeons of kalpas’. — Wayfarer
what’s your view of Sabine Hossenfelder? She has some pretty savage criticisms of current particle physics. — Wayfarer
And finally - I’ve noticed a few times your remark on the ‘creation and destruction’ of sub-atomic particles. This generally takes place also over cosmic time-scales doesn’t it? Like, many of the elements are created in stellar explosions, but then they last for cosmic periods of time after they’re created. Do I understand it right? — Wayfarer
But what about 'quantum time'? If the mathematics that describe change in the quantum world are different from the mathematics of change in the physical world then are there not two (space)times? Quantum time and physical time? Are the mathematics of quantum change sufficiently different from relativity to justify the idea that quantum particles live in a different spacetime? — EnPassant
Allow me to ask you a question. — EnPassant
Are the mathematics of quantum change sufficiently different from relativity to justify the idea that quantum particles live in a different spacetime? — EnPassant
I wonder if we're doomed to impose our own mythologies on everything we encounter... — Kenosha Kid
It’s more that everything in nature goes through cycles of creation and destruction....why should the Universe be different? (Oh, and I don’t know if Indian cosmology is ‘my own’ ... actually Carl Sagan did a TV episode on that idea way back...) — Wayfarer
I presented it as a need for two distinct concepts of space. You present it as a need for two distinct concepts of spacetime. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is one of the reasons why the ontological status of the wavefunction is doubted. — Kenosha Kid
The idea that it is a real thing gives rise to all kinds of nonsense involving reality splitting into multiple universes etc. It seems to me to be a convenient mathematical device, nothing more. — EnPassant
A mathematical device with an astounding ability to predict experimental outcomes, even at a statistical level, demands explanation. — Kenosha Kid
They are effectively acting in a random way. — EnPassant
So, what is happening here is that an n-dimensional event in quantum spacetime is projected onto the surface of a 4-dimensional physical spacetime. Say n = 10. This means 6 dimensions of information are lost because a 10 dimensional event is compressed into 4 dimensions. — EnPassant
Cyclic universes have no real empirical basis... — Kenosha Kid
As they have explored the metaphysical landscape of a mathematically-defined independent reality, the theorists have misappropriated and abused the word ‘discovery.’ So, they ‘discovered’ that elementary particles are strings or membranes. They ‘discovered’ that there must be a supersymmetry between different types of particle. They ‘discovered’ that the theory demands six extra spatial dimensions which must be compactified into a space so small we can never experience them. They ‘discovered’ that the five different types of superstring theory are subsumed in an over-arching structure called ‘M-theory.’ Then, because they ‘discovered’ that there are 10-to-the-power-500 different ways of compactifying the extra dimensions, each of these must describe a different type of universe in a multiverse of possibilities. Finally, they ‘discovered’ that the universe is the way it is because this is one of the few universes in the landscape of 10-to-the-power-500 different kinds that is compatible with our existence.
I want you to be clear that these are not discoveries, at least in the sense of scientific discoveries. They are assumptions or conclusions that logically arise from the mathematics but for which there is absolutely no empirical evidence. It’s not really so surprising that the theory struggles to make any testable predictions. There is simply no way back to empirical reality from here. — Jim Baggott
I'd prefer to refer to what you call the "n-dimensional" as non-dimensional. — Metaphysician Undercover
There is simply no way back to empirical reality from here. — Jim Baggott
Whatever the case may be, if there are two mathematically different universes then detection is when a trace effect is left on the interface between the two universes. But quantum time must be in the equations somewhere. — EnPassant
Neither do multiverses or the many-worlds interpretation — Wayfarer
Those damn Copenhagenists should stay in Copenhagen, where they belong, and forget about the universe. — Ciceronianus the White
And we certainly wouldn't expect a WHL big bang to just quickly spew out galaxies the way this black hole is apparently gobbling them up. — Kenosha Kid
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