The Multiverse: Science, Religion, or Pseudoscience?

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 21 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 3,6 тис.

  • @SabineHossenfelder
    @SabineHossenfelder  Рік тому +9

    This video comes with a quiz that lets you check your knowledge! quizwithit.com/start_thequiz/1689229798710x820116508313118700

    • @rationalsceptic7634
      @rationalsceptic7634 5 місяців тому

      ua-cam.com/video/bux0SjaUCY0/v-deo.htmlsi=pWHIx0QkY7ccg9Ok

    • @richardchapman1592
      @richardchapman1592 4 місяці тому

      Multiverse is a silly extrapolation of decision making where we can approximate what happens after wave function collapse. It's unobservably verifieable so shouldn't distract us too much. Mind you, unobservable theory about below the Planck length seems valid to me as somethings possible which may be relevant to looking into a fractal visual demonstration.

    • @colorlessking.
      @colorlessking. 7 годин тому

      Michi kaku seems like a fraud now, which I think he is

  • @dithy
    @dithy 2 роки тому +2134

    Don't worry about multiverse enthusiasts not agreeing with your video, because there is a multiverse in which they do.

    • @Achrononmaster
      @Achrononmaster 2 роки тому +50

      No. The multiverse religionists _think_ there is a universe where they do agree with Sabina --- that's a bit different to claiming _there _*_is_* a universe where they agree with her. In fact that's the whole point, this difference is the difference between objective and subjective (roughly similar to science versus religion).
      NB: I am not opposed to religious belief, just annoyed by stupid religious belief (a subjective annoyance to be sure, manifested in my objective behaviours).

    • @samuelowens000
      @samuelowens000 2 роки тому +158

      Im pretty sure it was meant to be a joke...

    • @maxlamda1826
      @maxlamda1826 2 роки тому +53

      This joke is deeper that I thought at firt glance because it contains somehow a paradox.

    • @pasadenaphil8804
      @pasadenaphil8804 2 роки тому +14

      I wish I had thought of this. Great comment!

  • @gregcampwriter
    @gregcampwriter 2 роки тому +166

    As a writer of science fiction, I observe that the concept of the multiverse is a powerful tool that one must use sparingly lest it become a cheap trick to save sagging ratings or a plot that's going nowhere.

    • @WildVoltorb
      @WildVoltorb 2 роки тому +5

      This

    • @stylis666
      @stylis666 2 роки тому +2

      @@mikicerise6250 Like in Rick and Morty, I suppose :p I think it might be hard to come up with a good reason to time travel if multiverses are a thing.
      I mean, The Terminator basically ended up with a multiverse, but if you start off with that premise, then would you go back in time to save people from a different universe, knowing your universe will still be completely dead? I do find that an interesting question, but i think there won't be too many of such interesting questions or answers, so it quickly becomes just more nonsense to add to the paradoxical "solutions". All though I did like the idea of that time travel movie where some kids made a machine to make money in the past or future or some shit. It's a time travel movie so it's dumb so who cares. I do like dumb movies though :) Let's not mix up dumb with not fun :)
      The movie Decoherence dabbled in such what if questions. Not with time travel though, but it did an amazing job telling a story and giving a lot of solutions to a lot of questions about what we might do in their situation. I definitely recommend it. It might rid you of your desire for a time travel movie with multiverses though, because, why bother? If the character already knows it's a different universe it's Rick and Morty allover again but probably not nearly as fun, and if they don't know, good luck thinking up an original story anyone could care about.

    • @johnnytass2111
      @johnnytass2111 2 роки тому +2

      The multiverse is most powerful in choose your own adventure tales.

    • @Azarilh
      @Azarilh 2 роки тому +3

      DC and Marvel right here. XD

  • @hwica2753
    @hwica2753 2 роки тому +234

    Sabine nailed it. Mathematics is a tool to simulate reality, but it can also be used to simulate fantasy.

    • @TheRealPaiMei
      @TheRealPaiMei 2 роки тому +22

      @@TeaParty1776 That’s wrong. Not every mathematical construct has ontological reality.

    • @TeaParty1776
      @TeaParty1776 2 роки тому +3

      @@TheRealPaiMei The power of math to identify reality requires methods which dont identify reality. Eg, imaginary and irrational number, square root. These methods are not subjective, not emotion, imagination or invalid concepts. They are indirect methods needed to identify reality.

    • @martinhorodrigues3809
      @martinhorodrigues3809 2 роки тому +4

      I wonder if Sabine will ever discuss the complex topic - Ego. It often gets in the way of knowledge

  • @thegreatgazoo2334
    @thegreatgazoo2334 2 роки тому +343

    Thank you for specifically pointing out that just because something exists mathematically does not mean it exists in reality. Too many people fail to grasp that concept.

    • @michaelmueller260
      @michaelmueller260 2 роки тому +12

      Exactly! Same thing applies to the big bang and cosmic inflation theories though...

    • @doubledee9675
      @doubledee9675 2 роки тому

      @@kensho123456 At the moment, I'm thinking that he probably isn't, but I'd like to hear what AKrutikoff says to help me work towards a final decision

    • @doubledee9675
      @doubledee9675 2 роки тому

      @@kensho123456 I shall see what AKrutikoff says

  • @AlexanderGieg
    @AlexanderGieg 2 роки тому +104

    I'd add a fourth category to Science, Religion, and Pseudoscience: Philosophy. Simplicity arguments referring to Occam's Razor, as well as those based on Popper (or Kuhn, Feyerabend, Lakatos, etc.), are all about the conditions of possibility of scientific research, that is, they pertain to Philosophy of Science. Therefore, those arguing for the multiverse hypothesis on the basis of the simplicity of axioms (vs those who oppose it on the basis of the simplicity of outcomes), are doing so from a Philosophical perspective, more than from a Scientific, Religious, or Pseudoscientific one.

    • @SgtSupaman
      @SgtSupaman 2 роки тому +11

      I don't think that warrants a new category. It falls under the purpose of her "religion" category. Philosophy is merely considering the possibility. Once one starts "arguing for the multiverse hypothesis", it is a matter of personal belief, which is exactly what the "religion" category is for. Calling it "religion" may seem like a strange label, so perhaps you could use "philosophy" as a stand in for that category if it suits you better, but the category definitely includes what you're suggesting.

    • @theultimatereductionist7592
      @theultimatereductionist7592 2 роки тому +3

      Why not make your list: Entertainment, Science, Politics, Capitalism, Communism, Religion, Pseudoscience, Engineering, Coding, Law Enforcement, Medicine, Mathematics? There exist many many many different categories of human activity. What is this narrow-minded closed-minded obsession with having to compare the human activity of science with the (utterly useless unimportant unnecessary garbage) activity of religion?

    • @Slasgo
      @Slasgo 2 роки тому +7

      @@SgtSupaman I think philosophy suits it better, since it doesn't imply actual belief or any kind of ethical code. Of course this is more of a subjective perception and up for debate.

    • @TheoWerewolf
      @TheoWerewolf 2 роки тому +3

      Mmm, this is one of those "technically true.. but" ideas. You have to have some kind of framework or everything becomes permissible. The frameworks for science weren't defined arbitrarily, but evolved out of 6000 years of trying different approaches. Popper's model is the most current model and it, not surprisingly, reflects the process by which the refinement of the process itself went through. In the end, testing a hypothesis works because it requires that the person making the claim "show their homework", so to speak. You can't just propose ANYTHING and have it accepted as valid, you have to propose a way to test it in such a way that if it fails, your hypothesis is either wrong, or incomplete.
      But science isn't like a game show, you don't lose and go home, you're free to refine the hypothesis and give it another try, as many times as you like.
      And Occam's Razor isn't a "law", it's a tool for choosing where to start. Start with the easiest possible model - but if that doesn't work, start making the model more complex, but only where absolutely needed. If you have two models and both work and have *identical* predictive properties, but one is more complex, go with the simpler one because nothing you have in front of you says the more complex one is better, AND it's... more complex. But if later you discover the simpler model is flawed, go to the more complex model and start over by seeing if it *isn't* flawed.
      The idea of testing is technically a philosophical concept, but the thing is, it works, kind of by definition. It's a tautology: "if it works, it works". If you want to see if something works, try it and see if it works. Is it a flawed approach? Yes. If it's possible that there are phenomena which are real, but untestable in any possible way, then it breaks down.
      But here's the thing... how will you know such a thing exists and is real?

    • @AlexanderGieg
      @AlexanderGieg 2 роки тому +11

      @Evi1 M4chine Actually, Philosophy is neither scientific nor unscientific, it's prescientific, in the sense of encompassing, not of being less.
      An analogy: no matter what scientific research discovers, it'll be something that can be summed up in a set of equations. In that way math encompasses physics, which can be seen as a subset of math.
      When scientists employ concepts such as causality, falseability, reductionism etc., they're using conceptual "tools" developed by philosophical inquiry. Science, even theoretical science, is the application of those tools in the investigation of the world our senses perceive. And while scientific research goes on using the tools developed by philosophy, philosophy itself proceeds developing more such tools, which may or may not eventually be employed in scientific research and other areas.

  • @D_Archives
    @D_Archives 2 роки тому +181

    It's impossible to overstate how great this channel is.

    • @omp199
      @omp199 2 роки тому +1

      "It's just as good as Sean Carroll's."

    • @TeaParty1776
      @TeaParty1776 2 роки тому +6

      In another universe, its possible.

