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PostPosted: Sun Sep 12, 2010 6:02 am 
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So, am I just an ignoramus or does this make no sense?

"given the existence of gravity, the universe can and will create itself from nothing"


http://edition.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/europ ... &wom=false

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(CNN) -- Theology is unnecessary. So says Stephen Hawking, the world-famous physicist who controversially argues in a new book that God did not create the universe.

"God may exist, but science can explain the universe without the need for a creator," Hawking told CNN's "Larry King Live" in an interview that aired Friday.

Hawking, 68, says in his book "The Grand Design" that, given the existence of gravity, the universe can and will create itself from nothing. "Spontaneous creation," he writes, is the reason why the universe and humanity exist.

"Gravity and quantum theory cause universes to be created spontaneously out of nothing," Hawking told Larry King.

King asked Hawking why he thinks people have reacted so strongly to his book.

"Science is increasingly answering questions that used to be the province of religion," Hawking replied. "The scientific account is complete. Theology is unnecessary."

Hawking said his book is an attempt to give a "broad picture of how the universe operates and our place in it. It is a basic human desire and it also puts our worries in perspective."

The idea behind it is "M-theory," which, he says, allows there to be many universes that were created out of nothing, none of which required the intervention of God.

That's because if there are many universes, one will have laws of physics like ours -- and in such a universe, something not only can, but must, arise from nothing, Hawking says. Therefore, he concludes, there's no need for God to have played a part.

That's the point of his book, Hawking told King -- "that science can explain the universe, and that we don't need God to explain why there is something rather than nothing, or why the laws of nature are what they are."

Hawking said that if he could travel through time -- which he said is theoretically possible -- he would go to the future to "find if M-theory is indeed a theory of everything."

Hawking has ALS, or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, which has confined him to a wheelchair and leaves him unable to speak without the help of a computerized voice synthesizer. The disease is also known as Lou Gehrig's Disease in the United States and motor neuron disease, or MND, in Britain.

He told King he's doing "pretty well" with the disease, 45 years after he was first diagnosed. The disease has a life expectancy of two to five years, according to the ALS Association.

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 12, 2010 8:44 am 
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I'm no quantum physicist, and in fact, my opinion of quantum theory is that, although it appears to be quite accurate, it requires a suspension of conventional logic in order to even begin to understand it, and i'm not sure what M-Theory --an extension of string theory-- has to do with it (and I'm skeptical about String Theory to begin with, since it is unfalsifiable it resembles religion more than science), but if I understand correctly, String Theory allows for an infinite number of possible universes, and in an infinite number of universes representing all legitimate possibilities, random chance becomes nonexistent. Even without a creator, we are guaranteed to exist, in at least one universe.

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 12, 2010 9:16 am 
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I find string theory and M theory very interesting, but I guess I'd have to read the book for a fuller explanation. Although lately Hawking seems like he's going more and more over the edge.

As I see it one thing or another needs to be eternal, either the universe (or seed of said universe) or a creator. That or you need to just have some sort of blind faith that something came from nothing... Just cause it did that's why!

Explaining the universe in terms of a classic big bang or Guth's inflation theory or multiple universes caused by massive branes colliding or whatever... just pushes the question back to: "ok well where did x come from then?" where x is whatever you're using to explain the creation of our universe.

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 12, 2010 9:22 am 
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The question of "First Cause" is not a logical problem unique to an atheistic construct of the universe, because the problem also exists for the theist ("Ok well where did X come from then?" where X=God), whether or not they choose to ignore it. Regardless, "something from nothing" isn't really entertained seriously by any science. As you said, some "seed" must have always* existed, be it God, or some other factor. An eternal God is no more logical than some less sentient eternal element --and Occam's Razor suggests the less sentient path as being the more likely place to start looking.

