After all, I'm sure you would agree with the conventional reply when folk ask what is the Universe expanding into. Very quickly you will say it is just the expansion of the metric itself. The Universe is not embedded in some larger space. — apokrisis
the answer seems to be probability. With localized random intensifications of energy in pre-universal space having occurred throughout "time", there was bound to be an intesification profound enough to begin the inverse reaction of the mass-energy equivalence reaction described by E=mc^2. — Michael Zwingli
the force of gravity over a long time in the environment of space, which is of course, a function of the matter itself. — Michael Zwingli
We are considering the formation of large planetary and other space bodies from, essentially, space dust, no? — Michael Zwingli
gravity is a property of the matter it's elf, a function of the mass thereof, and more effective in the environment of space. — Michael Zwingli
any type of "dust", or particulate matter of another name, has mass by the fact of it being matter... — Michael Zwingli
well, first the dust formed inorganic compuonds, which in turn, and in the right environment, eventually formed organic compounds, out of which eventually (in the right environment...in this case the warm primordial sea) were formed the first uniellular organisms, and the rest is evolutionary biology.
2 minutes ago — Michael Zwingli
in the right environment...in this case the warm primordial sea) — Michael Zwingli
From this, one must consider that, while the fact of our human existence might not be a miracle, it is yet miraculous. — Michael Zwingli
"What came before the Big Bang?" questions stimulate some creative thinking on both sides of the Realistic Science versus Idealistic Philosophy divide. And "spontaneous symmetry breaking" is a genius modern myth, along with the math-magical metaphor of instantaneous-inflation-from-nothing-to-cosmos. Relative to the ironic evasive tactic of "no-thing is unstable", the notion of the pre-bang symmetry-of-nothingness is precious. Both sides assume without evidence, that some-thing existed before our space-time era began. But one imagines that what-is-is-what-was. While the other envisions that what-was-is-what-will-be. ???The only answer to Why that does not precipitate an infinite regress and, in effect, begs the question is There Is No Why. Rather: How did the BB come about?' 'Planck era' spontaneous symmetry breaking. — 180 Proof
People who don't believe in God or any higher power like to say that the Big Bang was the start of the universe — HardWorker
You might be thinking just of space and not spacetime. Inertial expansion is flat but accelerating expansion is curved. — apokrisis
But even Linde’s eternal inflation is a story about a fractally branching multiverse so it indeed all branches from one initial starting point. There is a singularity in the need to explain why there was the first Planckian shoot that became the vast tree. — apokrisis
The prevailing view (the dogma) is that space can't be embedded in a higher dimensiolal one. But thats questionable, although the dogma forbids asking this. But 3d space can be immersed in 4d space. Causing expansion to be an illusion. — Prishon
The Ekpyrotic Model of the Universe proposes that our current universe arose from a collision of two three-dimensional worlds (branes) in a space with an extra (fourth) spatial dimension.
Well even if that is the case, that still leaves the question of why there was a Big Bang in the first place. — HardWorker
Planck probably thought that by calculating the smallest possible measurable time or length, that fades into asymptosis or ellipsis, would put an end to such "before the beginning" nonsense. — Gnomon
It would be nice, if for a change, we could just freely speculate on such pre-columbian "what's out there over the horizon?" scenarios, without coming to blows over which party is the biggest idiot : the short-cut-to-India optimists, or the sail-over-the-edge-pessimists. — Gnomon
It could be the case that Universe didn't start at the "point in time" that is its Planckscale event horizon. It could be true that there is a lengthy pre-bang story along the lines of Linde’s eternal inflation or Big Bounce cosmology. It may well be that QG is a theory that sees beyond the Planckscale and finds some kind of spacetime/energy density story that pushes the origin of that spacetime/energy density story into realms that are simply just smaller and hotter.
But these ideas are speculative, simplistic, and don't even tackle the essential questions about why there are these things of spacetime and energy density. Again, we pull folk up who ask what space our Universe is growing into, yet seem untroubled by bouncing cosmologies or branching inflation fields that presume a familiar notion of passing time as the place in which our Big Bang universe appears as just another material development.
I don't really have any objection to any of this — Seppo
If the current projects/paradigms (string theory, supersymmetry, etc) were going to bear fruit, you would have hoped it would have happened by now... and that just hasn't happened, we've been spinning our wheels for decades. — Seppo
I tend to be a bit more conservative in sticking to what is the widely held view of people with actual formal expertise on the subject, hence my comments here sticking to what I guess is sort of the party line on the topic RE quantum gravity and early Big Bang cosmology. — Seppo
Preamble: Most modern metaphysics presumes the laws of reality, the structure of the cosmos, to be contingent. The laws are just whatever they are with no real explanation other than some kind of anthropomorphic accident. This is a view that drives Tegmark and his multiverse speculation and other expressions of modal realism.
But physics itself appears to be closing in on a tale of mathematical necessity, a tale of symmetries and symmetry breaking, which now in metaphysics is also inspiring new schools of thought like Ladyman and Ross’s ontic structural realism - http://www.amazon.com/Every-Thing-Must-Metaphysics-Naturalized/dp/0199573093
So this is a new “emergent Platonism”. It is not that there is a realm of infinite forms – a Platonic ideal for every possible particular entity from triangles to jam jars – but rather that there is a general mathematical inevitability to the structure of nature. Given a starting point of unlimited material freedoms, some kind of prime matter, apeiron or entropic gradient to shape, a world must then self-organise according to certain intelligible principles. And this is what fundamental physics has quietly been doing from Newtonian Mechanics right up to string theory and loop quantum gravity today – systematically following the path leading back to the deep mathematics, the ur-pattern shaping nature.
So this is post about the unification of physics project. And this excellent blog post by Johannes Koelman gives the guts of the argument - http://www.science20.com/hammock_physicist/physical_reality_less_more
I will use it as a jumping off point, particularly this Venn diagram of how the theories form a three-cornered hierarchy of generalisation....
It it just that the party line too often feels like the party members papering over their own divisions and confusions so the general public/taxpayer funders don't catch on to what a mess they might be in.
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