    • @covid19alpha2variantturboc7
      @covid19alpha2variantturboc7 2 роки тому

      @@TeaParty1776 and in others this channel doesn't even exist

    • @luiggiphilipi
      @luiggiphilipi Рік тому

      So now we know this is the oposite particle to:
      "It's only possible to understate how great this channel is."
      Probably first time an entanglement was observed on a YT coment section.

  • @frank327
    @frank327 2 роки тому +22

    Such an impressive intellect, and even more impressive to be able to communicate these ideas with such clarity!

  • @garysteven1343
    @garysteven1343 2 роки тому +222

    Your videos are always a treat for rational thinking, thank you Sabine!!! ❤️

    • @ICANTOUCHTHESUN
      @ICANTOUCHTHESUN 2 роки тому

      Rational thinking is a myth, a fiction like Santa Clause or Bugs Bunny. And that revelation is a finding of the sciences! Stop living the fiction of the past like Sabine and her colleagues do.

    • @garysteven1343
      @garysteven1343 2 роки тому +3

      @@ICANTOUCHTHESUN Claiming something without presenting any valid arguments to support it, whatever your claims maybe, is illogical.
      Also, "a finding of the science" is usually something highly regarded. At least for people who understand how science works and are not blinded by religious beliefs.

    • @alexd.6551
      @alexd.6551 2 роки тому

      hmm, rational thinking has to do with arguments rather than facts, what we call science is the relation between the two which we humans enforce axiomatically (i.e. belief). If I live all my life in a cave and I see an elephant shadow on the cave wall, is it science to assume there is actually an elephant? If I am to understand correctly the shadow I must consider the elephant even if I have no interaction with it (apart from seeing the shadow). The elephant is the broader reality even if I could assume other simpler explanation for the shadow. Is it worth making the effort to understand the elephant for little to no practical benefit? @Sabine would say no. Others would argue science is about knowledge and not practical results. Math for instance is less than half practical and we still call it science.
      About the multiverse I have one observation to make: Our universe is very, very, very specific. It is so specific that the possibility for it to exist without anything else outside is about zero. The fact that we have this universe makes the universe itself to be the shadow on the cave wall example. This kind of compels us to rationalize the multiverse approach.

    • @reasonerenlightened2456
      @reasonerenlightened2456 2 роки тому

      but, Why is she constantly insisting that the measurer must have consciousness in order to have determinism of the measured?

    • @reasonerenlightened2456
      @reasonerenlightened2456 2 роки тому

      ​@@kensho123456 she never explains it.
      Clearly determinism emerges from the interaction between two entities but she insists that one of them must have consciousness. how come?

  • @fritzwardrodriguezprep5747
    @fritzwardrodriguezprep5747 2 роки тому +82

    Part of what makes this series so great is even my middle school science students can grasp most of the argument. They have all seen Marvel movies about the multiverse and find the concept interesting. It's great that they can understand that a concept science can still have value as a literary device. Hossenfelder does a wonderful job in explaining that just because science cannot address a topic does not mean the topic itself is without value.

  • @Quidisi
    @Quidisi 2 роки тому +125

    One of your BEST videos ever!
    My takeaways: 1. If it can't be empirically observed, it may not be wrong, but it's not science, it's faith-based.
    2. Just because some math describes reality does not mean that all math describes reality. (Math is a sub-set of Reality, not the other way around)

    • @brothermine2292
      @brothermine2292 2 роки тому +20

      Don't you have that last sentence backward? Assuming all of reality can be described using mathematical laws, but some math doesn't describe reality, this implies the math that describes reality is a subset of math... or to say it less precisely, reality is a subset of math.

    • @Redsauce101
      @Redsauce101 2 роки тому +11

      @@brothermine2292 You can use maths to describe anything just like you can use words to describe anything, it doesn't mean that set of maths or words is true to reality.

    • @brothermine2292
      @brothermine2292 2 роки тому +4

      @@Redsauce101 : You're agreeing with what I wrote, right? You didn't explicitly use a word such as "agree" though, so perhaps one of us is failing to communicate clearly.

    • @jhoughjr1
      @jhoughjr1 2 роки тому +2

      Or is it?

    • @Redsauce101
      @Redsauce101 2 роки тому +9

      @@brothermine2292 Disagree. Maths are a language and are merely a way to attempt to express an understanding of reality.

  • @TheSkystrider
    @TheSkystrider 2 роки тому +62

    I love how rational Sabine is. Very satisfying ways of explaining what things are and what things are not, regularly.

    • @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017
      @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 2 роки тому +3

      She's rational until you get her talking about trans people. Then all of a sudden she gets real woke/irrational.

    • @Richter647
      @Richter647 2 роки тому

      @@stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 Real woke? In other words, she treats trans people as equal human beings with respect and dignity. While you intentionally treat them with hate, ignorance, intolerance, and incivility. And why? Because you're a disgusting, uneducated, and uncivilized, asshole.

    • @tinkeringtim7999
      @tinkeringtim7999 2 роки тому +1

      It is very satisfying, unfortunately though, she should rip into a mirror sometime. Everything she lambasts in everyone else's work, appears to be in her own too.
      I used to love her until I discovered she's just yet another popularist hypocrite.

    • @tinkeringtim7999
      @tinkeringtim7999 2 роки тому +3

      @@stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 she has equally arbitrary and unclear lines about what counts as "real" in maths, but speaks and acts as if she's doing different.
      She asks and answers a lot of philosophical questions while in her videos and books lambasting philosophers for being useless, believing she is guided by the maths and experiments, but when others do the same just with a different perspective she correctly calls it pseudo-science.
      Anyone who thinks maths directly connects to nature without philosophy in between is just unaware of what science was when it earned the prestige which it has been frittering away ever since it denounced philosophy and adopted Hilbert's fundamentalist neo-platonic cult philosophy as its new and unquestionable foundation.

  • @emergentform1188
    @emergentform1188 Рік тому +6

    Brilliant, love it. Most humans tend to confuse their internal thoughts/theories with external reality, and it's not only theists who have this problem. It seems to be a very common issue for most people, I've noticed.

  • @raffaeledivora9517
    @raffaeledivora9517 2 роки тому +59

    Zuckerberg candy... that's an excellent german joke 🤣 (Zucker=sugar in german)

  • @robertosans5250
    @robertosans5250 2 роки тому +7

    Fantastic video. In these days it is essential to have someone to call BS for what it is. Thank you for that. You do science a good service.

  • @ibperth
    @ibperth Рік тому +4

    Outstanding! As a professional theoretical physicist who has used his mathematics to occasionally show experiment to be wrong (via subsequent experiments agreeing with our calculations and not previous experiments), I tell students that the domain of mathematical validity is always limited. Mathematics is not the reality, but a phenomenally useful tool on certain occasions. The challenge is to know when and where. While I love existential problems, I subscribe to: "Don't worry, just calculate!". Utility trumps all.

  • @MightyDrunken
    @MightyDrunken 2 роки тому +245

    It's a shame that we live in the only Universe where the multiverse does not exist.

    • @ashroskell
      @ashroskell 2 роки тому +18

      Very clever. Underrated comment. The more I read it the more my eyes cross and I disappear into a puff of logic . . .

    • @WilliamParkerer
      @WilliamParkerer 2 роки тому +10

      @@ashroskell Agreed. Gotta be mighty drunken to think of such sentence.

    • @socratesuffer2765
      @socratesuffer2765 2 роки тому +4

      In the parallel universe, you’re commenting on the right youtube video.

    • @rifwalker6807
      @rifwalker6807 2 роки тому

      Universes were observed in the hotel

  • @Relocrian
    @Relocrian 2 роки тому +207

    I really love how SH gets right to the point, destroys and then leaves you a message with some love in case your beliefs were broken. Frontier science is bloody, but necessary.

    • @daddyleon
      @daddyleon 2 роки тому +10

      And cracks some lovely jokes!

    • @KaiseruSoze
      @KaiseruSoze 2 роки тому +2

      lol - you've been to a physics convention eh?

    • @notwhatiwasraised2b
      @notwhatiwasraised2b 2 роки тому +2

      well said

    • @bitkurd
      @bitkurd 2 роки тому

      The “belief” is just an illusion including Sabine’s opinion. As soon as she stops judgment, her entire universe will collapse and will be withdrawn back into singularity. Human intellect can not understand anything bigger than human’s brain, unfortunately it’s the sad truth.

    • @zero132132
      @zero132132 2 роки тому +3

      The claim that MWI is observationally identical to other QM interpretations is incompatible with the claim that MWI is unique among QM interpretations in positing that unobservable shit is real. The methodology for testing it and reaching it as a conclusion is identical to Copenhagen, except that it arguably makes fewer assumptions.
      You could try to argue that interpretation isn't science, but the claim that the moon really consists of dust couldn't properly be described as religion, even though it's a claim about physical existence rather than just observations.

  • @fonkyfesh-old
    @fonkyfesh-old 2 роки тому +210

    Thank you Sabine, for bringing all this tabloid-level "science" back down to earth.

    • @commodoor6549
      @commodoor6549 2 роки тому

      Tabloid level science?... like that guy Leonard Susskind? Easy there Fonky Fonk, Sabine is a relative novice in the field of theoretic physics, who does her UA-cam channel as a side hustle because her science gig isn't paying the bills. Btw, this year's Nobel Prize winners experimentally pushed Bell's Theorum out of the shadows and into the daylight, and apparently the Universe may not be locally real. All Sabine has is a UA-cam channel. Btw, I didn't see Sabine's name listed on that Nobel Prize.
      _There are more things in heaven and Earth, Horatio, Than are dreamt of in your philosophy_ .

