> IIUC,
> it's based on the assumption that the universe is infinite in spatial and temporal extent, but this is mistaken.
> Our universe, by which I mean our bubble, is finite.
> nothing can become infinite via a finite process, which is implied by the finite age of the universe.
> IIUC,According to Google, that means the "International Islamic University Chittagong", but it must not understand correctly.> it's based on the assumption that the universe is infinite in spatial and temporal extent, but this is mistaken.You're right, that is mistaken, so it's fortunate that Hugh Everett did not make that mistake. By the way, I don't feed trolls so if I hear any of that "Trump physics" crap this conversation is over.> Our universe, by which I mean our bubble, is finite.In Hugh Everett's Many Worlds theory the word "bubble" has no meaning although that word does have meaning in "Eternal Inflation" and in the "String Theory landscape", but as far as Everett's Many Worlds is concerned they are irrelevant, they may or may not be true.
Max Tegmark has proposed 4 different types of "Many Worlds"1) A spatial extension of our observable universe, perhaps by an infinite number of light years or perhaps by just an astronomical number of light years.
2) The same as #1 but the more distance you travel the more the fundamental "constants" of nature change.
3) Hugh Everett's Many Worlds.4) Ultimate Ensemble Theory, everything that is not logically self-contradictory exists, not just everything that Quantum Physics allows.I believe in #1 as does every astronomer and physicist on the planet,
I am an agnostic concerning #2, and I am close to being an atheist concerning #4. Tegmark is comfortable with #3 as am I, but he is willing to go much further than I am.
> nothing can become infinite via a finite process, which is implied by the finite age of the universe.But something can remain being infinite after a finite amount of time if it started out being infinite, and that may or may not be the case with our universe,
Everett's Many Worlds has nothing to say about that issue.John K Clark See what's on my new list at Extropolis
t6z
On Saturday, January 25, 2025 at 6:57:27 AM UTC-7 John Clark wrote:> IIUC,According to Google, that means the "International Islamic University Chittagong", but it must not understand correctly.> it's based on the assumption that the universe is infinite in spatial and temporal extent, but this is mistaken.You're right, that is mistaken, so it's fortunate that Hugh Everett did not make that mistake. By the way, I don't feed trolls so if I hear any of that "Trump physics" crap this conversation is over.> Our universe, by which I mean our bubble, is finite.In Hugh Everett's Many Worlds theory the word "bubble" has no meaning although that word does have meaning in "Eternal Inflation" and in the "String Theory landscape", but as far as Everett's Many Worlds is concerned they are irrelevant, they may or may not be true.i call it a Bubble to suggest an approximately spherical shape, which is implied by the Cosmological Red Shift, which has approximately the same value in every direction. So its shape is like a somewhat distorted sphere. AGMax Tegmark has proposed 4 different types of "Many Worlds"1) A spatial extension of our observable universe, perhaps by an infinite number of light years or perhaps by just an astronomical number of light years.Falsified by the data, the age estimate of the universe. AG
>> I believe in #1 as does every astronomer and physicist on the planet,> Not true; not even close to true. They mostly, or perhaps entirely believe in the age estimate of the universe. AG
> #3 depends on an infinite universe, which I have falsified. AG
> IIUC = If I Understand Correctly. IIUC your reply hasn't come remotely close to a genuine reply to my argument. AG
On Sat, Jan 25, 2025 at 1:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> I believe in #1 as does every astronomer and physicist on the planet,> Not true; not even close to true. They mostly, or perhaps entirely believe in the age estimate of the universe. AGWe know that to the limits of experimental accuracy on the largest scale space is flat, and no physicist or astronomer alive believes the Earth is the center of the universe; put those two facts together and there is only one logical conclusion, every physicist or astronomer alive believes that the observable universe can NOT be the entire universe,
it might be an infinite number of light years across or it might be only an astronomical number of light years across, but either way it must be much much bigger than what we can see.
