Our universe should be called multiverse and not universe

In summary, the conversation revolves around the concept of the multiverse theory, which suggests that there are multiple universes in existence. The significance of our own universe is debated, with some arguing that it is just one among many, while others believe it is unique and important to us. The possibility of inter-universe travel is also discussed, with some proposing that wormholes could provide shortcuts, although this is met with skepticism. The laws of physics in other universes are also speculated, with mention of black holes and white holes having different effects on the laws of physics. However, the lack of evidence for the multiverse theory is noted, and the conversation ultimately ends with the acknowledgement that these ideas are still being explored and debated.
  • #1
whiteholes
27
0
Actually our universe should be called multiverse and not universe!

multi = many
uni = one

If the multiverse theory is correct, we would be one universe in about
10^500 other universe. This figure is vastly greater than the total amount of atoms in our universe! So if it's really correct, the significance of our universe would just be as much as the significance of an atom in our universe!
 
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  • #2
Show me one of these other universes.

Garth
 
  • #3
Not necessary, Garth.

Whitehole, by saying "our universe" repeatedly even after saying we shouldn't use the term, you clearly understand that "our universe" would still be unique in the multiverse.
 
  • #4
russ_watters said:
Not necessary, Garth.

Whitehole, by saying "our universe" repeatedly even after saying we shouldn't use the term, you clearly understand that "our universe" would still be unique in the multiverse.

what do you mean?
 
  • #5
'Our universe' is the universe important to us. Going by the various subtley different versions of the multiverse idea I've heard, it would still mean that our universe is unique and pretty damn significant to us, given we reside here!

While in the grandscheme of things, one universe in 10^500 isn't important, sometimes you have to add a bit of perspective from your own point of view.
 
  • #6
nope! I totally disagree. By saying that only our universe is imporatant, its like saying humans are only those that reside on earth! Arnold said "it would be arrogant to say that there are only humans in the universe!" Anyway by studying other universe, we can possibly predict the future of our universe. I ask you, how long can Earth stay in a suitable condition for us to live in. We have to find other places to live in. By studying other universe, it can also show wheather our laws of physics here are the same in all universes. The speed of light is NOT the same in all universes.!
 
  • #7
That's not what I said. I said our universe is important to us. I'm in no doubt that there are billions of Earth like planets in just this universe, that doesn't remove the fact that I live on this planet and hence it's of major importance to me.
white holes said:
I ask you, how long can Earth stay in a suitable condition for us to live in. We have to find other places to live in.
Space travel is most likely a hell of a lot easier than inter-universe travel (providing such a thing even exists).
white holes said:
By studying other universe, it can also show wheather our laws of physics here are the same in all universes. The speed of light is NOT the same in all universes.!
Considering the multiverse theory is based on practically no evidence at all (it's all conjecture) it's a pretty bold statement of you to say that the speed of light varies in different universes.
 
  • #8
That's not what I said. I said our universe is important to us. I'm in no doubt that there are billions of Earth like planets in just this universe, that doesn't remove the fact that I live on this planet and hence it's of major importance to me.
ok great...so that means other universes are of equal significance to you. right?

Space travel is most likely a hell of a lot easier than inter-universe travel (providing such a thing even exists).
space travel to the nearest star would take 4 Earth years but due to time dilation, it would seem like just a few months. Also wormholes would ppossibly provide shortcuts in space travels. (i think black holes also would!)

Considering the multiverse theory is based on practically no evidence at all (it's all conjecture) it's a pretty bold statement of you to say that the speed of light varies in different universes.
yes, but let me ask you...do you believe is it possible that our universe is only the one that exist? Is there only one big bang? Actually gravity might actually allow us to have a peek at other universe. And yes, I'm bold. If you only follow what other scientists say and agree with them, would there be any improvement? You have to think differently and later think of reasonable arguments which i am still thinking about.
 
  • #9
The laws of physics are not the same in everywhere. Stand on a black hole or stand on a white hole(if it exist) and you would be amazed that the laws of physics there would be totally different from what on earth!
 
  • #10
white holes said:
The laws of physics are not the same in everywhere. Stand on a black hole or stand on a white hole(if it exist) and you would be amazed that the laws of physics there would be totally different from what on earth!

