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Multiverse may be falsifiable
OpposingArgument
1
#107348
CONTEXT
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The Arrow of Time »
The Arrow of Time
The Arrow of Time ☜A map exploring some issues concerning the nature of time that lie at the boundary of physics and philosophy. The map follows up a talk to the Blackheath Philosophy Forum on 2 April 2011 by Huw Price, Professor of Philosophy and director of the Center for Time at Sydney University.☜F1CEB7
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The physics of time »
The physics of time
The physics of time☜Is our subjective sense that time has a direction from past to future reflected in impersonal physical processes and laws? Is it better - from the impersonal viewpoint - to look asymmetries in time rather than a direction (to the future) of time?☜FFB597
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The thermodynamic arrow »
The thermodynamic arrow
The thermodynamic arrow☜The Second Law of Thermodynamics implies an arrow of time in the sense that the entropy (or disorder) of an isolated system such as the whole universe never decreases - it either increases or remains constant.☜59C6EF
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Why do we see an entropy gradient? »
Why do we see an entropy gradient?
Why do we see an entropy gradient?☜We find ourselves in an observable universe in which entropy increases consistently in one direction, thereby showing time asymmetry - an arrow of time. Yet the vast majority of underlying dynamical processes are time-symmetric. How to account for this? Two broad approaches are considered here.☜FFB597
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Asymmetric boundary condition »
Asymmetric boundary condition
Asymmetric boundary condition☜We see entropy increasing because: 1. An isolated system in a less than maximal entropy state will spontaneously evolve toward higher entropy. 2. We inhabit a universe (or part thereof) at less than maximal entropy. Both must be true for the explanation to work.☜59C6EF
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Past hypothesis »
Past hypothesis
Past hypothesis☜We inhabit a universe - or part thereof - characterized by a low-entropy past that has enabled the evolution of intelligent observers to occur. This together with Boltzmanns probabilistic argument (see sibling node) implies entropy will increase over time toward thermal equilibrium.☜9FDEF6
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Why low entropy in the past? »
Why low entropy in the past?
Why low entropy in the past?☜How do we account for the low entropy of the early universe reflected in the extreme - but not perfect - homogeneity of the distribution of matter and energy shortly after the Big Bang? When gravity is prominent - as in the early universe - a smooth distribution is unstable and of low entropy.☜FFB597
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Anthropic selection »
Anthropic selection
Anthropic selection☜Several explanations have been offered that rely on (weak) anthropic selection to explain the low entropy past. They all note that conscious observers can only exist in an environment far from thermodynamic equilibrium, but differ on how the we came to be in such a state.☜59C6EF
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Low entropy generators »
Low entropy generators
Low entropy generators☜In a universe/multiverse of large - possibly infinite - extent extremely improbable events can be expected to happen in at least some locations and times. Such events will include fluctuations into a low-entropy configuration. There are several hypotheses as to the nature of such fluctuations.☜9FDEF6
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Source of low-entropy states »
Source of low-entropy states
Source of low-entropy states☜What processes could give rise to the existence of regions of spacetime well away from thermodynamic equilibrium required in order for conscious observers to evolve? Several proposals are appended to this node☜FFB597
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Fluctuations in de Sitter space »
Fluctuations in de Sitter space
Fluctuations in de Sitter space☜Cosmologist Sean Carroll has proposed that low entropy may result from fluctuations in De Sitter space - a vacuum except for dark energy and the end point of expanding space time. Some fluctuations lead to cosmological inflation, giving rise to smooth low entropy baby universes - like ours.☜59C6EF
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Multiverse theories unscientific »
Multiverse theories unscientific
Multiverse theories unscientific☜Philosopher of science Karl Popper claimed that a theory is unscientific if it is unfalsifiable by observation or experiment. Since other universes in the multiverse are unobservable, their existence cannot be falsified or confirmed. Hence the theory is unscientific.☜EF597B
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Multiverse may be falsifiable
Multiverse may be falsifiable☜☜EF597B
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[1]
Physics in the multiverse (article)
Author:
Aurélien Barrau - CERN Courier (December 2007)
Cited by:
Peter Baldwin
7:32 AM 13 May 2011 GMT
URL:
http://lpsc.in2p3.fr/ams/aurelien/aurelien/CCDecMULTIV.pdf
Excerpt / Summary
"Clearly, predictions can only be made probabilistically, but this is already true in standard physics. The fact that we can observe only one sample (our own universe) does not change the method qualitatively and still allows the refuting of models at given confidence levels. The key points here are the well known peculiarities of cosmology, even with only one universe: the observer is embedded within the system described; the initial conditions are critical; the experiment is “locally” irreproducible; the energies involved have not been experimentally probed on Earth; and the arrow of time must be conceptually reversed.
However, this statistical approach to testing the multiverse suffers from severe technical short cuts. First, while it seems natural to identify the prior probability with the fraction of volume occupied by a given vacuum, the result depends sensitively on the choice of a space-like hypersurface on which the distribution is to be evaluated. This is the so-called “measure problem” in the multiverse. Second, it is impossible to give any sensible estimate of fi. This would require an understanding of what life is – and even of what consciousness is – and that simply remains out of reach for the time being. Except in some favourable cases — for example when all the universes of the multiverse present a given characteristic that is incompatible with our universe — it is hard to refute explicitly a model in the multiverse. But difficult in practice does not mean intrinsically impossible. The multiverse remains within the realm of Popperian science. It is not qualitatively different from other proposals associated with usual ways of doing physics. Clearly, new mathematical tools and far more accurate predictions in the landscape (which is basically totally unknown) are needed for falsifiability to be more than an abstract principle in this context. Moreover, falsifiability is just one criterion among many possible ones and it should probably not be over-determined."
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Entry date (GMT):
5/13/2011 7:25:00 AM
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