*-The word "Always" highlights another problem with this line of questioning, both for the theist and the atheist -- we are attaching the existence of "time" as we know it to the issue. We assume "eternity" actually exists, in either direction. In fact, the moment of creationmay have started the whole process of time. We already know for an absolute, testable fact that the flow of time is not a constant (hell, time dilation effects actually had to be factored into the calibration of the clocks on GPS satellites), and it may not even have always existed, nor is it guaranteed to always exist in the future. Assuming the Big Bang Theory as fact, for instance, relativity implies that time itself started to flow with the Bang. I'm not discussing merely the perception of time, but the actual flow of time itself. It very well could have been "the beginning of time." For the Theist, this actually helps answer an unfathomable question, "What did God do alone in the void during the eternity before Creation?" There was no eternity before creation. If God exists, then He created time itself.

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 12, 2010 10:48 am 
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I suspect that's more of CNN and Larry King taking Hawking out of context and selectively pruning whatever he said for media use. I'd look for an unedited transcript first.

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Last edited by Khross on Sun Sep 12, 2010 3:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 12, 2010 11:07 am 
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Talya wrote:
The question of "First Cause" is not a logical problem unique to an atheistic construct of the universe, because the problem also exists for the theist ("Ok well where did X come from then?" where X=God), whether or not they choose to ignore it. Regardless, "something from nothing" isn't really entertained seriously by any science. As you said, some "seed" must have always* existed, be it God, or some other factor. An eternal God is no more logical than some less sentient eternal element --and Occam's Razor suggests the less sentient path as being the more likely place to start looking.



I think we're in agreement. Or at least that sounds like what I was trying to get across. Universe always existed or God always existed, thus there is no answer to where did either come from. As for Occams Razor I'd disagree if we're talking a single, non-infinite universe. Now that theories of multiverses and such are abound it seems even more convoluted. It's far too well structured to be a lucky one time thing if it only happened one time.

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 12, 2010 11:15 am 
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After reading about/contemplating what makes the universe tick (or at least, our understanding of how it ticks), there is no way that these incredibly complex processes could have come about without some sort of divine creative force. Whether that is the Christian God, or any other god for that matter, is unknowable at this time. But for as powerful of forces as gravity and quantum mechanics are, I just don't buy the whole "spontaneous creation" thing. Obviously, Hawking is a brilliant man who understands way more about physics than I do, so I will differ to him on those issues. But he, like me, is ultimately only making an assumption based on the evidence available to him.

There's got to be something more, IMO.

It's like the whole evolution vs creation debate.

To me the logical answer is . . . *drumroll* God (or some other divine entity) used evolution to create life on Earth.


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PostPosted: Sun Sep 12, 2010 11:47 am 
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This doesn't make much sense to me based on what I know of Hawking- especially since the bet that time travel is possible was settled decades ago (the conclusion being that it isn't).

Also it supposes that gravity pre-exists our universe which Hawking would know to be rubbish. The only thing I can get out of this is that people are reporting things out of context.

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 12, 2010 12:18 pm 
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Elmarnieh wrote:
Also it supposes that gravity pre-exists our universe which Hawking would know to be rubbish.


Gravity is merely the curvature of space that takes place around mass. If one presupposes the Big Bang Theory to be correct, then gravity surely did exist before the universe, else the supermassive singularity which exploded would not have existed.

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 12, 2010 12:21 pm 
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Gravity is a force along with the strong, weak and electromagnetic forces, complete with a particle, in theory although afaik it's yet to have been found.

None of it is making much sense to me, and I'm trying to give him the benefit of the doubt. This is harder lately since Hawking has been on about space aliens coming to suck our resources dry and such.

Anyway in this excerpt he says a "law such as gravity" not gravity itself, maybe that's somehow relevant although I dont see how. And the bit about observing another planet orbiting another star, again, was that really questioned? Was anyone out there saying "see?! where else would you find the star and planet set up??? Musta been the G man!"

http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2010/ ... ng-creator

Quote:
God did not create the universe, the man who is arguably Britain's most famous living scientist says in a forthcoming book.