Are you speaking a different language?

What do you mean 'stand on a black hole'? Is there some sort of symbolism there?

What is your concept of a black hole and a white hole? If the laws of physics exist in a different state in other 'universes' which are part of the 'multiverse' as you are eluding to, then can you be sure black holes would exist?
 
  • #11
white holes said:
The laws of physics are not the same in everywhere. Stand on a black hole or stand on a white hole(if it exist) and you would be amazed that the laws of physics there would be totally different from what on earth!
As ComplexPhilosophy points out, if the laws of physics were utterly different for a black hole, you could not use our laws of physics to predict such things existence.

If you were hovering just above the event horizon of a black hole things would be different from standing on the surface of Earth but the laws of physics would be the same, it's just they cause more obvious things to happen near a black hole than on Earth.
 
  • #12
white holes said:
Also wormholes would ppossibly provide shortcuts in space travels.

You can throw speed of light, black holes, white holes and even space travel into a possible future but wormholes? It's starting to sound like Startrek.
 
  • #13
well we are argueing about something that we can niether prove nor neglect. saying that laws of physics willl be altered is something which we cannot agree on but it is also true that such things as white holes and worm holes will totally revolutionise the human thought process. it is also important that we allow new ideas to come up and in doing so allow the older ideas to be crushed
 
  • #14
If the multiverse theory is correct, we would be one universe in about
10^500 other universe. This figure is vastly greater than the total amount of atoms in our universe! So if it's really correct, the significance of our universe would just be as much as the significance of an atom in our universe!

Wow, they can barely aproximate the number of atoms in our universe - we don't know how big it is, but try to aproximate the number of universes in 'multiverse'

nope! I totally disagree. By saying that only our universe is imporatant, its like saying humans are only those that reside on earth! Arnold said "it would be arrogant to say that there are only humans in the universe!" Anyway by studying other universe, we can possibly predict the future of our universe.

We aren't able to fully study even our solar system, and yet we want to study other universes.

I ask you, how long can Earth stay in a suitable condition for us to live in. We have to find other places to live in. By studying other universe, it can also show wheather our laws of physics here are the same in all universes. The speed of light is NOT the same in all universes.!

You read "Parallel Worlds" didn't you? Earth, as I think and predict will stay in good condition long enough. You have a lot of world out here, be the first one to move, if condition are already getting quite bad for you. How do you know the spped of light isn't the same in all universes? How do you know the speed of light is even the same in every place of our universe? This quite reminds me of middle ages. Where people from the day of birth were focusing on heaven and thinking whether they're going or not.

space travel to the nearest star would take 4 Earth years but due to time dilation, it would seem like just a few months. Also wormholes would ppossibly provide shortcuts in space travels. (i think black holes also would!)

Be the first one to go. Just remember to send me a post-card :biggrin:
 
  • #15
Be the first one to go. Just remember to send me a post-card

i will but that card might take 4 years to reach you at the speed of light and i will be younger than you after that high speed journey!
 
  • #16
I agree with Garth, show me observational evidence of any other universe. The unobserved is a possibility, the unobservable is philosophy.
 
  • #17
Can anyone solve the problems we have when we say there is just one universe?
In that case this universe must be infinite without a beginning and without an end. It must be macroscopically homogenous and isotropic towards infinity. However, if we extrapolate the situation we find in our observable universe, then it seems almost unbelievable that our observable universe does not belong to a very large (our) universe that really is a black-hole. Such a very large black-hole, with a corresponding low average density, will have an event horizon separating us from a space which must contain something (or even is something where, (in autonomous reality), nothing can not exist). It is not so bad a suggestion, I think, to name that environment a multi-verse in which ours is only one part.
So the question can be, what is more acceptable, is it the described universe I started with, or will it be part of something like an, indeed not observed and not known, multi-verse. I see heroic attempts to introduce super-symmetry, (even in a complex mathematical setting) in order to bring vacuum energy to zero, but that does not help to make me believe that reality can be made out of nothing. To my feeling a multi-verse gives a better view and a better lead to our developing hypotheses and theories than restricting ourselves to a framework we will never really understand. I have much sympathy for physicists like Martin Rees, Gabriele Veneziano, or Paul Steinhardt who are (dare) indeed trying to go in such a direction. It is to my opinion contra productive to ask, “show just one other universe”. Maybe detection of gravitational waves from our cosmic background can be of some help in proceeding. Anyway, reasonable hypotheses and theories on one hand, observations and experiments on the other always have led to better models of our reality, which can only be a tiny part of an autonomous reality we will never completely understand. Maybe there even is a limit to experiments we will be able to set up. In that case, maybe, we can only proceed a bit further by going on with coherent and intuitive thinking and putting our thoughts together? In mathematics, however of great help, one can suggest everything, but that is not physics!
 