    • @ravimishra4914
      @ravimishra4914 Рік тому

      At sme stage evry science is tabloid level... Even the argument presented against multiverse aren't convincing...big bang enthusiasts don't hve any real logical answers wen smebdy asks them about beginning of time and wat before big bang... The multiverse theory has it origins in ancient Indian science and is the only logical answer to the mysteries of the universe...ancient Indian Hindu scientific texts tells a lot about cyclical nature of time and universe...

    • @rationalsceptic7634
      @rationalsceptic7634 Рік тому

      ua-cam.com/video/1mJSkvqICY8/v-deo.html

    • @donaldkasper8346
      @donaldkasper8346 Рік тому

      It is not tabloid science, it is gibberish crap.

    • @commodoor6549
      @commodoor6549 Рік тому

      @@donaldkasper8346 Sure, go to Stanford and have that discussion with Dr. Leonard Susskind. You might want learn to read at the 6th grade level first
      ua-cam.com/video/WL38FGjV-u8/v-deo.html

  • @KutWrite
    @KutWrite 2 роки тому +22

    Fascinating, as usual.
    Kudos on your graphics. They really pop!
    I feel sorry for any universe in which there is no Sabine Hossenfelder.

  • @jcork3460
    @jcork3460 2 роки тому +10

    Sabine, I love your humour! You still bring the information to us but in such a brilliant way. Please carry on in your way!

  • @meesalikeu
    @meesalikeu Рік тому +1

    there is nothing more clear and straight forward than a doc sabine video.

  • @paulm5443
    @paulm5443 2 роки тому +4

    Great video. Nice to see you weren't too judgemental on people believing in the multiverse if they want to. It's interesting to consider complex ideas but it's really good how you point out they are not science or theories.

  • @Tacopi3
    @Tacopi3 2 роки тому +6

    I feel like this addresses many worlds theories unfairly by claiming it "Postulate[s] the existence of unobservable entities". It postulates that to observers, these many universes are all observable. It's not fair to say that this has no testable experimental significance to us if it is the true rationale behind Bell's theorem.

    • @Tacopi3
      @Tacopi3 2 роки тому +2

      @Evi1 M4chine First of all, please get off your high horse. That second paragraph is unnecessary.
      You misunderstand my position as I do not believe that observers are ever in an 'absolute' universe. We are always experiencing many worlds at a time and the observations/measurements we take define the common characteristics of those worlds; limiting their differences. The consequences of all observers to be observing multiple worlds simultaneously can elegantly explain quantum mechanical weirdness without stripping particles of their discreet positions in their respective universes. But we as observers can never collect enough information to define ourselves to a single universe and must live in many worlds.
      She even admits that these theories can explain all the same observations in 14:36 but claims that it means nothing if the theory mechanisms parallel those of the Copenhagen interpretation albeit with different assumptions. She views it as more complicated so it is 'pseudoscience' now? This is wielding Occam's razor as a club in the exact way she criticized.

  • @garycarter6773
    @garycarter6773 2 роки тому +5

    I love you in every multiverse. Thank you!!! Great video! :)

  • @russswanson3820
    @russswanson3820 2 роки тому +53

    Both the science and the humour are well done. Thanks!

    • @daddyleon
      @daddyleon 2 роки тому +1

      Yeah, she’s a true star at it: clear, concise, convincing, quite witty!

  • @juanjoseescanellas3798
    @juanjoseescanellas3798 2 роки тому +17

    As always, very clear explanation of a relevant topic, even out of Physics. Great.

  • @evazauner
    @evazauner Рік тому +1

    oje sabine, du zerstörst grad meinen traum. ich liebe diese multiversumsgeschichten, und hoffe doch sehr, dass sie nicht nur "geschichten" sind. immerhin sind ja einige der grossen in der physik davon überzeugt.

  • @timoluetk
    @timoluetk 2 роки тому +35

    Thank you so much far making this Sabine. This is one of the big theories in public perception and someone needed to call it out!

  • @TheoWerewolf
    @TheoWerewolf 2 роки тому +24

    Dr. Hossenfelder, I most enjoy your presentations when you're focused on core science and this is very core. But the two issues that most resonate with me are "the untestable 'science'" problem and "scientists who confuse the model with reality" problem. I run into both of these so often with otherwise well qualified and highly intelligent scientists who should know better.
    The latter case is even weirder because it works both ways: "extend a model outside its range of application and define it as reality" and "selectively limit a model to avoid hitting an unwanted outcome where the model and reality just don't line up". The one that drives me spare is "if you go faster than light, you go backwards in time." Well, no, because you can't go faster than light. This is a case where there are multiple models that say different things (which should be a huge clue that ALL the models are incomplete), but Einstein's equations (by way of Lorentzian math) say that any object with rest mass cannot go AT the speed of light, let alone faster. Moreover, if you go faster, you require imaginary numbers to represent time, length and mass/energy, which makes no sense. That's not how the real world works.
    The thing about Lorentz equations is that they work VERY well (it's why the GPS system works, for example), but clearly at the speed of light or past it, they break down. In fact, ALL similar equations break down when an object with rest mass hits or exceeds the speed of light. So making statements like "if you go faster than light you go back in time" are not science. They also ignore the entire question of "Is there an extant past and future?" (if not, there there is no 'past' to go back to), "Is the universe absolutely deterministic?" (if so, then the question is meaningless since you already ARE in the past, you're just describing the worldlines more completely - you didn't 'travel'), "Is there a second (or more) t-axis?" (which you'd need if you can consciously choose to 'move" back in time, since moving is a change in location over time and now you're treating TIME as location) and so on, all of which fall into the "untestable science" domain, for now.
    It's perfectly OK to say "we don't know" or " we don't know how to model that yet," but I often see scientists try to fix a problem with a model by layering even more model on top or by willfully ignoring other models that don't mesh with theirs (see: Einstein and quantum mechanics...). When done for the right reasons, this is actually good - it forces scientists to refine and test their models rigorously - but at its worse (Fred Hoyle's staunch refusal to accept the big bang mainly because a Jesuit priest figured it out - even though that priest was a world class physicist) it just slows everything down and confuses and misleads people (anti-vaxxers, anyone?).

    • @Dragrath1
      @Dragrath1 2 роки тому

      @@DragNetJoe If you read my comment you would know that the claim you made has been falsified the risks of the vaccines are extremely minimal less than 1 in a million odds while the risk for long covid is about 1/5 odds. Yes the fatality risk is lower than smallpox but it is more deadly than influenza. Notably there is still a relatively high number of deaths among children compared to influenza or a typical cold.

    • @yueelson
      @yueelson 2 роки тому

      @@Dragrath1 Tell that to someone whose lung fibrosis got activated as a result of vaccination, and their life got cut short for a few years... And no - I'm not anti-vaxxer - got all the way through booster.
      As to Dr H opinion on multiverse - it should be expressed in peer review publication and be part of scientific debate. This is not a matter of public opinion... And yes - the fate of multiverse/eternal inflation theory is still up in the air (or false vacuum? ;-) ).

  • @donaldcarter6252
    @donaldcarter6252 2 роки тому +31

    Thank you Sabrine, for explaining difficult physics problems in ways your everyday average Joes with a high school education like myself can understand. I'm so glad to hear that I'm not the only one who thinks that (although fun to discuss) the multiverse has a nice home in science fiction, but not one just yet in physics! You rock Sabrine, keep the videos coming!

  • @samuelpoche-mercedes2352
    @samuelpoche-mercedes2352 2 роки тому +4

    I agree with everything in this video, You're not questioning the validity of the multiverse but rather questioning its scientific aplications.

  • @tomschmidt381
    @tomschmidt381 2 роки тому +12

    Another great episode exercising my brain cells. I'm multiverse agnostic. As our knowledge expands our notion of being in the center of things has been diminished so I don't find the notion of multiple universes untenable but as you mentioned if they are impossible to observe there is no way to know if they exist or not so not scientific.

    • @Achrononmaster
      @Achrononmaster 2 роки тому

      She did point out @11:50 published papers of tests for multiverse hypotheses using the CMBR.

    • @joansparky4439
      @joansparky4439 2 роки тому

      @@Achrononmaster for some of them, not all..

    • @joansparky4439
      @joansparky4439 2 роки тому +1

      @Evi1 M4chine _"research grant money being spent on them, leaving juust that one bit too little for research for that thing that ultimately caused your child to die from something totally preventable"_
      That argument is based on research grant money being distributed/allocated on merit instead of need.. which is a broken/inefficient system to begin with.
      Markets are very good at distributing/allocating scarce resources based on need instead of merit, while commissions and other such processes/constructs/frameworks are usually being run by a "select" few who NATURALLY optimize locally for their own benefit.
      Markets are global optimizers IF every market participant has the same rights.. this is then also what differentiates free markets from unfree markets, where the former are as equal as possible the latter enforce rules that create a select view - which is what leads to the suboptimal local optimization instead of the gloabl optimization.

  • @M200Sniping
    @M200Sniping 2 роки тому +4

    The book was fantastic! THe audio book reader was also excellent and captured your tone and speaking style well.

    • @SabineHossenfelder
      @SabineHossenfelder  2 роки тому +2

      I'm happy to hear! 😊

    • @_John_P
      @_John_P 2 роки тому

      @@SabineHossenfelder Please talk about rotating wormholes, thanks.

