Pre-Big Bang?

SLAM: debunk creationism, pseudoscience, and superstitions. Discuss logic and morality.

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Darth Wong
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Post by Darth Wong »

SCRawl wrote:
Gullible Jones wrote:There are hypotheses, actually, such as the colliding-brane thing from M-theory... None are backed by any evidence whatsoever though.
Reading that kind of terminology made my brain turn off when I read the latest Hawking book. And my degree is in physics.
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Gullible Jones
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Post by Gullible Jones »

I'm not sure it's as bad as you say, but yes, there's definitely some of that.

IMHO it doesn't help that the popular image of scientists tends towards the severely Aspergerish and/or the sociopathic.
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Post by Gullible Jones »

Re the latest Hawking book - my brain started bleeding when he mentioned the anthropic principle as something valid and useful. I find it difficult to believe that a guy like Hawking would fail to realize that the "principle" is at best a useless statement of the bleeding obvious; but great minds are as fallable as the rest of them, I guess.

Michio Kaku's latest book (Parallel Worlds) I found to be more shockingly worse though. The first few dozen pages basically took the form of: "Wank Superstring theory wank wank hyperspace wank wank higher dimensions wank Randall wank gravitons leaking off the brane wank wank wonderful wank wank absolutely not a kludge wank wank wank," ad infinitum. I wasn't able to finish it.

Kind of sad, seeing how good Hyperspace was (including Kaku's lambasting of the anthropic principle). I was left wondering if some editor had read a draft and sent Kaku a note saying, "Need more string theory wank, readers like the taste," or something.
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Post by Zixinus »

Is it accurate to say that it is impossible to know what happened "before" (yes, I get that you can't go more north then the North Pole) the Big Bang?
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Post by Messon »

Zixinus wrote:Is it accurate to say that it is impossible to know what happened "before" (yes, I get that you can't go more north then the North Pole) the Big Bang?
It is literally impossible, and not in a 50 years from now it will look insane that I said that sort of way.
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Post by Junghalli »

I believe there's also a cyclical universe hypothesis where there's a cycle of Big Bangs and Big Crunches, so before the Big Bang there would have been another cycle. But IIRC Dark Energy may have put the kibosh on that, but don't quote me on it.
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Post by SCRawl »

Junghalli wrote:I believe there's also a cyclical universe hypothesis where there's a cycle of Big Bangs and Big Crunches, so before the Big Bang there would have been another cycle. But IIRC Dark Energy may have put the kibosh on that, but don't quote me on it.
The fact that the universe appears to be accelerating in its expansion puts the whole notion of a big crunch in the category of "unlikely". (Aside from the KFC version -- damn that's tasty.) Even if there had been a series of bangs and crunches, they would be punctuated by singularities, and you can't get past a singularity.
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Post by hongi »

Cosmic Variance may have what you're looking for.

And usefully, for simpletons like me, there's radio science programs.
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Post by D.Turtle »

Messon wrote:
Zixinus wrote:Is it accurate to say that it is impossible to know what happened "before" (yes, I get that you can't go more north then the North Pole) the Big Bang?
It is literally impossible, and not in a 50 years from now it will look insane that I said that sort of way.
Shouldn't it be possible to say something about the conditions that existed which caused the Big Bang?
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Post by McC »

D.Turtle wrote:Shouldn't it be possible to say something about the conditions that existed which caused the Big Bang?
"Conditions that existed" is nonsensical -- that's the point. Something cannot "exist" before spacetime itself did.
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Post by Darth Wong »

Junghalli wrote:I believe there's also a cyclical universe hypothesis where there's a cycle of Big Bangs and Big Crunches, so before the Big Bang there would have been another cycle. But IIRC Dark Energy may have put the kibosh on that, but don't quote me on it.
Even if that were the case, time would be cyclical. There would still be no time outside of time. The problem with discussing matters of time is that people are so locked into the mindset of assuming time is constant that they act as if space-time itself exists within some larger absolute timeframe.
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Post by Surlethe »

Here's a way to think about it. Consider falling into a black hole. Because you can't escape from the singularity after you cross the event horizon, you are locked into eventually colliding with it. Given any point in time after you fall past the event horizon, the singularity is always in your future. The Big Bang is (as I understand) a black hole in reverse; so by the reasoning above, given any point in time, the Big Bang singularity is always in the past. You can't get past it.
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Post by TithonusSyndrome »

Surlethe wrote:Here's a way to think about it. Consider falling into a black hole. Because you can't escape from the singularity after you cross the event horizon, you are locked into eventually colliding with it. Given any point in time after you fall past the event horizon, the singularity is always in your future. The Big Bang is (as I understand) a black hole in reverse; so by the reasoning above, given any point in time, the Big Bang singularity is always in the past. You can't get past it.
I've wondered if death from an observer's perspective is at all like this, with time continually dilating as the observer comes closer and closer to the moment of expiring but never actually experiencing their own demise.
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Post by CaptJodan »

TithonusSyndrome wrote: I've wondered if death from an observer's perspective is at all like this, with time continually dilating as the observer comes closer and closer to the moment of expiring but never actually experiencing their own demise.
That's a less than reassuring prospect. I, for one, would rather cease to exist.
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Post by Junghalli »

TithonusSyndrome wrote:I've wondered if death from an observer's perspective is at all like this, with time continually dilating as the observer comes closer and closer to the moment of expiring but never actually experiencing their own demise.
The brain has a finite processing speed so I doubt this dilation could continue indefinitely.
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Post by Surlethe »

TithonusSyndrome wrote:I've wondered if death from an observer's perspective is at all like this, with time continually dilating as the observer comes closer and closer to the moment of expiring but never actually experiencing their own demise.
Perhaps, but I doubt it; there's no reason for the perception of time to slow down as death looms. And from the perspective of someone falling into a black hole, time for him doesn't do anything; he whizzes on past the event horizon and is eventually spaghettified as he approaches the singularity. It's the observer hovering above the hole who sees him slow down as he approaches the event horizon.
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