The universe wouldn't surprise me at all if it is fundamentally incoherent to it's own content (for example observers) which are restricted to experiencing time and space from a falsely standardised pov. — Benj96
Philosophy as physics without the maths. — Banno
I think this thread shows that mathematics is insufficient for explaining the reality of physical existence. That's why we've developed philosophy. — Metaphysician Undercover
Philosophical ideas seem to require ream after ream of supporting prattle. — jgill
And without a hierarchy of moral values which only philosophy can provide, your own proposition itself, that "physicists have better things to do", is meaningless prattle. Such a proposition would require reams of support to justify it as sound. — Metaphysician Undercover
So my own conclusion - which I hope does not come across as a cop-out - is that the ultimate origin of our universe is unknown, and is potentially unknowable. And what (if anything) came before may have been some kind of reality that was a lot like ours - but considering that the nature of the universe at t=0 is fundamentally different to what our reality currently is, it seems very reasonable to expect that anything on the other side is likely to have been radically different to our current reality. Maybe even so different that we wouldn't even be able to understand it as anything "real". — Jaded Scholar
I thought you and others might enjoy knowing that most physicists regard String Theorists and other specialists in unprovable/unfalsifiable theories as not really being "physicists", and actually being "mathematical philosophers". ;)
It's a distinction that is not usually made with disrespect (philosophy is a huge part of foundational physics) - but as more of a demarcation of what should be allowed to be called "science". — Jaded Scholar
While I concede that Science itself is not free from biases, but this is one area where the formal position is pretty respectable. This position defines the confirmed existence of the "Big Bang Theory" by the multiple stages of rapid expansion that we know the universe experienced in its first few seconds, days, and years. So we can (and do) know that the Big Bang happened immediately after the birth of the universe, but our knowledge can only get asymptomatically close to "t=0". Our current mathematical models extrapolate the existence of a singularity at t=0, but in every case where they come up, a singularity represents a transition point where our theories (or maybe just our current system of mathematics, or both) stop working and, as far as we can tell, no longer describe reality. — Jaded Scholar
Not only do we not know if or how reality might work on the "other side" of any singularity, we don't know if or how reality might work *at* a singularity. — Jaded Scholar
Not only is it possible that we don't actually understand the birth of the universe, it is an established fact that we do not. — Jaded Scholar
I thought you and others might enjoy knowing that most physicists regard String Theorists and other specialists in unprovable/unfalsifiable theories as not really being "physicists", and actually being "mathematical philosophers". ;) — Jaded Scholar
I thought you and others might enjoy knowing that most physicists regard String Theorists and other specialists in unprovable/unfalsifiable theories as not really being "physicists", and actually being "mathematical philosophers". ;) — Jaded Scholar
I would classify that as metaphysical speculation. — Metaphysician Undercover
What do you think of proposals such as Roger Penrose's CCC, with his supporting evidence of 'Hawking points?' My quals in physics only go as far as year 1, of my BSc(Hons) in Computing Science, (over 30 years ago). Do you assign any significant credence to any of the cyclical or oscillating universe proposals? — universeness
However, some physicists argue that string theory is falsifiable if an experiment shows quantum mechanics fails.
