Ladas wrote:
Not having read the book just the piece he wrote for the WSJ, I took his position to be just an extension of the multi-world concept of life in this universe, which I believe most here at least understand, if not support. I could be mis-remembering, but this topic has come up here before, and except for a couple expected posters, most people seem to at least grasp the idea that with billions of stars in this galaxy, much less the Universe, that it is considerably more likely that life exists elsewhere than just Earth, and that because of differences in conditions, it is very unlikely that life is anything like us.
Rather than make the assumption that the goal of the Universe (if it has one) was to create Humanity, and therefore everything that exists does so to suit us, we exist due to adaptions to the conditions as they transpired. Its clearly not as glamorous a picture of our existence, but the more likely in my opinion.
Religion would tell you that we are unique, not just in our biology, but in our existence, and that this existence is the direct and intentional will of some greater being. Science casts doubt on the unique status of our existence as the sole life in the Universe, while retaining the "unique" status of our particular brand of existence, stemming directly from the conditions particular to this planet, this solar system, then Galaxy, etc.
But then, what he stated in the article is not really a new theory. I've ready multiple variations of this concept, where the laws of physics that govern our Universe are/were not static, and have only reached this equilibrium due to specific conditions during creation. Other universes have other laws, if the "laws" are stable enough to support a universe, and those that aren't collapse back unto themselves and "explode" into a new iteration. Essentially, what we consider the "laws" are really just guidelines... no wait, wrong topic... are only "laws" for this particular universe. Other Universes have different conditions.
Pretty much yeah, except we have no proof of other universes but we do of other worlds.
"We're so lucky! We live on a world perfect for life as we know it!"
"Well, there are a LOT of worlds out there so yeah odds are there will be at least one"
I get that.
"We're so lucky, we live in a universe perfectly proportioned to support existence as we know it!"
"Well, there are a lot of uh... universes? Out there? I'm Ron Burgandy?"
Hmmm....
I mean granted it could very well be, even though now you're talking serious SciFi stuff with multiverses etc. And if there are in fact nearly infinite multiverses, you get some really... really funky theories. In an infinite universe(s), with a finite amount of configurations for atoms, things will repeat infinitely. An analogy would be you have 4 pairs of shoes and 3 pairs of pants. A finite amount. You can combine them in so many ways, but after a certain point, the combinations repeat. So in an infinite universe, another you is out there. In fact an infinite amount of you are out there.