Thread Closed

Speculate about the biggest question there is

 
Share Thread Thread Tools
Aug19-07, 11:00 AM   #1
 

Speculate about the biggest question there is


How do we end up in this system of order, complexity and beauty - the universe, the human organism, that of all other highly complex subsystems?

What caused the singularity/big bang? An omnipotent/omniscient/omnipresent/infinite presence? Is the universe and its finetuning simply an accident in the presence of parallel universes (w/ different initial conditions)? Is it merely a simulation? Is it something abstract that we don't comprehend?
PhysOrg.com
PhysOrg
science news on PhysOrg.com

>> Ants and carnivorous plants conspire for mutualistic feeding
>> Forecast for Titan: Wild weather could be ahead
>> Researchers stitch defects into the world's thinnest semiconductor
Aug19-07, 11:07 AM   #2
 
Recognitions:
Gold Membership Gold Member
Homework Helper Homework Help
Science Advisor Science Advisor
Actually, to me, a much bigger question is why do my socks keep disappearing??
Aug19-07, 11:37 AM   #3
 
According to David Hume,

A designer must be at least as complex as its designer. If Nature, but its complexity and order requires a designer, than it follows that this designer needs a designer. Since the designer is so complex, it too would need another designer and so on ad infinitum. Unless we want to invoke an infinite series of creators, we would need to conclude that complexity and order can arise without a purpose. We could respond by resting content with an inexplicably self-ordered divine mind but then why not rest content with an inexplicably self-ordered natural world?

An unsupported ad hoc hypothesis for this will not do.

Science is weak agnostic towards the things it doesn't claim to know. When science doesn't know something, it doesn't try to hide it.

The Universe may be fined-tuned for our specific kind of life, but probabilities can only be done from the front-to-back, not the other way around.

Sit down with three friends and shuffle and hand out a deck of cards. After you have done that, note the configuration. You can easily see how improbable these configuration is. You can play cards for the rest of your life without getting the same configuration you did. Yet it happened.

The Big Bang is a theory of the development of the Universe, not the origin.

http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/astronomy/bigbang.html

Ponder the old myth of the earth. Surely, the earth cannot just float in space? Naturally, the earth rests on the back of an elephant. Well, what does that stand on? Hmm. Well, it stands on four turtles. Well, what does those stand on? Hmm. A gigantic superturtle! What does that stand on? Nothing, because it can float on its own.

We might as well conclude that the earth can float in space on its own, rather than standing on an elephant, standing on four turtles, standing on a giant superturtle being able to just float in space.

Actually, to me, a much bigger question is why do my socks keep disappearing??
Maybe they are trapped in one of those curved, hidden dimensions inside the giant flying superturtle?
Aug19-07, 12:08 PM   #4
 

Speculate about the biggest question there is


Good feedback, Moridin

Quote by Moridin View Post
According to David Hume,

A designer must be at least as complex as its designer. If Nature, but its complexity and order requires a designer, than it follows that this designer needs a designer. Since the designer is so complex, it too would need another designer and so on ad infinitum. Unless we want to invoke an infinite series of creators,...
What if this "infinite series of creators" is a collective infinite presence in itself? An "everything" so to speak...

Quote by Moridin View Post
...we would need to conclude that complexity and order can arise without a purpose.
The flying spaghetti monster seems more likely that that hypothesis.

I will go more in depth later
Aug19-07, 12:21 PM   #5
 
I used 'Purpose' to refer to 'consciously directed' in this context.

What if this "infinite series of creators" is a collective infinite presence in itself? An "everything" so to speak...
That would at least remove the giant superturtle.
Aug19-07, 02:43 PM   #6
 
Speaking of probability; lets say there is a set n with initial conditions that fulfills the requirements for life. Obviously we would be in a jackpot element of that set, since we're self-conscious. But the complexity and "higher art" of our universe is still too high, I think intelligent life can exist at way more primitive levels of design (if it is design). We didn't only hit the jackpot, we hit the jackpot of jackpots of jackpots.
There is something; the question is what! At this point we can probably only make educated guesses, the more rational, intelligent, and open-minded, the better.
Aug19-07, 09:26 PM   #7
 
Blog Entries: 13
Recognitions:
Gold Membership Gold Member
Science Advisor Science Advisor
Retired Staff Staff Emeritus
Note: This thread has been moved to the Metaphysics & Epistemology subforum.
Aug20-07, 12:33 PM   #8
 