In the new work, The Grand Design, Professor Stephen Hawking argues that the Big Bang, rather than occurring following the intervention of a divine being, was inevitable due to the law of gravity.

In his 1988 book, A Brief History of Time, Hawking had seemed to accept the role of God in the creation of the universe. But in the new text, co-written with American physicist Leonard Mlodinow, he said new theories showed a creator is "not necessary".

The Grand Design, an extract of which appears in the Times today, sets out to contest Sir Isaac Newton's belief that the universe must have been designed by God as it could not have been created out of chaos.

"Because there is a law such as gravity, the universe can and will create itself from nothing," he writes. "Spontaneous creation is the reason there is something rather than nothing, why the universe exists, why we exist.

"It is not necessary to invoke God to light the blue touch paper and set the universe going."


In the forthcoming book, published on 9 September, Hawking says that M-theory, a form of string theory, will achieve this goal: "M-theory is the unified theory Einstein was hoping to find," he theorises.

"The fact that we human beings – who are ourselves mere collections of fundamental particles of nature – have been able to come this close to an understanding of the laws governing us and our universe is a great triumph."

Hawking says the first blow to Newton's belief that the universe could not have arisen from chaos was the observation in 1992 of a planet orbiting a star other than our Sun. "That makes the coincidences of our planetary conditions – the single sun, the lucky combination of Earth-sun distance and solar mass – far less remarkable, and far less compelling as evidence that the Earth was carefully designed just to please us human beings," he writes.

Hawking had previously appeared to accept the role of God in the creation of the universe. Writing in his bestseller A Brief History Of Time in 1988, he said: "If we discover a complete theory, it would be the ultimate triumph of human reason – for then we should know the mind of God."

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 12, 2010 12:33 pm 
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The one point my simple brain cannot grasp.

If there is literally nothing, how can gravity have any affect on it ?


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PostPosted: Sun Sep 12, 2010 12:46 pm 
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Gravity is itself something, in the form of a Graviton particle, as predicted by string theory anyway. I also remember in Guth's inflation theory he mentions gravity coming about some absurdly small amount of time after the big bang. It's actually some weird function of gravity that Guth suggests caused the inflation.

Hmm and in looking into it I find this:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Guth

Quote:
According to Guth’s theory of cosmic inflation, the universe originated from a false vacuum filled with high energy. The existence of a repulsive gravitational field caused the universe to enter a great period of exponential expansion. He realized that the expansion was so quick that in only 10−33 seconds, it was 1050 times the original size. Due to the fact that the false vacuum is not stable, the expansion will not continue forever. Instead, quantum tunneling will cause the false vacuum to decay into a low-energy true vacuum. When it decays, bubbles suddenly appear to fill in the space. Although the bubble universes start out small at first, many of them will quickly become fairly large. The ultimate conclusion was that, on the contrary to popular belief, it was possible for the universe to suddenly appear from nothing.


Which is still a punt of the question of origin.

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 12, 2010 12:50 pm 
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Theology is unnecessary does not mean theology is incorrect. That's the first point that I can see people taking out of context. Theology is unnecessary also does not mean that theology can not intermingle. That's the second point being taken out of context. Most people are fine with, "Buddhism says this, Islam says this, and Christianity says this." They're okay with the idea that Buddhism exists, and doesn't prevent them from being Christian. If you then present to them, "Okay, well modern science says this," they flip a gasket.

That all takes place before the article is written and presented to the audience. The story then turns from, "Well, here are our findings," to, "Prominent scientists claims to have proven there's no god!" Even if nobody comes right out and says it, that's the real headline. That's what we all take from it, regardless of our philosophical leanings.

Anyway, on to string theory.

When you were in grade school, you probably learned about a coordinate plane. Somewhere around 5th or 6th grade, maybe a little earlier, you learned about points, lines, and planes. The word "ray" might've popped in there somewhere, also. The main idea, however, is that the universe is composed of these little tiny dots, or points. That's how we conceptualize the world around us. The atomic model even fits it - atoms are these tiny little dots, and they're made up of even smaller dots.

That concept turns into our mathematical model. When engineers design stuff, we usually think of things in terms of "particles" which is just a fancy word for "dot." When we put a man on the moon, somewhere along the line NASA reduced the space shuttle to a dot that was going to travel between one dot (Earth) and another dot (moon). Just like the internet is a series of tubes, the universe is a series of dots. You'll see shortly why I picked that metaphor.

General relativity and quantum mechanics **** up our neat concept of the universe as a collection of dots. This is where string theory arose from. We needed a way to model the universe that worked better. Rather than envisioning the universe as dots, we started to think of it as a bunch of line segments. Now, if you have a ring, that isn't a bunch of dots connected in a circle. Instead, it's one object. Just take a "string" and make a loop out of it. These line segments can interact with each other and do all sorts of goofy stuff, but the idea is that now the universe is a series of tubes just like the internet. Atoms now are not dots, they are lines.

This isn't really that bizarre of a notion. Circuit diagrams and plumbing diagrams were using that same model for a hundred years prior to the introduction of string theory. Anybody who was dealing with electricity or water flow was already used to the notion that the line between this water heater and that pump, or this battery and that resistor, was one entire thing.

Somewhere along the line, someone decided it might be easier to understand physics if instead of thinking of atoms as lines, we started thinking of them as sheets. Then it went from sheets to boxes. Eventually we got to M-theory. I forget exactly what dimension is where we jumped from superstring to M, but for the lay person, it would probably suffice to tell you that string theory is lines, and M theory is sheets, boxes, and higher dimensional objects. The analogy works, even if I haven't put the dividing lines in exactly the correct place.

Now here's the problem with the article. There is something that the average lay person just doesn't get that causes us to misunderstand Hawking. Hell, some physicists don't get this distinction.

String theory and M-theory are mathematical models. A string or a brane is not a real thing. The real thing is the atom, and an atom is not a string, nor is not a dot, a sheet, or whatever other thing we've conceptualized it as. An atom is an atom. Lines, points, planes, boxes, circles, spheres - these are not real things. They are mathematical models we use to describe and predict how real things behave.

That's also why it isn't a problem that M-theory isn't falsifiable. A circle isn't falsifiable, either. A circle is a collection of points equidistant to a center point. It has certain properties that arise because of its definition, but you can not prove a set of points equidistant to a center to be something other than a circle. It was totally arbitrary, we could've called it a fnord. But the circle isn't the real thing. A collection of concentric circles isn't a real thing, either. A DVD is a real thing.

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 12, 2010 1:01 pm 
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Dash wrote:
Gravity is a force along with the strong, weak and electromagnetic forces, complete with a particle, in theory although afaik it's yet to have been found.


Midgen wrote:
The one point my simple brain cannot grasp.

If there is literally nothing, how can gravity have any affect on it ?


Gravity is definitely a force from our point of view, because the curvature of spacetime is not something we can discernably see. How it is actually believed to work is a bit different. The late science fiction author Dr. Michael Crichton actually wrote a very good "layman's terms" explanation of the curvature of space and how it relates to gravity (in addition to the existence of dimensions beyond 3) in his book "Sphere."

Imagine a universe had only two obvious spacial dimensions. Ours has three obvious dimensions, but let's imagine a two dimensional universe. Space seems flat. Let's use a table to represent the universe. Now, let's use an orange to represent a star in this flat universe, so we set it on the table. Now, let's use a marble to represent a wandering space object of some kind. Roll it past the orange...but the marble goes straight, so the model is innaccurate. What's wrong?

This apparent two dimensional space exists in more than two dimensions, just as our three dimensional universe has more than three dimensions. Imagine instead of a table, that our two dimensional universe is something softer, like a trampoline. Now use something heavier, like an orange-sized lead ball in the center. Now roll the marble past it. Now the indentation on the formerly flat space of the trampoline causes the marble to curve as it goes past the ball. Roll it too close, or too slowly, and it will circle right into the ball. This two dimensional space is curved in a third dimension that affects the path of objects which adhere to its two dimensional plane.