> #3 depends on an infinite universe, which I have falsified. AGLike hell you have!! You have not even falsified #1 or #2, much less #3. And if Hugh Everett's theory is correct then the Multiverse is infinitely old.
> IIUC = If I Understand Correctly. IIUC your reply hasn't come remotely close to a genuine reply to my argument. AG
Therefore I must conclude that you have not understood Quantum Mechanics correctly, just as you are unable to understand Special Relativity correctly.
> prefer to shoot from the hip, as it were, to defend the cult.
z0
On Sat, Jan 25, 2025 at 5:43 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:> prefer to shoot from the hip, as it were, to defend the cult.Goodbye.
On Sat, Jan 25, 2025 at 8:29 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Saturday, January 25, 2025 at 12:11:15 PM UTC-7 Jesse Mazer wrote:On Sat, Jan 25, 2025 at 1:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Saturday, January 25, 2025 at 6:57:27 AM UTC-7 John Clark wrote:> IIUC,According to Google, that means the "International Islamic University Chittagong", but it must not understand correctly.> it's based on the assumption that the universe is infinite in spatial and temporal extent, but this is mistaken.You're right, that is mistaken, so it's fortunate that Hugh Everett did not make that mistake. By the way, I don't feed trolls so if I hear any of that "Trump physics" crap this conversation is over.> Our universe, by which I mean our bubble, is finite.In Hugh Everett's Many Worlds theory the word "bubble" has no meaning although that word does have meaning in "Eternal Inflation" and in the "String Theory landscape", but as far as Everett's Many Worlds is concerned they are irrelevant, they may or may not be true.i call it a Bubble to suggest an approximately spherical shape, which is implied by the Cosmological Red Shift, which has approximately the same value in every direction. So its shape is like a somewhat distorted sphere. AGMax Tegmark has proposed 4 different types of "Many Worlds"1) A spatial extension of our observable universe, perhaps by an infinite number of light years or perhaps by just an astronomical number of light years.Falsified by the data, the age estimate of the universe. AGIf the universe *were* infinite spatially (or at least much larger than the observable region), but still began in a Big Bang a finite time in the past (or at least we could not receive light signals from before then, even if there was something before as in 'eternal inflation' theories), do you think the observational data would be any different? Assuming a finite speed of light, the observable region would still be a finite size in this scenario, no?JesseYou pose a compound question, so hard to answer. I am just dealing with our Bubble, nothing to do with Eternal Inflation. And within our Bubble, or any Bubble, I think the observable universe will be finite since the SoL is finite. Also, the unobservable part is estimated to be hugely larger, some estimates are 200 times larger but I'm not sure if that refers to its volume or radius. But with a finite age, it cannot evolve to infinity in spacial extent, no matter how fast it expands. That condition could only exist IMO if that was its initial condition. But as I wrote, that would be imposing another infinity on the BB (aside from infinite density at T=0), which again, IMO, is highly dubious. I'm not sure I answered your question, so you might have to rephrase it. AGIn the math of general relativity the universe could have been spatially infinite at every finite time after the Big Bang, and the Big Bang itself is treated as a singularity so it need not have a well-defined size. But anyway, the argument you are making above about why you think the universe must be finite seems to be a theoretical one, but before that in the post I was responding to, you seemed to be saying an infinite universe was falsified by *empirical* data, not just theoretical arguments--is that right?
If you were making that claim, you should be ready to defend it even in the case where you grant for the sake of argument that there is no theoretical problem with the GR model of a universe that's infinite in size but began a finite time in the past (or at least agree to put aside all theoretical objections for the time being). Are you saying that even if you do put theoretical objections aside, you still think the empirical data is in conflict with the idea of an infinite universe that began a finite time in the past?
Jesse
Yes. I don't think I ever made a theoretical argument; just an empirical one that the universe was never spatially infinite, now or in the past.
Cosmologists agree that the universe gets smaller as we go backward in time. How could it get smaller as it returns to the BB, and yet still be infinite in spatial extent?