    • @AquarianSoulTimeTraveler
      @AquarianSoulTimeTraveler 2 роки тому

      @@SabineHossenfelder Well if we take all the space between all the atoms and electrons and close the gap we could fit all of reality everything in the entire universe down as the size of a grain of rice. Ultimately everything is subjective so there is no truth but all we can do is try to come up with the most simplistic Solutions like you always say. Each universe's version has its own frequency and they all share the same so-called Mass or fundamental building block for creating everything we see. But it's hard for people to comprehend is how a change in the frequency can allow you to Only See what is part of your reality and I hypothesize that accelerating expansion of the universe could be caused by dark matter and I have a couple different reasons on what could be causing this dark matter to grow exponentially. On one hand I think that the dark matter does interact with regular matter and if we were to not slap the mainstream narrative then you could easily say that dark matter is all of the other Universe versions and the more time travel you have in a particular time the more differentiation you have and therefore you have more increase density of dark matter because dark matter is these other Universe versions bleeding through we could see it there we could so-called measure it but we just can't actually see it. Increasing the number of soul Time Travelers in a area of operation like on this planet will create a rise in the density of Dark Matter creating an illusion of accelerating expansion this is one of the theories but just know everything is a theory and it's all a waste of time...

    • @AquarianSoulTimeTraveler
      @AquarianSoulTimeTraveler 2 роки тому

      @@SabineHossenfelder that's a good thing about philosophy it can easily destroy "science" if a tree falls in the woods and no one is around to hear it does it make a sound... like I always say in order to have objectivity you need to have an observer that exists from the very beginning of time and will exist all the way to the end of time and even if we have an observer that existed from the very beginning of time the end of time is not now and therefore there is no objectivity only subjectivity so yes if no one is around to hear the tree fall could it possibly make a sound??! And also called objects in our universe are also subjects because No Object existed from the beginning of time and will exist all the way to the end of time and if even if it does the end of time has not came yet so there is no objectivity! All this does is creates a hierarchy of bullshit people wanting to sound Superior when they are absolutely not! Therefore all science is pseudoscience! Plain and simple! I guess we need something to waste our time on though I enjoy our interactions here and I like your little winks you do...

    • @AquarianSoulTimeTraveler
      @AquarianSoulTimeTraveler 2 роки тому

      @@SabineHossenfelder all I know is that the fact that 'science' has claimed that our universe is expanding faster than the speed of light just slaps itself in the face. You could say it's relative and all the other bullshit but ultimately it is all bullshit! The fact that scientists or so-called scientists would accept this as so-called science it's just mind-boggling how so many people could be so stupid... it's a lot easier than having to rethink our entire scientific method though because all of our instrumentation and all of our measurements would be considered completely inaccurate and unmeasurable which they are. Like I say one of the biggest problems is thinking that we can observe from our singular point in space and time even if we've napped our entire galaxy there's nothing but a singular point in space and time with physical ships mapping our entire galaxy it would still be nothing and therefore to think that we can map accurately our entire universe from our singular point in space and time using telescopes that cost billions of dollars it would ultimately lead to all of the measurements being wrong and that we can't map from our singular point in space and time if we were logical we would come to this conclusion but it's not about logic it's about getting funding and if there is no logic to anything then why would we fund the work... if we know the objects in the mirror may be closer than they appear due to this exponential growth of dark matter which is everywhere our measurement ability would be completely knocked so it's easier to say that we can measure the dark matter and our universe is accelerating and expansion past the speed of light which is totally insane instead of saying that the dark matter is exponentially growing creating an illusion of accelerating expansion pass the speed of light! I stand for a lot of things but without what I will not stand for is our universe accelerating faster than the speed of light it's just not true and if science was honest with itself it would know that there was no way to physically prove it from our singular point in space and time. we would need to map the entire universe with physical ships... Anyways i bit your head off enough for this abomination of a video... Lu ttyl

  • @aquacruisedb
    @aquacruisedb 2 роки тому +8

    As Karl Pilkington once said concerning the study of gravity "It's not a problem so don't worry about it...we're not all floating about, so leave it". I feel the same way regarding the multiverse!

    • @chbe6945
      @chbe6945 2 роки тому

      The great Karl Pilkington might have a different view on multiverses. His edict 'so leave it' for gravity might not necessarily transfer over to multiverses. Someone should consult the great man on this question.

    • @marcforrester7738
      @marcforrester7738 2 роки тому +5

      An attitude that ages like milk the moment someone stumbles on a practical application.

    • @dlevi67
      @dlevi67 2 роки тому +2

      @@marcforrester7738 How does milk age the moment someone stumbles on a practical application?

  • @jeremyrice5091
    @jeremyrice5091 2 роки тому +6

    I never thought a explanation of the multiverse theory could be so funny! Absolutely brilliant.

  • @Aarkwrite
    @Aarkwrite 2 роки тому +10

    I used to ignore the elephant in the room but thanks to Sabine I made a new friend.

  • @leonard3826
    @leonard3826 2 роки тому +4

    A marvelous demonstration of "how to call out Michio Kaku, without calling out Michio Kaku".

  • @thakursn
    @thakursn Рік тому +3

    Honesty in science is the need of the hour, and I thank you!

  • @lrvogt1257
    @lrvogt1257 2 роки тому +20

    I would love to see a conversation/debate with Ms Hossenfelder and Sean Carroll who seems to be more comfortable with the multi-verse concept.

    • @rossmcleod7983
      @rossmcleod7983 2 роки тому +7

      Yes it would be a thing alrighty. Big fan of Sean Carroll, has a fantastic channel.

    • @KirkpatrickSounds
      @KirkpatrickSounds 2 роки тому +5

      Eagerly awaiting this to become a reality

    • @annamyob
      @annamyob 2 роки тому

      Sabine is perfectly comfortable with the concept. She's just enough of a scientist to know it's not science. Either Sean (however enamored he may be of the concept) is also enough of a scientist, or is not.

  • @redcleon
    @redcleon 2 роки тому +37

    Question: You say, "We know that black holes evaporate, so they eventually reveal their inside," but isn't that something we believe due only to mathematics? I was under the impression that hawking radiation had never been observed.
    Love your work. Thank you.

    • @ruprecht9997
      @ruprecht9997 2 роки тому +1

      Stuff falls into black holes, and they have a boundary towards space around them, and there is the gravity thingy, so it is at least fair to say there probably is an inside, and to reason about it. :-)

    • @schawo2
      @schawo2 2 роки тому +5

      @@fullfungo We observed something else, and after some nice philosophical deductions we can now belive in Hawking Radiation. HR is now just a synonym of God. Going overrationalized in Physics has its own pitfalls. We have to think out of the box to find new physics.

    • @fullfungo
      @fullfungo 2 роки тому +2

      @@schawo2 what are these “philosophical deductions” you are referring to?

  • @waltergith6535
    @waltergith6535 Рік тому +1

    Great, it is so important to state what science can and can't do and how it is supposed to work. Thank you Sabine.

  • @fluffysheap
    @fluffysheap 2 роки тому +11

    This is a wonderful video. I've been saying almost all of these things for years, now I have strong evidence on my side too. The "unobservable even in principle" is even the same exact phrasing.
    Seriously, thank you!

  • @holeshothunter5544
    @holeshothunter5544 2 роки тому +8

    10:30 I agree completely. Too many think that mathematics IS something. I say it describes something with an unknown degree of accuracy. Thank you,. Sabine

  • @fpostgate
    @fpostgate Рік тому +1

    Thanks again Sabine, you keep me watching. Thanks for the comments about people extrapolating their math models!

  • @janee11able
    @janee11able 2 роки тому +9

    Amazing ! Thank you for clarifying why it is not science. Keep up the good work ;)

  • @macsnafu
    @macsnafu 2 роки тому +17

    Thank you for this video. A lot of new age types have tried to use multiverse theories as justification for their wacky ideas. I enjoyed the multiverse DC Comics created in the 60s and 70s, but retroactively ruined in the 80s, but even as a teenager, I knew the multiverse was as fictional as the super-powered beings that populated it.

    • @macsnafu
      @macsnafu 2 роки тому +1

      @@HW-sw5gb Sorry for the mis-implication of my statement. DC's multiverse is fictional.

    • @HW-sw5gb
      @HW-sw5gb 2 роки тому

      @@macsnafu My bad as well, I get what you meant in your original comment now 🙏 You’re 100% correct.

  • @peterbaxter8151
    @peterbaxter8151 Рік тому +1

    Thank you for your criticism of multiverses Sabine. Great work.

  • @ivanelrino
    @ivanelrino 2 роки тому +10

    Sabine, I'd really love it if you reviewed the sci-fi physics written about in The Three-Body Problem series, especially the third book.

  • @billwehrmacher3842
    @billwehrmacher3842 2 роки тому +4

    I love your channel and enjoy the overview of various inventions. In so many, like this one, for which finding the correct answer, have zero impact on anything...in our universe.
    You have the absolutely correct view of this. :)

  • @CalikL
    @CalikL 2 роки тому +3

    Just discovered this channel and can't stop watching your videos!

  • @dragonmudd
    @dragonmudd 2 роки тому +7

    Great video, but it's important to point out that infinite, even infinite multiverses, does not necessarily mean every possible thing you can imagine definitely happens/exists. Infinities can have gaps. For example, the even numbers are infinite, but you'll never find three among them. Or, infinite random walks in three dimensions have only about a 1/3rd chance of returning to the point they started.

    • @tahunuva4254
      @tahunuva4254 2 роки тому +2

      If we define a universe as the container for a set of truths (or measurements, observation, actualised possibilities, or whatever other synonym for “real thing” you want to use), then everything you can imagine *does* happen, if there are infinite realities. Your argument here is akin to saying “you won’t find an impossibility among these infinite possibilities”; which is false, because it’s completely possible for a reality to contain impossibilities, as illogical as that may seem to us.

