A friend told me that quarks both do and don't exist. So if that can happen I'm willing to stay positive.
It is impossible to do things that are logically impossible, like a married bachelor.INeedAName said:Obviously, you did not listen to me. I asked for a round square, not a square circle. No cookie for you!oktalist said:If the many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics is correct (which seems likely) then everything that is physically possible has actually happened/will happen/is happening (past/future/present tense makes no sense here). If a particle happened to spin in a slightly different way a few nanoseconds after the big bang, then the laws of physics would've turned out very differently, and maybe we'd be living in 2-dimensional space and be made out of pixels instead of atoms, collecting coins and eating mushrooms to get big.
I found a square circle, is that good enough?INeedAName said:How about a round square? Don't know how one would look like, but I know I would be mightily impressed did I ever see one.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lp_space![]()
Yea its a really broad stroked version of metaphysics. It was just the only thing I could think of that would support the argument.The Lugz said:what goes on in your head is an idealized, simplified version of physics that connects all the ideas you have with what you believe are their logical outcomesZack Alklazaris said:According to Metaphysics if it exists in ones mind then yes it exists.
And since practically anything can exist in your head I would have to say, yes. Anything is possible.
if you 'believe' something happens, your brain can paint you a picture of it
but last time i checked, having a picture of something did not make it fact
and if a mathematician said this, hes bloody stupid.
stand back from the equations once in a while and smell the roses.
actually 'infinite monkeys' don't really work someone tested how random a monkey was capable of being, and it mostly just tapped all the keys that were easy to reach by laying it's hands on the keyboard and ignored some near the edgesSacremPyrobolum said:Space is infinite, therefore everything you can think of is out their somewhere.
It like the infinate amount of monkeys typing on an infinate amount of keyboards will at some point get you a complete library of all the books ever written.
Do you agree with this?
which is rather amusing, considering all force in the universe follows the easiest route, it happens to be a microcosm for the entire universe
anything very different from us would likely be extremely rare
( unless we're the rarity, you always have to count that possibility )
personally in a universe where everything decays, everything looses energy i would say intelligent life with the ability to generate order from chaos would be the most rare thing there is
i would say we are the /*/*/*/*..66`¬
combination from the keyboard, amidst the qwidvoksdvdv,ca/'[kcjscjmma 's that prevail amidst the chaos of the stars and planets
if you want to equate the comparisons
of-course, i could be wrong but it fits nicely for now
I agree that the multiverse theory makes much more sense then everything existing in one universe. Where I must disagree, however, is on the point of limits to space and time. The current thought on the "end" of the universe has more to do with the end of energy(at least in the form that we know). What will most likely happen is that the universe will continue to expand while stars and planets get farther and farther from each other. Eventually, all the stars will use up their fuel and die(creating either white dwarfs, super nova, neutron stars, or black holes). All of these will also one day evaporate, leaving nothing but void. The reason the crunch theory is no longer used(that is what I was taught in school) is because they have discovered that the universe's rate of expansion has actually increased. It was once thought that gravity would slow this rate down just enough that it would, with time, pull everything back into a singularity. There is a great speech on youtube called "A Universe from nothing" that was given by Lawrence Krauss. He gives a really good explanation on the theories of how the universe began and how it will end. He also, at the end, talks about the concept of the infinite. Very much worth a look.LilithSlave said:There's more reason to believe that there are infinite universes than believe than our current universe is infinite.
Our universe started from a quantum fluctuation and expanded from that. And there are naturally limits to the expansion of it. Limits to not only space, but time. It could not only be expending, but it could hit a physical limit and contract. Even contracting to the point it would cause a universal crunch.
However, it is still possible that everything exists, with the multiverse theory. There could be many and even infinite universes.
The best case scenario we can hope for is multiple, instead of infinite universes, ethically. And that we are not heading to either a heat death or a universal crunch.
Actually, that is a common misnoma: Space is not continally expanding, the volume of the finite mass in the universe is (that is to say everythig which ensued from the big bang is still speeding away from everything else at a steadily decreasing rate, but in an area surrounded by infinite nothingness, or 'space') The space surrounding that mass, or matter, is generally accepted to be infinite.orangebandguy said:No. If space is continually expanding then surely it has a limitation, it just increases real fast.
Kind of reminds me of Olber's paradox. (I think it's Olber's??)
Touche Mr.Kataksopo... touche.... BUT the cheescake! It is MINE!Kataskopo said:Well, I refuse to be broke and not-having-an-audi-R8-Spider, but that doesn't make it any more realLedan said:Okay..... but there must still be more than just this one big bang. I refuse to believe that this is the only bubble of matter.Kataskopo said:No no no, the universe is not expanding into anything. It's an intrinsic expansion, relative by the separation of the parts of the universe.Ledan said:To the naysayers out there:
Our bubble of matter (usually called the universe) is expanding out into space, and there doesn't seem to be any boundaries to this space. Thus infinite space. Infinite space. And we know that our bubble originated from a big bang (probably). What are the odds, that this is the ONLY big bang in this infinite space? I would say.... 0.
So, with infinite space, and a (possible) infinite amount of "universes"(or big bangs) then anything and everything is possible.
Short comment: there are many big bangs out there. so anything is possible.![]()