Quote by Helicobacter View Post
Speaking of probability; lets say there is a set n with initial conditions that fulfills the requirements for life. Obviously we would be in a jackpot element of that set, since we're self-conscious. But the complexity and "higher art" of our universe is still too high, I think intelligent life can exist at way more primitive levels of design (if it is design). We didn't only hit the jackpot, we hit the jackpot of jackpots of jackpots.
There is something; the question is what! At this point we can probably only make educated guesses, the more rational, intelligent, and open-minded, the better.
The problem is that natural selection (that started as soon as the primitive molecules could reproduce) is a deterministic process, not a random one or one based on chance. NS gives the illusion of design. Also, humans are just one species among billions and we are not at the top of a great chain of being because such a thing does not exist (instead; it is the tree of life).
Aug25-07, 08:50 AM   #9
 
Quote by Moridin View Post
The problem is that natural selection (that started as soon as the primitive molecules could reproduce) is a deterministic process, not a random one or one based on chance. NS gives the illusion of design.
This is true--natural selection is by definition the "non-random reproduction and survival of genotypes" (see any textbook on Organic Evolution). I think this fact is not well appreciated and the source of much confusion when folks discuss details of "evolution" of life forms.
Aug27-07, 10:33 AM   #10
 
Quote by Moridin View Post
The problem is that natural selection (that started as soon as the primitive molecules could reproduce) is a deterministic process, not a random one or one based on chance. NS gives the illusion of design. Also, humans are just one species among billions and we are not at the top of a great chain of being because such a thing does not exist (instead; it is the tree of life).
Would you consider that humans are at the top of the great food chain?
Aug27-07, 06:40 PM   #11
 
Quote by sd01g View Post
Would you consider that humans are at the top of the great food chain?
There is no "great food chain" for humans to be on top of--I suggest you read any of the editions of the textbook by Eugene P. Odum titled 'Fundamental of Ecology".
Aug28-07, 02:01 PM   #12
 
Quote by Rade View Post
There is no "great food chain" for humans to be on top of--I suggest you read any of the editions of the textbook by Eugene P. Odum titled 'Fundamental of Ecology".
Would you consider that humans are at the top of the great chain of predators?
Aug29-07, 08:36 PM   #13
 
Quote by sd01g View Post
Would you consider that humans are at the top of the great chain of predators?
No, of course not--consider the correct answer to your question the next time you SCUBA within home range of Great White Shark. You see, there is no "great chain" of predators within the trophic dynamics of ecosystems--all is a web.
Aug29-07, 09:01 PM   #14
 
Quote by Rade View Post
No, of course not--consider the correct answer to your question the next time you SCUBA within home range of Great White Shark. You see, there is no "great chain" of predators within the trophic dynamics of ecosystems--all is a web.
Actually, I agree with you. There is no great chain of predators, only one master predator. Think how difficult it would be to try and quantify how many whales, sharks, and fish the great predator species has killed. Must be in the billions or tens of billions. After we finish speculating about the biggest question of all, maybe the second biggest question would be--why and how has one of the tens of millions of species become so much more powerfull and dominant than all the rest?
Sep2-07, 11:14 PM   #15
 
Mental capacity develop to technology. It all began with the primitive tools.
Oct8-07, 04:40 PM   #16
 
My biggest question would be: Who am I?

In the context of the countless possibilities such as: In a game; I could be a pet, that I am unaware of; I could be a figment of someone's or my own imagination; I be living two lives, in two different "worlds" but I can't remember thisr world when I am in the other one and vice versa.

As I stated possibilities are endless.
Oct11-07, 06:51 AM   #17
 
The biggest question in my view is

"How to live life?"

This is the question that is of prime interest for all branches of study. If we all come to some conclusive answer or theory(though I don't think its answer can be absolute) it will solve the greatest problem of man "Being happy."

I think the central theme or purpose of any study is this. "How to live life?"
Thread Closed
Thread Tools


Similar Threads for: Speculate about the biggest question there is
Thread Forum Replies
Speculate for me .. General Physics 9
Do string theorists speculate about unfolding dimensions? Beyond the Standard Model 6
What's your biggest mistake? General Discussion 22
What is the biggest star we know of? General Astronomy 3
The biggest question General Discussion 2