    • @stylis666
      @stylis666 2 роки тому

      Exactly. It's like the possibilities we see in this universe. We might think that it's possible that a flipped coin would fall on the other side, but that doesn't mean that it is. It might just be that you'd need an impossible history of everything for it to happen that way at that time and place.
      In a similar way I couldn't have a version of me that would marry Elon. First off, I wouldn't be able to identify with such a thing and you'd have a hard time showing the history of that universe before you can convince me that the person who did that is in any way comparable to me without me being able to say that I am then comparable to everyone on this planet as well and everyone here is also a version of me. It would require vastly different genetics and parents before it could be possible.
      At best you can show that things are technically in the set of possibilities because marriage is a thing and both Elon and I are human and humans marry, so I could marry Elon. Something you can also do with universes and black swans. This universe exists, swans exist, black feathers exist, so technically a multiverse is possible and so are black swans. You can't do that with gods for instance. You can't, for instance, show that a god, as a mind without a body, is a possibility that we can reasonably consider.
      But what we can and can't show to be possible has nothing to say about the actual possibility. After all, it's possible I am wearing yellow socks, until you know I don't. They're black by the way, mostly purple I'd guess from experience, which is not an existing colour but a combination of red and blue and zero yellow.

    • @tahunuva4254
      @tahunuva4254 2 роки тому

      @@stylis666 “Impossible” is a meaningless term given infinite possibilities, though. As soon as you define something as impossible (like your example efficient triangle wheels), you’ve already flirted with the idea of an efficient triangle wheel. And thus, it has a chance (however seemingly infinitesimal) of being a part of our paradigm. That’s not egocentric, that’s just how science escapes from the realm of dogma: by being open to possibility.

  • @glasses685
    @glasses685 2 роки тому +6

    Great video. Some people would say the multiverse idea is currently the only way to explain why the physical constants happen to be in the narrow range that permits life (and observers). In the same way that, if we assumed Earth was the only planet, we'd want some sort of explanation as to why it happens to have conditions that allow life. But if we assume there are trillions of other planets then it's much less surprising that some of them would have the right conditions for life.
    I'm not claiming it's scientific though, since other planets can be observed and other universes can't. Still, in the absence of any scientific theory explaining why the values of the constants are what they are, from a philosophical standpoint it seems as good as explanation as any.

    • @joansparky4439
      @joansparky4439 2 роки тому

      That still doesn't help explaining why something (obviously) is - it just throws a statistical cape over it. You can do that when you philosophize, but don't call it science.

    • @annamyob
      @annamyob 2 роки тому

      "the only way to explain" ... balderdash. The existence of other "earths" doesn't explain a single thing about our Earth. "oh, there's a trillion of 'em, so there's bound to be one that has the particulars that ours has" doesn't explain a thing. yet another logical fallacy masquerading as science.

    • @davegold
      @davegold 2 роки тому

      The 'narrow range that permits life' is a totally unproven conjecture.

    • @annamyob
      @annamyob 2 роки тому

      @@davegold that too. :)

  • @jonathansachs1979
    @jonathansachs1979 Рік тому

    Thanks for this. as a curious layperson I thoroughly enjoyed both the content and the delivery.

  • @sharonminsuk
    @sharonminsuk 2 роки тому +28

    The first of your videos that I have watched. I love that you are opinionated! I'm no physicist, but sometimes some aspects of modern physics seem insane to me. It is refreshing to hear "there may actually not be anything to this".

    • @sharonminsuk
      @sharonminsuk Рік тому +1

      I don't want to go overboard on condemnation. I'm actually a scientist myself (biology, not physics), and I think that proposing and considering novel ideas is useful and important. As long as somebody knowledgeable can bring a critical eye to it, which is why I appreciated this video. And if nothing else, such ideas can make for some AWESOME science fiction stories! Also, some of the "crazy" ideas will turn out to be true, and you just never know in advance, which ones they will be. Everything we now take as established and solid, once sounded crazy to most people.

    • @joeltunnah
      @joeltunnah Рік тому

      ​@sharonminsuk very little in modern physics is "established". It changes at least every generation, if not sooner.

  • @stephenhawdon2208
    @stephenhawdon2208 2 роки тому +4

    I love watching your videos. Always eloquently explained!

  • @lawrencium2626
    @lawrencium2626 Рік тому

    thank you for an honest and skeptical pitch, I got fed up of 'science media' glossing over these topics with a little too much permissive ease.

  • @MarceloTrindade1
    @MarceloTrindade1 2 роки тому +55

    That's another great video, as always, but not because Sabine questions the multiverse(s). It is great because she condemns those physicists that, instead of using Mathematics as a Science translation tool, use Mathematics to "create" science.

    • @martifingers
      @martifingers 2 роки тому +7

      A counter example possibly though: Dirac's prediction (using only mathematics) of the positron.
      Sabine is formidable but I feel there is a slight tension here with here previously stated notion that you cannot really understand basic physics through analogies - the maths is essential. I hope I am not misrepresenting her but I come away from this feeling I need to really think this through. Her characterisation of the scope of science may be open to challenge.

    • @jcolvin2
      @jcolvin2 2 роки тому +1

      In her other videos she contradicts herself tho. She says that the essential mathematical parts of our theories should be considered to exist. She can't make up her mind on this, and contradicts herself.

  • @kr7799
    @kr7799 2 роки тому +9

    Excellent video. I think one big realization that can come out of this discussion is that science cannot answer many important questions that humans may be interested in. I mean I would like to know whether multiverse exists, but science simply cannot answer that question for me. While science is extremely useful in advancing civilization think there needs to be a reasonable amount of humility in acknowleding its limits.

  • @JoeCensored
    @JoeCensored 7 місяців тому +2

    Somewhere out there, someone was surprised by an elephant while watching this video, and is now convinced of many worlds.

  • @UncleSmokey
    @UncleSmokey 2 роки тому +31

    I Love the videos Sabine. Always a great interpretation of the Science.

  • @beatrute2677
    @beatrute2677 2 роки тому +9

    So glad to hear someone who knows their trade calling out BS for what it is. I’ve always tried to keep an open mind about the whacky theories of the last 20 years or so, but a lot of things never seemed to sit right with me and I have always chalked it up to my ignorance.

    • @squarerootof2
      @squarerootof2 2 роки тому +1

      Whacky "hypotheses": Dark Matter, Dark Energy, Inflation, Big Bang, General Relativity. Those are just a few of the most mainstream.
      Edit: oh, I forgot Flat Earth. That will be coming soon to the mainstream too together with one world unified religion.

    • @jackkrell4238
      @jackkrell4238 2 роки тому +1

      @@squarerootof2 Can you please expound on the notion that the world will have one "unified" religion?

    • @squarerootof2
      @squarerootof2 2 роки тому

      @@jackkrell4238 That's what the WEF, the Vatican and your rulers want for the sheeple. It's no secret, they brag about it.

    • @beatrute2677
      @beatrute2677 2 роки тому

      @Evi1 M4chine I hear ya man. I havent watched PBS spacetime for a long time now because of that reason.

  • @prakashms9621
    @prakashms9621 2 роки тому +2

    You have raised most important and relevant points. Thank you.

  • @richardhunt809
    @richardhunt809 2 роки тому +16

    Thank you for this typically clear-minded video, Sabine. I’ve always thought the many-worlds interpretation was absolutely crazy and completely useless and I can’t understand why anybody takes it seriously.

    • @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017
      @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 2 роки тому +2

      It's actually well motivated.

    • @dalmationblack
      @dalmationblack 2 роки тому +4

      @@richardhunt809 the appeal is that it behaves in practice identical in results to the Copenhagen interpretation (which we haven't found a problem with yet) without the incoherence of that theory's view of the measurement problem.

    • @jcolvin2
      @jcolvin2 2 роки тому +1

      People take it seriously because that's what the physics says (the Schroedinger equation + decoherence). It describes many worlds. The alternatives are all onticly incoherent or merely instrumentalist. Copenhagen can't say when a measurement happens. Qbism is just silent on the ontology. Objective collapse is increasingly ruled out by experiment. Bohm is manyworlds in denial (the pilot wave + decoherence is equivalent to Everett). Everett isn't actually an "interpretation" at all; it's just what the physics says. SH is an instrumentalist, but doesn't want to come out and say it.

    • @dalmationblack
      @dalmationblack 2 роки тому +1

      @@jcolvin2 yeah pretty much this. I like SH but I'm not sure what problem she has with MWI's solution to the measurement problem. "Measurement is when your brain becomes entangled with the thing you're measuring" explains everything we see without any assumptions beyond the schrodinger equation afaik

  • @ronigbzjr
    @ronigbzjr 2 роки тому +34

    When I was younger and more into physics, I took a few university courses on quantum mechanics. One of them was called Quantum Mechanics Interpretations, a course supposedly about physics, however took place in the building that was used for philosophy and social studies and such. The course was probably one of the things that made me give up on physics altogether. The professor, an avid believer of the many worlds interpretation btw, was the single most boring lecturer I have ever had a class with. His tone never changed as he droned on and on about what seemed like completely unscientific ideas, some somewhat plausible and others completely absurd. If this is supposed to be the cutting edge of physics, I said to myself, what's the point?
    It all sounds a little harsh, and I don't mean to shit all over the work of very important and intelligent human beings. They deserve their funding and noble prizes, no doubt. But I think what Sabine is saying should be a wake up call both for scientists and for the public to stop treating science like the new religion. Science is only concerned with explaining observation, belief has nothing to do with it. Human beings will keep exploring the cosmos and discover many new things but we may never know the answers to the so called "fundamental questions" and that's alright. Science doesn't have to explain everything and we're frequently chasing our own tail with this race towards a magical "one theory to rule them all". It's just an unnecessary burden on science to force it to bend to our human need of finding meaning in everything. That's what we have belief for, and to each their own.
    Thank you for another great video from the realest science communicator on youtube.