Cosmologists agree that the universe gets smaller as we go backward in time.
On 1/25/2025 6:56 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:Yes. I don't think I ever made a theoretical argument; just an empirical one that the universe was never spatially infinite, now or in the past.There's no empirical argument for that because the universe looks flat, which is empirically consistent with it being spatially infinite. Now you may object to that on some philosophical or metaphysical grounds and just say it is very, very big compared to the part we can see and hence looks flat (as the Earth looks flat locally).Cosmologists agree that the universe gets smaller as we go backward in time. How could it get smaller as it returns to the BB, and yet still be infinite in spatial extent?It could have been always spacially infinite.
If hypothetically it *was* infinite, but the speed of light was finite and it began a finite time in the past, would you expect in that case there WOULD be an upper limit to the distance we could observe (i.e. the observable universe would be finite, even it the unobserved part beyond that went forever), or that there WOULD NOT be any upper limit? (I would say the answer is obviously that there WOULD still be an upper limit because light can only travel a finite distance in a finite time, but I'm curious if you disagree)
Cosmologists agree that the universe gets smaller as we go backward in time.They agree the observable universe gets smaller, and the distance between any pair of landmarks at rest relative to the cosmic background radiation (say, a pair of galaxies) gets smaller. But they do not make any claims about whether the *whole* universe gets smaller, since both of those things could be true even if the universe was infinite in size at all times.
Jesse
On Saturday, January 25, 2025 at 9:27:58 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:On 1/25/2025 6:56 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:Yes. I don't think I ever made a theoretical argument; just an empirical one that the universe was never spatially infinite, now or in the past.There's no empirical argument for that because the universe looks flat, which is empirically consistent with it being spatially infinite. Now you may object to that on some philosophical or metaphysical grounds and just say it is very, very big compared to the part we can see and hence looks flat (as the Earth looks flat locally).
The relevant question IMO is whether or not the universe can BECOME spatially infinite in finite time, and the answer is definitely negative, and assuming this is correct, the unobservable region must have an upper bound. OTOH, if it is now spatially infinite, meaning no upper bound on the unobservable region, that means it was an initial condition which I reject as positing a singularity at T=0. AG
Cosmologists agree that the universe gets smaller as we go backward in time.They agree the observable universe gets smaller, and the distance between any pair of landmarks at rest relative to the cosmic background radiation (say, a pair of galaxies) gets smaller. But they do not make any claims about whether the *whole* universe gets smaller, since both of those things could be true even if the universe was infinite in size at all times.I generally agree. But it's hard to imagine a universe which is spatially infinite and yet expanding, which would mean the average distance between galaxies is increasing. AG
Jesse
> In the math of general relativity the universe could have been spatially infinite at every finite time after the Big Bang,
> and the Big Bang itself is treated as a singularity so it need not have a well-defined size.
They all seem to show the BB as a point. Anyway, you wanted to see what I was referring to, so I delivered. AG
IIUC, it's based on the assumption that the universe is infinite in spatial and temporal extent, but this is mistaken. Our universe, by which I mean our bubble, is finite. We know that by applying basic logic. First, since nothing can become infinite via a finite process, which is implied by the finite age of the universe. So if the universe is spatially infinite, that must be its initial condition when it came into being with the Big Bang. But that would require adding a singularity of sorts to the usual concept of the BB; namely, that at its inception, it became infinite in spatial extent instantaneously. This hypothesis must be rejected for the same reason we regard theories with infinities as incorrect when they make such predictions. AG
> Those kinds of plots can be used to represent both open and closed universes, see the attached images showing illustrations from the physicist Roger Penrose's book The Emperor's New Mind, where he presents plots for positive curvature, flat curvature, and negative curvature (in the case of negative curvature the circular cross-sections are supposed to be a special kind of diagram which compresses an infinite hyperbolic geometry onto a disc where the size of all the shapes gets more and more compressed closer to the edge,
rwe