How would you respond to the last sentence, would your response be anything more than 'yeah ..... IF!' — universeness
As a retired mathematician, a "mathematical philosopher" resonates more as someone indulging in mathematical foundations - a topic at the heart of the subject, but one many if not most practitioners have little concern over. — jgill
I hope you stick around. Actual scientists are a rarity here, as are math people. The intersections of science and philosophy can be an entertaining circus. :cool: — jgill
Ditto!it's probably my favourite cyclical model so far. — Jaded Scholar
Does this mean you favour the many worlds proposal, supported by such as Sean Carroll and Alan Guth et al.So while I think we shouldn't assume every other universe is like we think ours is, it seems even more tenuous to assume that every other universe is unlike ours. — Jaded Scholar
Consider that every time we make a temporal measurement there is necessarily a t=0, the point at which the measurement starts ... the very same problem which we have in modeling the Big Bang, exists when we model any temporal reality. — Metaphysician Undercover
In Newtonian mechanics it manifests as an infinite acceleration at the precise moment a force is applied, and in wave mechanics it manifests as the uncertainty of the Fourier transform. — Metaphysician Undercover
So this is the problem with any supposed "point in time", it is a singularity and we cannot understand what exists at a point in time. Accepted conventions place the limit at about the Planck length, but that is dependent on the conventions. — Metaphysician Undercover
Likewise, as explained above, we do not understand the universe at the present, at every moment of passing time. — Metaphysician Undercover
I would classify that as metaphysical speculation. The issue with this speculation which is derived from mathematicians and physicists, is that it tends to rely heavily on the reality of mathematical ideals and geometrical figures. This is known as Pythagorean, or Platonic, idealism. — Metaphysician Undercover
The bit I struggle with, conceptually, is the final 'state' before the 'new Aeon/Big Bang,' begins. — universeness
Could you also help me understand a little more as to why any loop quantum gravity quanta could not turn out to be just another vibrating string state? — universeness
Does this mean you favour the many worlds proposal, supported by such as Sean Carroll and Alan Guth et al. — universeness
When I say "t=0" in this case, I'm using it as a shorthand for the much more difficult-to-characterise hypothetical boundary where our mathematical models interpolate the existence of spacetime itself, as we know it, to exist on this side, and to not be able to exist on the other side. This is very different from what you are talking about; the arbitrary assignment of t=0 on a number line to define the subset of a Cartesian plane that we care about. Though I admit that I did not communicate that at all (in fact, I deliberately avoided it). — Jaded Scholar
This claim about Newtonian mechanics does not make sense. It confused me so much that I honestly think you can't be as wrong as I think and you are more likely to be referring to something I'm not getting. One of the biggest benefits of Newtonian mechanics over pre-Newtonian classical mechanics was that the second law eliminated the artefact of infinite acceleration (except for massless particles). — Jaded Scholar
But I am confident that in your next line you really are just misinterpreting the nature of wave mechanics and/or Fourier transformation. The temporal uncertainty you refer to here has nothing to do with time itself, and is a straightforward result of transformation between any given noncommutative dimensions - none of which are *necessarily* time. — Jaded Scholar
Again, I agree, but do not think this is actually meaningful here, and comes across as actively un-meaningful. Along the lines of: "Sure, we don't understand the Big Bang, but like, do we really understand ANYTHING, man?". — Jaded Scholar
So I'm incredibly confident that the problem of Platonic idealism has been solved, as far as it applies to our mathematical and scientific culture. — Jaded Scholar
I think it is both safe and responsible to assume that one of the fundamental barriers to our full understanding of the universe is that mathematics itself may not yet be sophisticated enough. — Jaded Scholar
Whatever the gaps are, they are not what you described - if we could label them, we could have fixed them by now. — Jaded Scholar
When I say "t=0" in this case, I'm using it as a shorthand for the much more difficult-to-characterise hypothetical boundary where our mathematical models interpolate the existence of spacetime itself, as we know it, to exist on this side, and to not be able to exist on the other side — Jaded Scholar
In Physics, we get mathematical results that can be called "unphysical", but I don't recall any such qualification given a single time in my Complex Theory lectures. — Jaded Scholar
But I think we should assume that there are limits on what mathematics we can imagine, — Jaded Scholar
it's so easy to be shuffled into the category of "I don't know but I know it when I see it" — Jaded Scholar
The power of modern maths is unprecedented, and I am happy to have science popularisers talking about that, but ... less happy to have them included in academia, where I think more people should be realistically considering that some of our gaps could be the result of fundamental problems with mathematics itself. — Jaded Scholar
Similarly, his (and Tononi's) ideas on consciousness seem like they provide interesting opportunities to quantify our observations in a sophistocated way, but if they are useful at all, I think it will be in identifying the specific kinds of mathematics we observe, and allowing us to use that to infer the underlying mechanisms - and nothing like the validation of the metaphysics used to construct those models. — Jaded Scholar
What does it mean for mathematical structures to be "real"? — schopenhauer1
That's not something I had considered before. I assumed some string or perhaps superstring states, were responsible for the actual (for want of a better term) 'fabric' of spacetime itself. I thought that's part of the reason why supersymmetric particles were so sought after at the LHC?and the strings themselves are objects that travel through spacetime (and/or other available degrees of freedom). — Jaded Scholar
But LQG is based on a modification of general relativity, and in GR, gravity is a force both created and enacted by spacetime itself. In a sense, it's not even accurate to describe gravity as a "force" in this setting. LQG attempts to unify GR with QM by quantising spacetime itself. So LQG quanta are not just the mediators of gravity, they are also, in a way, the origin of gravity and the medium in which its effects occur. — Jaded Scholar
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