    • @DoctorBiobrain
      @DoctorBiobrain 2 роки тому +2

      I think the issue is people wanting to prove how smart they are by using their imagination to get ahead of science and pretend it makes them cutting edge. The further ahead their theory gets and more confusing it sounds, the smarter they must be because other people don’t understand what they’re talking about and you end up with followers saying how beautiful the emperor’s clothes are to prove they’re one of the smart ones who totally understood the gobbledygook. But if you don’t have evidence then you’ve got nothing and life doesn’t reward guesses.
      Thus said, I think this would be best defined as science as philosophy, not religion. Religion includes rituals and philosophies usually change to adapt to new knowledge while religion usually denies new knowledge if it conflicts with established beliefs. Scientific Philosophers love grabbing the latest research to build their imaginary theories on because it keeps them ahead of everyone else.

    • @theultimatereductionist7592
      @theultimatereductionist7592 2 роки тому +1

      Why not make your list: Entertainment, Science, Politics, Capitalism, Communism, Religion, Pseudoscience, Engineering, Coding, Law Enforcement, Medicine, Mathematics? There exist many many many different categories of human activity. What is this narrow-minded closed-minded obsession with having to compare the human activity of science with the (utterly useless unimportant unnecessary garbage) activity of religion?

    • @Steiwerd
      @Steiwerd 2 роки тому +2

      Do calculations. Never think about anything. Based.

    • @maalikserebryakov
      @maalikserebryakov 2 роки тому +1

      @@theultimatereductionist7592 Why do you hate God

  • @mickmiah7605
    @mickmiah7605 2 роки тому +18

    Thank You for this presentation. I saw you being polite to Michio Kaku, along with Roger Penrose, so TY for discussing this tired issue.
    I was hugely happy to hear Roger talk about the failing of QM and the need for a "Gravitised Quantum Mechanics". Is there any chance you could explain what he meant by this or your thoughts regarding this? Thank You Sabine for all these vids, I really appreciate them.

    • @user-jk1tw2qf1i
      @user-jk1tw2qf1i 2 роки тому +1

      I second this post. My thesis is on this topic, so I would love to hear an opinion.

    • @kiyoaki1985
      @kiyoaki1985 2 роки тому +3

      I tried to watch that video but just couldn't. Michio Kaku irritates me to no end with his speculative pandering.

    • @user-jk1tw2qf1i
      @user-jk1tw2qf1i 2 роки тому

      @@kiyoaki1985 lol. me too. i think penrose is similarly speculative, but i like his originality. string theory might play some role in understanding quantum gravity in the future, but without confirmation of it experimentally (not for many years i might add) making crazy untestable claims is the goofiest thing you could do. you'd think that a physicist would have a stronger logical compass than that

    • @kiyoaki1985
      @kiyoaki1985 2 роки тому +1

      @@user-jk1tw2qf1i I really don't get the appeal of speculative theories about multiverses and the fermi paradox and interstellar travel, it all just seems so infantile and uninteresting. I liked Kaku when I was 12 and didn't know better but kind of hate him now.

    • @edwardorr9439
      @edwardorr9439 Рік тому +1

      Whenever Sabine shot down a tenet of string theory, I'd hear "Michio Kaku" in my head. Luckly, I didn't make that a drinking game. I would have been unable to write these comments.

  • @Prayukth
    @Prayukth 2 роки тому +12

    Lack of interest in our universe is the reason for the interest in other universes..

    • @thebomber7641
      @thebomber7641 2 роки тому

      Meh. As the video points out its just a matter of "poetry". One of the topics that is easy to use as a media entertainment and has nothing to do with real universe. Similar to how the characters in all the entertainments are shown in a totally unrealistic ways, or being used as an instrument for anything (developing the plot or other characters) and doesnt really exist as an independent characters.

    • @calvinjackson8110
      @calvinjackson8110 4 місяці тому

      Yeah, why don't we work on trying to understand THIS universe instead of worrying about others which may not even exist.
      And I am aware that there is a segment of theorists who speculate whether this one is real, or an illusion or some hologram or simulation.

  • @redshiftdrift
    @redshiftdrift 2 роки тому +4

    Wonderful, thanks for showing what the limits of science are!

  • @vladpetric7493
    @vladpetric7493 2 роки тому +2

    Dr Hossenfelder, I'd like to respectfully object to your characterization of the Flying Spaghetti Monster. There are multiple aspects of the FSM that one could technically observe in the current universe.
    For instance, while we haven't directly observed spaghettification, I don't think anyone would argue that it doesn't happen near black holes.
    Similarly, the pasta-like layers in a neutron star have been hypothesized as well.
    There are other references, but perhaps less testable.

  • @yt.personal.identification
    @yt.personal.identification 2 роки тому +4

    In the mind of every person you have ever met exists a different and distinct version of you and no two are identical.
    Every observation gave a different measurement to each observer.

    • @mrdownboy
      @mrdownboy 2 роки тому +2

      Beautiful comment, almost poetry. Thank you for this, it has changed my perspective completely. Thank you.

  • @KirkpatrickSounds
    @KirkpatrickSounds 2 роки тому +5

    Fantastic as always. Would love to see Sabine discuss the MWI on the Mindscape podcast one day.

    • @fullyawakened
      @fullyawakened 2 роки тому +1

      Yes I think everything in this video is very well debunked even just in reading Carrol's book "something deeply hidden". It's almost like she hasn't heard of this stuff before even though it's her profession. She didn't address a single argument the multiverse theory stands on, just kept calling it silly.

  • @ashroskell
    @ashroskell 2 роки тому +1

    Loved this video. FINALLY I found a serious physicist willing to say out loud what so many of us lay-physics-fans have been thinking for all these years. I disagree with your definition of religion, if not the point you were making about it, but that’s all. After all, for many, the personal revelation of Gods or a God is very real to them, therefore has a personally evident basis for conviction in that belief. However, any thinking person would accept that this is not a basis for forcing that belief on anyone else, even if they enthuse about spreading it. So I have always maintained that the multiverse is a philosophical belief, like a preference for a political system. You can see effects in the real world resulting from the work people do to strive for that ideal - or in multiverse terms, the effects of their experiments to try to prove the hypothesis, or the effects their math has on others - but you can never see, touch, smell, or feel the idea in the real world. It still alters people’s behaviour and their goals in life, but that has no bearing on science or platonic evidence for being a thing. Not sure if I’m making sense now, but I hope that makes sense to someone.

    • @juanausensi499
      @juanausensi499 2 роки тому

      Believing in things that can't be experimented is religion, but that's not a definition of 'religion'. Blame the English language and is ambiguous verb 'to be', that sometimes is unidirectional and sometimes is bidirectional.

  • @brucehoward8767
    @brucehoward8767 2 роки тому +116

    Hooray for Sabine, a delightful blend of high IQ, cynicism, sarcasm, hot pepper and humor. Perhaps she’s the science gadfly. She not only rips apart theories but bloods the noses of those that promote them.

    • @brucehoward8767
      @brucehoward8767 2 роки тому +3

      @@storksforever2000 Good point but I don’t think that it is applicable in this case.

    • @storksforever2000
      @storksforever2000 2 роки тому +5

      @@brucehoward8767 Could’ve said the same thing about hidden variable theory. They literally thought it was intrinsically philosophical in nature for decades. Then someone came along and made it not. Same thing here. You can’t assume things will remain the same into the infinite future.

    • @reasonerenlightened2456
      @reasonerenlightened2456 2 роки тому

      Why is she constantly insisting that the measurer must have consciousness in order to have determinism of the measured?

  • @suan22
    @suan22 2 роки тому +18

    I think if we stick to the generally accepted theories then science would stop making progress. So i think it worth thinking about new ideas. Who knows maybe at some point someone will find a way to test those theories and they will be upgraded form pseudoscience to real science.

    • @tonybiddle6668
      @tonybiddle6668 2 роки тому

      Exactly. The genuine SCIENTIST does like Darwin and follows the evidence wherever it leads him, regardless of whether it demolishes his previously held hypotheses. The PSEUDO-scientist hangs onto his preconceived notions and rejects all the evidence (drawn from all over the world since anything began to be recorded) that proves them wrong as so much superstitious nonsense. Therefore some of our leading Atheists forfeit all credibility to be considered scientists - they are just using PARTS of science (scientia =knowledge) to push their own agenda.

  • @MikeWiest
    @MikeWiest Рік тому

    A thousand thank yous for pointing out that Many Worlds just renames rather than solves the measurement/collapse problem…you get a “branching problem” in addition to all the unobservable universes.

  • @ASLUHLUHC3
    @ASLUHLUHC3 2 роки тому +7

    You know somethings wrong when Many Worlds is the least controversial one

  • @naasking
    @naasking 2 роки тому +10

    I agree with most of this video, but I think the notion that we invented mathematics is more contentious that she admits. If we discover it instead, it solves a lot of thorny philosophical issues and this leads naturally to Tegmark's mathematical universe in which all mathematical structures exist. That said, as Sabine explains here, I wouldn't really call this science but philosophy.

    • @oscargordon
      @oscargordon 2 роки тому

      "Thorny philosophical issues"???" Are there any philosophical issues, thorny or otherwise, that have ever been solved?