Similarly, gravity is the curvature of space (and actually, time as well) into a hitherto unseen dimension. The mass travelling through three dimensional space must still adhere to the three dimensional "plane" that represents our space, but the curvature of space causes what we see as gravitational effects. One of the really mind-blowing aspects of this, is a gravitational orbit, while eliptical, is actually a straight line through space-time. Earth is not losing momentum or forced to change course as it circles, tethered by the gravitational curve of space around our sun, but is rather following a completely straight and unerring course through spacetime in all its unknown dimensions.

I love Relativity and astrophysics in general, but I can't say the same for quantum mechanics, which give me a headache...

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Last edited by Talya on Sun Sep 12, 2010 1:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 12, 2010 1:04 pm 
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Corolinth wrote:
That's also why it isn't a problem that M-theory isn't falsifiable. A circle isn't falsifiable, either. A circle is a collection of points equidistant to a center point. It has certain properties that arise because of its definition, but you can not prove a set of points equidistant to a center to be something other than a circle. It was totally arbitrary, we could've called it a fnord. But the circle isn't the real thing. A collection of concentric circles isn't a real thing, either. A DVD is a real thing.


I think you misinterpret my point.

String Theory may be a "mathematical model," but it's a model that can never be used to predict anything. A true "Theory of Everything" could be used in a predictive way, like Relativity or Quantum Theory, in practical applied science. But String (and therefore M) theory is a model that can never be disproven or proven, you cannot test it in any way. Relativity and quantum theory can be used to make predictions about the behavior of objects and particles, but String Theory cannot, and if it is true, will never be able to be used in the same way. It is simply a very complex guess.

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 12, 2010 1:08 pm 
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Corolinth wrote:
Theology is unnecessary does not mean theology is incorrect.


Reminds me of this quote from Bruce Willis:

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"Organized religions in general, in my opinion, are dying forms", he says. "They were all very important when we didn't know why the sun moved, why weather changed, why hurricanes occurred, or volcanoes happened", he continues. "Modern religion is the end trail of modern mythology. But there are people who interpret the Bible literally. Literally! I choose not to believe that's the way. And that's what makes America cool, you know?


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PostPosted: Sun Sep 12, 2010 1:12 pm 
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That's a result of what it models. Someone said, "Hey guys! What if we thought of atoms as lines instead of dots," and the response he got from a few of his colleagues was, "Oh, I see. That makes sense, now."

It doesn't have to make predictions. Its purpose can just be to make something easier to understand or picture in your mind.

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Talya wrote:
The late science fiction author Dr. Michael Crichton actually wrote a very good "layman's terms" explanation of the curvature of space and how it relates to gravity (in addition to the existence of dimensions beyond 3) in his book "Sphere."



Ha that's my favorite explination of it too. That book was so good then they decided to go with Dustin Hoffman and Queen Latifah for the movie.

Anyway, for Corolinth's point that Hawking is simply saying it's now not necessary for a creator, fair enough. He does seem to suggest that Science could describe spontaneous existence though which ... err... hmmm. I get that quantum theory is the stuff of really weird principles like being in two places at once and solid objects passing through one another and seemingly complete chaos, but he's making a big leap to say the universe could have just created itself from nothing.

Strings are indeed real things though, if the theory is to be believed. Unless my information is just way outdated. Strings are impossibly small closed loops of energy that vibrate in a particular manner and exist in up to 11 dimensions including space-time, last I heard. Branes are a collection of strings, basically, at least that's how I understood it. All of this is theory though of course, and unproven, possibly unprovable.

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Corolinth wrote:
That's a result of what it models. Someone said, "Hey guys! What if we thought of atoms as lines instead of dots," and the response he got from a few of his colleagues was, "Oh, I see. That makes sense, now."

