You are right that there are far more configurations of things than of nothing, making something more likely over time — Kenosha Kid
anthropic principle — Kenosha Kid
You say it better than me!
Thanks for putting a mathematical spin to it.
I was wondering about what I initially thought was a problem for my answer to the fundamental question of metaphysics:
Assuming that the only possible configurations of
something are: {A, 7, and (A, 7)} each of these being
something, only one of these configurations could be conducive to life but then that means:
P(nothing) = 1/4 and P(something with life) = 1/4 which still leaves us with having to explain why
something rather than
nothing. It finally dawned on me that this isn't necessarily the case. Life could exist in configuration A or 7 or (A, 7) or all of them even if only in vastly different forms. Anyway, what I want to say is, the
anthropic principle is relevant in this regard.
Do you have any idea about the physical constants of the universe as it relates to the anthropic principle? I remember downloading a book titled "Just Six Numbers" about how the universe wouldn't have evolved in the way it did to permit life if the values of one or more of six physical constants in the universe had been different. I haven't gotten round to reading it though. I will...someday.
By the way, assuming my argument to be true, can you mathematize it better?
I'll give you a rough sketch of how I approached the question of why there is something rather than nothing:
1. Possibilities:
Nothing or
Something
2. There's only 1 kind of
nothing
But
3. There are many kinds of
something. It makes sense if we look at it mathematically. 1 thing is
something, 2 things are
something,...n things are
something,...ad infinitum. Each one of these somethings would need to be considered independently. Why? All I can do here is offer an analogy. If a bag contained 1 black ball and 3 white balls, a total of 4 balls, the probability of picking a white ball = 3/4. Each 1 of the 3 white balls is treated as probabilistically independent i.e. each white ball, by itself, matters. Too, lumping all of these possible
somethings together would be
everything and that's not what the fundamental question of metaphysics is asking. The question is not why is there
everything and not
nothing? but rather why is there
something rather than
nothing?
By the way, I propose another
fundamental question of metaphysics viz. why is there
something rather than
everything?
4. Ergo, given that
nothing is just 1 possibility, the probability of
something if
something consists of 1 thing or 2 things or 3 things...n things = n/(1+n). Remembering that
something is
at least ONE, n can extend to infinity. What happens to n/(1+n) as n approaches infinity? It approaches 1 or 100%. That means the probability of
something existing rather than
nothing is 100% and that's just another way of saying
something is certain (100%) to exist.
:chin: