I've bolded what additions I made to your post, AV. I would earnestly point out I by no means did so to be irritating or as an attempt to be clever. I'm doing so to demostrate that I quite agree with you, but how my perception on the issue is not quite the same as yours.Admiral Valdemar wrote:Nothing has ever happened before the initiator of the event happened [that we are currently aware of.] Nothing has ever had more energy come out of it than went in total [that we are currently aware of.] There are things we know to be true and give the status of law [and can be accepted as such until conflicting evidence is discovered.] Unless you can show how thermodynamics and relativity/causality can be got around, then it's simply impossible, no matter what new physics we find, [even if they demand complete rewrites of current theories into more complex and advanced ones?] Learning more about a square peg won't allow you to fit it in a circular hole [unless you find a circular hole big enough that the square peg fits into the round hole regardless of different geometric configurations ], so to speak.Bubble Boy wrote:
You would be more accurate if you stated that our current knowledge and understanding of physics and the universe decrees FTL an impossible concept.
It's one thing to make positive statements regarding established theories making specific predictions...quite another to assert the universe somehow bends to our understanding of it.
The universe has historically proven that is more than capable of breaking our theories; no theory has ever 'broken' the universe, and never will since they are merely the best reflection of it possible at the time.
Yes, we have incredibly useful and seemingly accurate theories about our universe, and I won't dream of seriously contesting them without quite a bit of verifiable evidence and reason to support such an endeavor.
However, when one considers how utterly insignificant the physical size and length of time our presence is relative to the universe, declaring our mind bogglingly limited testing field results (as compared to the rest of the universe) as pertaining to all of existence is akin to examining the properties of a single grain of sand and then asserting those properties as reflecting the behavior and attributes of all matter in the solar system.