It doesn't have to make predictions. Its purpose can just be to make something easier to understand or picture in your mind.



And yet the lines don't make the universe make more sense, or easier to predict. Thinking of atoms as dots still provides the only way for us to make use of those atoms, and still provides the only methods of making predictions on the behavior of those atoms. String Theory has done NOTHING to assist scientists in understanding the universe. It's simply a big "What if?" scenario.

I'm not the first one to make such an accusation, and people more educated in the field than any of us have admitted it. This is why scientists like Mathematical Physicist Peter Woit have described String Theory as nothing more than "science fiction modeled in mathematical terms."

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Actually, speaking of Peter Woit, he has a very good criticism of Hawking's latest book and comments here:

http://www.math.columbia.edu/~woit/wordpress/

For the little my uneducated opinion matters, as much as I admire Hawking, I agree with Woit. Accepting M-Theory is tantamount to "giving up," throwing in the towel and abandoning a search for a real theory of everything.

A telling exerpt:

Peter Woit wrote:
The book begins in a more promising manner, with a general philosophical and historical discussion of fundamental physical theory. There’s this explanation of what makes a good physical model:

Stephen Hawking wrote:
A model is a good model if it:

1. Is elegant
2. Contains few arbitrary or adjustable elements
3. Agrees with and explains all existing observations
4. Makes detailed predictions about future observations that can disprove or falsify the model if they are not borne out.


The fact that “M-theory” satisfies none of these criteria is not remarked upon.

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 12, 2010 3:37 pm 
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If you read Timeline (as opposed to watching the crappy movie), The author points out as the end of the 1800s pulled around that people thought "We knew everything about everything." That the corners of the scientific map were more or less drawn out. Then we discovered electrons, and all the great innovation of the next century that built on that. So excuse me if I don't consider the scientific account complete.

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 12, 2010 7:00 pm 
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Dash, you are describing a de Broglie wave:

Image

That is what an electron does within an atom which gives rise to the different energy states and orbital patterns. From looking at that picture, can you see how it could be helpful to think of the electron as a string rather than a dot? This does not mean that an electron is, in fact, a line rather than a dot. It's an electron. There are certain other applications where it's more helpful to think of the electron as a sheet rather than a line. This is sort of like the question of whether light is a particle or a wave. It has properties of both, and this gave rise to the idea of the photon. The truth of the matter is that the distinction isn't meaningful.

Protons and neutrons also have quantum numbers associated with them, and they too have wave properties, so it becomes helpful for certain applications to look at them as lines rather than dots.

Everything else is just pouring on more and more math. Now, that might be useful as far as understanding what's going on, provided you have a strong enough math background to follow along, but it doesn't change the fundamental idea behind string theory: Conceptualizing the universe as being made up of something other than dots. Saying a string or a brane is real is misleading. I could say that rectangles are real because my laptop screen is a rectangle. That's disingenuous. My laptop screen has the shape of a rectangle, and therefore all of the math associated with rectangles works for doing calculations regarding my laptop screen. It does not actually make "rectangle" a real thing. The rectangle is a mathematical model. My laptop screen is the real thing. "Rectangle" is the model that allows me to study laptop screens, tables, boxes, and shelves without having to invent four different forms of math.

Rorinthas wrote:
If you read Timeline (as opposed to watching the crappy movie), The author points out as the end of the 1800s pulled around that people thought "We knew everything about everything." That the corners of the scientific map were more or less drawn out. Then we discovered electrons, and all the great innovation of the next century that built on that. So excuse me if I don't consider the scientific account complete.
Actually, even when Albert Michelson said that, all of his contemporaries knew he was wrong. Then, within a few short years, a different Albert published a paper that opened up the floodgates. Ever since, the idea that we've discovered everything there is to discover has been regarded as preposterous. Society would be in a much better place if religions took a similar mentality.