    • @oscargordon
      @oscargordon 2 роки тому

      @@wanderslostify I suppose in a way you could be correct in that technically everyone with a PhD is a philosopher.
      So your example of a thorny problem solved by people who’s day job is actually a “philosopher” instead of “a person who uses the scientific method to solve problems", is the emission theory of vision where people identified as philosophers thought we shoot particles out of our eyes to be able to see.
      It was Alhazen (Ibn al-Haytham), identified as a mathematician, astronomer, and physicist that correctly identified how vision worked.
      "Ibn al-Haytham was an early proponent of the concept that a hypothesis must be supported by experiments based on confirmable procedures or mathematical evidence-an early pioneer in the scientific method five centuries before Renaissance scientists. On account of this, he is sometimes described as the world's "first true scientist".
      So sorry, your number one best example of how philosophers solved a thorny problem doesn't add up.
      Try again.

    • @wanderslostify
      @wanderslostify 2 роки тому +1

      @@oscargordon Alhazen is the scientist that first came up with the scientific proof. Before he did that, he formed a logical and testable hypothesis based upon his evaluation of other people's reasoning. Only after this reasoning was done, he was able to construct an experiment that tested his hypothesis. If his reasoning was not sound, his experimental observations would have been useless. These days, science can build on itself with only very basic reasoning (still a philosophical exercise, though). When you get back to early principles, philosophy is needed to define the questions that scientific inquiry hopes to answer.

  • @RexMundiFL
    @RexMundiFL Рік тому

    Great topic.. from a scientific standpoint, the unobservability and lack of empirical evidence for these multiverses make them unnecessary assumptions.
    💡 The scientific method relies on empirical observations and testable predictions, and multiverses do not currently fall within the scope of scientific inquiry.
    💡 It is crucial to differentiate between scientific theories supported by evidence and personal beliefs or speculative ideas.
    💡 While multiverses may inspire science fiction and philosophical discussions, they should be regarded as hypothetical scenarios until empirical evidence is available.
    💡 We need to always encourage scientific exploration and open-mindedness, but also emphasize the importance of distinguishing between scientific concepts and speculative hypotheses.

  • @MrDingDong2
    @MrDingDong2 2 роки тому +5

    What I've never understood about the Multiverse, is that just one single photon would spawn an infinite number of universes since the particle can travel in an infinite number of directions from its origin. So if just one single particle create an infinite number of universes based on travel path alone, and then you apply the same logic to all existing particles, it would in the end create so many infinities that the whole Multiverse idea just does not seem rational.

    • @stylis666
      @stylis666 2 роки тому

      From that perspective, yes. But you're missing a part of that puzzle. One single photon can still not stop midway and travel backwards. If there are more than one particle, they're constrained by each other. Not everything is possible, so the irrational universes don't exist. Problem solved.

    • @MrDingDong2
      @MrDingDong2 2 роки тому

      @@stylis666 My point is that if we think we've found all paths a particle could take from its origin, well, we havent. Because we could always find a new path in between two others.

  • @chompchompnomnom4256
    @chompchompnomnom4256 2 роки тому +6

    I love Sabine's sense of humour

    • @spacebread501
      @spacebread501 2 роки тому

      I dont as it is often quite condescending, which is not helping a rational discourse.

    • @PromethorYT
      @PromethorYT 2 роки тому

      @@spacebread501 I don't feel like its condescending, its just very rational and make a point. I have yet to disagree with anything this woman said.

    • @willcollins9470
      @willcollins9470 2 роки тому +1

      First your user name is really good. Second Sabine can really do a good burn on people or topics, hahah

  • @a_b897
    @a_b897 Рік тому +1

    In as far back as the late 1700s Kant showed how and why our knowledge simply cannot extend beyond the realm of possible experience. Multiverse theories are modern-day dialectical illusions. I think it would genuinely befenit people interested in furthering human knowledge to read Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason, especially those on the cutting edge of science, whether theoretical or not.

  • @Concordeagle
    @Concordeagle 2 роки тому +4

    Actually, Sean Carroll in his "Deeply Hidden" book, specifically states Many Worlds is NOT the multiverse.

  • @djnach96
    @djnach96 2 роки тому +4

    The layered meaning of "Zuckerberg Candy" is with no doubt a comic peak in this script

  • @francescos7361
    @francescos7361 2 роки тому +2

    Thanks prof.Hossenfelder for sharing your knowledge

  • @tech-utuber2219
    @tech-utuber2219 2 роки тому +5

    I don't know which one is worse, the Multiverse machinations or Michio's Kaku's "God equation" campaign.

  • @rickwyant
    @rickwyant 2 роки тому +7

    To think that our universe is the only one is like the time when some people thought the world was all that they could see, or that our planet was the only one, our galaxy the only one. Whatever the conditions were that created this universe must surely be occuring over and over again.

  • @justsomeguy4260
    @justsomeguy4260 2 роки тому +2

    Countries together form a continent, continents together form a planet, planets together form a solar system, many solar systems together form a galaxy and it keeps going on.
    Once we thought milky Way was all there is until it was proven wrong, I'm sure it's the same case with multiverse as well.

  • @TerryBollinger
    @TerryBollinger 2 роки тому +4

    Sabina, thank you for a superb presentation. Two quick (no kidding!) observations on math and measurement:
    12:12 *MATH* _“The big problem with multiverse ideas is that physicists mistake mathematics for reality.”_ The most pernicious math danger is that classical continuum math assumes that infinite information densities cost nothing in the physical world. For nearly a century, computer and communication creators have run well-funded and ferociously results-oriented experiments pushing the limits of information physics. The results tell us that bits are not simple abstractions but machines for storing a particularly rigid form of information and that the physical world never supports infinite bit densities.
    14:22 *MEASUREMENT* _“But if you don’t update the wave function upon measurement, then that just doesn’t describe what we observe.”_ Shocker: all forms of acceleration, even incredibly minute accelerations, cause wave collapse and thus update the wave function. As Feynman noted in his lecture on the two-slit electron self-interference experiment [1], the degree of this collapse is mathematically well-quantified since it cannot exceed the wavelength of the momentum unit causing acceleration.
    Let’s think this one through. If in laboratory experiments acceleration always causes wave collapse up to, but never exceeding, the spatial wavelength of the total momentum transferred by the acceleration event, then wave collapse cannot be a rare event. For example, if two atoms bond chemically, they also collapse each other’s xyz location waves every time they accelerate each other’s positions (think orbits). That’s good since their wave locations in xyz space would otherwise expand until the probability of staying bonded vanishes.
    *The Wave-Collapse Equilibrium (WCE) Model of Particles*
    Wave collapse via mutual acceleration thus is literally how the atoms _stay_ bonded and avoid drifting off into separate quantum realms. Exchanges of momentum at spatial frequencies comparable to their sizes enable them to stay bonded and possess sufficient structure to support chemistry. For less tightly bound conduction electrons that fail to receive atomic-scale momentum packets regularly, the idea of drifting off due to the expansion of their wave functions is not an abstraction. It is how they conduct current. It is also how you are reading this text since the photons passing through the lenses of your eyes exchange just enough momentum to “see” the human-scale shape of those lenses but not enough momentum to localize and scatter their wave functions. We call the latter case of scattering-level momentum exchanges a white surface.
    Unless you are modeling specific quantum phenomena in condensed matter physics, it’s easy to overlook these incredibly rapid, fine-grained, no-conscious-observers-needed wave collapse processes. We tend to do that because these processes allow compact wave functions to hold their shapes at modest energies and thus look and behave like particles. Once you begin thinking of a wave function that maintains its shape as a particle, it’s hard to return to the wave view. The particle approximation is one of physics’ most significant gifts to biology since it enables a straightforward and computationally efficient way to estimate what happens next in a world where such predictions make survival possible.
    However, ignoring this wave-collapse equilibrium (WCE) perspective is unwise when attempting to build comprehensive models of reality. Continual mutual measurement via same-space-scale momentum exchanges is the fabric of classical reality and the source of our approximation of quantum waves as particles. Atoms reside at a size and temperature sweet spot where their masses generate a mix of similar-scale momentum frequencies. Exchanges of these momenta, in turn, keep them well-localized relative to each other. Another wave collapse equilibrium sweet spot exists at the much higher energies and far smaller sizes of atomic nuclei, and yet another for the binding of quarks inside protons, neutrons, and other particles. The disparity of the energy scales isolates these sweet spots from each and lets different levels of quantum behavior exist simultaneously in one system, with the Mössbauer effect as one example. The increasing disparity between spatial momentum frequencies and object sizes in chemistry is also why the quantum world begins to fade as molecules grow more massive and more classical in behavior.
    *Multiverse Implications of WCE*
    The concept of wave-collapse equilibria sheds light on a deeper problem with multiverse concepts: They assume uncollapsed universal wave functions as self-evident mathematical generalizations of the quantum wave functions seen in laboratories. They are not. Due to their classical continuum mathematics heritage, universal wave ideas subtly but invariably invoke assumptions that, at least for wave functions, information that storage is free and has no real-world implications. Once one assumes that such infinitely smooth universe-spanning wave functions _necessarily_ underly physical reality, the resulting density of states makes the theoretical emergence of one or more variants of multiverses almost inevitable. The situation is akin to the operator of a small-town radio station discovering that, for reasons unknown, her low-energy signal has suddenly acquired the ability to broadcast the entire world’s collective data signal. In physics, the vacuum density problem is the most explicit example of the dangers of such subtle mathematical assumptions.
    Even Schrödinger, while attempting with his cat to show the inherent flaws of infinitely elaborated smooth wave functions, inadvertently invoked this class of wave functions by assuming that the particle’s emission must remain quantum. However, particle emission is an acceleration event that becomes irreversible once it leaves the high-energy sweet-spot environment of the nuclear matter. The correct answer to Schrödinger’s thought problem is that the wave function collapses when the particle leaves the nucleus.
    Apart from the information density problem, the ubiquitous nature of wave collapse in WCE means creating large-volume, high-mass, high-complexity complex wave functions is virtually impossible. If wave collapses are nothing more than minute accelerations via momentum - and experimentally, such exchanges _always_ result in wave collapses - then at no point in the history of the universe, including at its origin, did a sufficiently low-frequency momentum exchange environment exist for such a universal wave function to emerge or have meaning.
    Far from being fundamental at the astronomy level, experimental evidence suggests wave functions are among the most fragile imaginable of large constructs. Only by removing wave functions from all momentum transfers for vast periods can they expand their scope, which, like all waves, is limited by the speed of light. Thus while intergalactic photon wavefunctions can occupy volumes up to a fraction of the entire universe, they do so only at a terrible price in terms of spacetime isolation.
    *But What About Standard Model Particles?*
    The wave-collapse equilibria model matches the dynamics of quantum-scale “bola systems” in which a force bonds and mutually accelerates two or more massive entities. These include nucleons of bound quarks, atomic nuclei of bound nucleons, atoms nuclei bound to electrons, and molecules of bound atoms. However, it seems irrelevant to Standard Model entities such as the electrons and quarks that lack discernable internal structure and thus any opportunities for mutual accelerations.
    One possibility beyond this note’s scope is that subtler forms of wave collapse stay hidden in our classically comfortable xyzt mapping of the deeper, more rigorously relativistic Poincaré spacetime of special relativity. Mass, time, and quantum frequency would play roles, as would the notably xyz-incompatible half-spin characteristic of all fermions.
    *Force Strength and the Edges of Physics*
    For classical reality, the strength of the most potent binding force determines the level of details that can persist over time. Since the winner in this category is the strong force, quark-gluon plasmas may already be pushing the limits of detail. Lacking any sufficiently potent force, neither superstrings nor no Planck foam would have meaning in such a universe. The vigorous exploration of the strong forces of the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) thus may already be exploring the limits of self-collapsing structures capable of persisting in time. Whatever they find thus may have relevance even for structures as extreme as black holes.
    (And yes… I did say something about “brief,” didn’t I? Oops!)
    -----
    [1] Feynman Lectures I 37-6 - Watching the electrons
    www.feynmanlectures.caltech.edu/I_37.html#Ch37-S6-p11
    ----------
    Terry Bollinger CC BY 4.0
    2022-09-10.21.20 EDT Sat [Updated 2022-09-11.17.40 EDT Sun]
    PDF: sarxiv.org/apa.2022-09-10.2120.pdf
    All Notes: sarxiv.org/apa

    • @BartvandenDonk
      @BartvandenDonk 2 роки тому +1

      Thanks for your deep thoughts and explanation.
      However it does not explain why ever this existence is.
      I wonder every day I wake up and smile 🥰
      Stay curious and be happy.

  • @MaryAnnNytowl
    @MaryAnnNytowl 2 роки тому +16

    Thanks for the gobbledygook-free interpretation. I appreciate what you do, Sabine. ❤️❤️
    As for the hypothesis? One would hope that, in at least one of those other potential universes, my life didn't fall apart 22 months (and 28 days, but who's counting?) ago. I'd hope at least somewhere I'm still happy. 😔

    • @srobertweiser
      @srobertweiser 2 роки тому +1

      Roughly 23 months? You should be thanking your lucky stars. My life didn't fall apart, it was ripped away from me 31 years ago when I was dx'd with multiple sclerosis before I was 17 years old. And I wasn't even lucky enough to get the part-time type [relapsing/remitting], I was chronic, on duty 24/7/365. MS strikes men only 25% of the time, PPMS [primary/progressive] in only 10%, and it rarely occurs in children as young as 13 [when my symptoms first reared their ugly ufcking head]. So the planets were in perfect alignment against me in the darkest hours on the fifth of November, in the year Our Lord Nineteen Hundred and Seventy-Four. I'm sure there's a universe somewhere where I don't have MS, but I'm stuck in this one. Maybe we'll meet up in one of the better universes in the Multiverse. BTW, I think Nytowl was one of the drugs my doctor rx'd to combat insomnia.

    • @quintboredom
      @quintboredom 2 роки тому +1

      @@srobertweiser I'm really sorry that happened/is happening to you, hope you ever get to experience the better paths that you had in the multiverse

    • @scene2much
      @scene2much 2 роки тому +1

      Loss happens, and can suck in all 216000 space-time degrees ( 60 ^ (dimensions-1)),
      Sorry for your losses, and I wish you a meaning & joy-restoring grieving.

  • @janerussell3472
    @janerussell3472 2 роки тому +2

    Perhaps the important quuestion to be asked is, Why is the Universe so fine-tuned?
    The late Steven Weinberg didn't like a multiverse solution, because it made the universal constants arbritary.
    "But anthropic arguments provide not just a bound on ρV ; they give us some idea of the value to be expected: ρV should be not very different from the mean of the values suitable for life. This is what Vilenkin calls the “principle of mediocrity...for R = 1 Mpc, [ the co-moving radius of a sphere ] the probability of finding a vacuum energy as small as 2.3 ρM 0 is only 7.2%.” 'Living in the Multiverse' 2005.
    To the maybe 120 order magnitude discrepancy [ of the vacuum catastrophe ] can be added the 15 magnitude discrepancy of a Higgs mass at 125 GeV, if there is a Higgs, of course, which can be discarded in a photonic charge universe, along with the baggage of quarks, gluons amd hadronisation, inferred or theorised but never seen
    It's strange that atheist scientists dismiss G0d on a premise of "never seen" but accept Gell-Mann's hypothesis of a never seen zoo of quarks. lol. The fine-tuning implies a designer if a multiverse or Goldilocks contention is dismissed.

  • @Sylar-451
    @Sylar-451 2 роки тому +50

    Awesome video, my BS detector often goes off with theories like these, and you put words to explain it all so well

    • @Jopie65
      @Jopie65 2 роки тому +3

      Still i don't agree with putting the many worlds interpretation away like BS because it implies unmeasurable extra worlds.
      Kopenhagen also implies unmeasurable consequences: faster than light propagation of wave function collapse. And it does so with an extra collapse rule which many worlds doesn't have.
      That means many worlds is simpler and explaining the same phenomena than Kopenhagen. That's where Occam's razor should razor Kopenhagen away.

  • @zyansheep
    @zyansheep 2 роки тому +4

    Here so early, this video isn't even in the videos tab yet!

  • @solarwinds3311
    @solarwinds3311 2 роки тому +2

    One of my favourite books, Quarantine by Greg Egan is all about multiverses and collapsing waves. I recommend this "sci-fi apocalyptic" novel.

  • @kevinfarrellUK
    @kevinfarrellUK 2 роки тому +5

    Always fascinating and interesting, and as an ignorant in the sciences and maths, I still find much that helps me find a very small grip to the subjects that educate and make me think. Thank you.
    Off topic but I am sometimes left with a question in my head about what science says and does with ‘random’. It it used or useful in science, and if so, how? I would be very interested in your thoughts on this. (Apologies if my question is pointless.)

  • @andrewhorwood1058
    @andrewhorwood1058 2 роки тому +4

    I was pondering the multiverse, probably before you were born. I used to be fascinated by the concept but have long since come to suspect it is as unlikely as string theory. Love your videos. Good sense of humor too.

  • @erichstocker8358
    @erichstocker8358 2 роки тому +1

    I think this was a very good explanation of the issues.

  • @WhimsicalShark
    @WhimsicalShark 2 роки тому +4

    The most realistic multiverse is the universe beyond the observable. It may aswell be a separate universe

  • @marcelob.5300
    @marcelob.5300 2 роки тому +33

    There exists a universe where Sabine supports the multiverse interpretation 😀

    • @SimonBrisbane
      @SimonBrisbane 2 роки тому +2

      Only on your fantasy UA-cam channel

    • @not2busy
      @not2busy 2 роки тому +1

      🤣🤣 Good one! 😂

    • @Achrononmaster
      @Achrononmaster 2 роки тому

      @Marcelo B you wonderful lunatic! You've lampooned the entire serious point of Sabine's commentary: to assert *_there is_* is precisely the anti-scientific point of view she was trying to de-promote. What is the case is that Many Worlders *_think there is_* a universe where Sabina supports MWI. "Thinking there is" is totally different to "there is" --- this was the entire point of the video.

  • @dmitrygrey
    @dmitrygrey Рік тому +1

    You forgot to mention the biggest support for multiverse hypothesis. Is that fundamental constants are very tweaked in a way that this universe can support life. So or there's a god which tweaked them, or we a super lucky in power of googol, or there are many universes and we can discuss it here because other universes can't support life but this one can.

  • @pmetham
    @pmetham 2 роки тому +3

    Given that Space-Time can stretch, may I request a session on what's possible with Space-Time? Could part of it roll back and forth like a rubber band that has been twisted and released? If a galaxy was situated in such a region would that obviate the need for dark matter to explain the rotational speeds?

    • @TeaParty1776
      @TeaParty1776 Рік тому

      Space and time are relationships among things in the universe, not transcendentals. See Aristotle.