Talya wrote:
And yet the lines don't make the universe make more sense, or easier to predict. Thinking of atoms as dots still provides the only way for us to make use of those atoms, and still provides the only methods of making predictions on the behavior of those atoms. String Theory has done NOTHING to assist scientists in understanding the universe. It's simply a big "What if?" scenario.

I'm not the first one to make such an accusation, and people more educated in the field than any of us have admitted it. This is why scientists like Mathematical Physicist Peter Woit have described String Theory as nothing more than "science fiction modeled in mathematical terms."
If we want to bring quotes by famous scientists into the mix, Richard Feynman is purported to have said that theoretical physicists are physicists who lack the skill to perform real experiments, while mathematical physicists are mathematicians who lack the skill to perform real mathematics. The guy doesn't like string theory, and thinks that funding should be going to researching other models. Well, he's got a point. If string theory looks like it's a dead-end, other avenues do need to be explored. Saying string theory is a dead end, it's going nowhere, and we need to pursue other ideas is a fair statement. Which, from looking over Peter Woit's wiki article and blog, seems to be the crux of his argument.

The statement that it does nothing to assist scientists in understanding the universe is hyperbole, and to say it gives no method of making predictions is demonstrably false. I cited two examples in a previous post where we use core ideas from string theory. Neither one resembles high-brow notions of the shape and composition of the universe, and instead call to mind more mundane occupations such as plumbers and electricians. That's the rub. It may not be useful to particle physicists trying to figure out gravity, but it has been useful to other disciplines. You are being just as myopic as some of the proponents of string theory. Of course, you at least have an excuse.

When people talk about string theory, they start looking at all the crap that's been piled on top of it rather than the underlying premise of using lines rather than dots to build the universe out of. I'm not suggesting that the multiple universe idea is rock solid, and quite frankly, I'm not sure how we get there from using lines instead of dots. People are making wilder and crazier hypotheses based off of something that's never been tested in a lab. Is it time to knock that **** off, rein people back in, and run some tests? Yes, it is.

At any rate, the question of whether string theory is useful is a separate question from whether it's falsifiable, and whether it matters if it's falsifiable. It's also a separate issue from completeness. Religion provides a "complete" account of the creation of the universe. It's not much good for making accurate predictions, but it's complete. The Flood doesn't help scientists understand **** about the universe, but it's complete. Something can be both complete and wrong. In fact, it's a whole lot easier than finding something that's complete and correct, which is why we keep looking as religions spring up and die out around us.

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 12, 2010 8:40 pm 
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Corolinth wrote:
Religion provides a "complete" account of the creation of the universe. It's not much good for making accurate predictions, but it's complete. The Flood doesn't help scientists understand **** about the universe, but it's complete. Something can be both complete and wrong. In fact, it's a whole lot easier than finding something that's complete and correct, which is why we keep looking as religions spring up and die out around us.


Actually, the Flood, the rest of Genesis, and any other religion's creation story if it has one, is usually wildly incomplete. In fact that's rather the point. The message is "This happened, and God caused it, don't worry about how or why" and the "how" is (or at least should be) left to science.

The problem arises when certain types of people get ahold of these stories and then try to make them be complete because they are too fearful or too unsophisticated to understand that the stories being less than complete does not somehow make them worthless. That's when you start seeing the absurdity arise.

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 12, 2010 10:57 pm 
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Talya wrote:
Elmarnieh wrote:
Also it supposes that gravity pre-exists our universe which Hawking would know to be rubbish.


Gravity is merely the curvature of space that takes place around mass. If one presupposes the Big Bang Theory to be correct, then gravity surely did exist before the universe, else the supermassive singularity which exploded would not have existed.



Our universe is defined as what is composed of spacetime. It is the ever expanding bubble of spacetime that makes up our Universe. Although most recently there is discussion if time exists at all and is just a by product of our observation in our minds.

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 12, 2010 11:04 pm 
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Hey at least with string theory you can predict quantum entanglement. Can't do that with anything else in the toolbox. I gave up trying to pay attention when they said that maybe 16 dimensions isn't enough.

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