  • #18
Hi everybdoy: I think in this thread so far nobody has talked about the question that why we need the multiverse ?

Answer is to solve the fine tunning problem i.e., why the values of physical constants are what they are. Multiverse theory says that there are universes of all possible values of physical conditions, space time dimensions, initial conditions.

Here I would like to suggest four articles on the theory of multiverse:

1. Max Tegmark: hep-th/0409072
2. G.F.R. Ellis et al (2004): MNRAS 347, 921 (i am sorry find yourself astro-ph version)
3. David Deutsch (2001): The structire of Multiverse
(avalibale on net)
4.Aguirre A, hep-th/0409072

Apart from there are many other articles also. I think one should visits Tegmark's page for detail.
 
  • #19
I'm still stuck on the observational evidence part. If the theory has no observational consequences in our universe, I find it . . . uninteresting and irrelevant. Speculation is fun, even credentialed scientists indulge in it every now and then.
 
  • #20
To put it this way (i haven't read all other posts though):

I can't give a damn about people on other planets, or even in other universes. I'm here, and I have no way (currently) to interact with those "others".
 
  • #21
Actually, you could observe it its just that congress pays no attention to anything smaller then a dollar bill. My meaning is that if we had done what Carl Sagan, you should know him, told us to do. Then scientist would already be probing the strutcure of string and learning how they close small "multi-verse holes up.
 
  • #22
Chronos said:
I agree with Garth, show me observational evidence of any other universe. The unobserved is a possibility, the unobservable is philosophy.



in this lecture and experiment: http://www.quiprocone.org/Protected/Lecture_2.htm- David Deutsch explains and performs an experiment which empirically demonstrates the existence of the Multiverse- some are considering this the first proof that we live in a Multiverse- this work has earned him a great deal of acclaim and funding recently- [ http://www.edge.org/3rd_culture/prize05/prize05_index.html ] and I wouldn't be at all surprised if these discoveries eventually win him the Nobel Prize


"The quantum theory of parallel universes is not the problem, it is the solution. It is not some troublesome, optional interpretation emerging from arcane theoretical considerations. It is the explanation—the only one that is tenable—of a remarkable and counter-intuitive reality"
~David Deutsch

http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/quant-ph/0104033
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #23
setAI said:
in this lecture and experiment: http://www.quiprocone.org/Protected/Lecture_2.htm- David Deutsch explains and performs an experiment which empirically demonstrates the existence of the Multiverse- some are considering this the first proof that we live in a Multiverse- this work has earned him a great deal of acclaim and funding recently- [ http://www.edge.org/3rd_culture/prize05/prize05_index.html ] and I wouldn't be at all surprised if these discoveries eventually win him the Nobel Prize


"The quantum theory of parallel universes is not the problem, it is the solution. It is not some troublesome, optional interpretation emerging from arcane theoretical considerations. It is the explanation—the only one that is tenable—of a remarkable and counter-intuitive reality"
~David Deutsch

http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/quant-ph/0104033
Is this the multiverse or the many-worlds interpretation of QM?

Garth
 
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  • #24
Garth said:
Is this the multiverse or the many-worlds interpretation of QM?
Note that at least according to Max Tegmark's multiverse classification the MWI is also a kind of multiverse theory.
 
  • #25
hellfire said:
Note that at least according to Max Tegmark's multiverse classification the MWI is also a kind of multiverse theory.
Yes, but the MWI is a little over-redundant in multiplying 'entities' for my liking.

Garth
 
  • #26
I am suprised that there is no mention of Lisa randall, etal, in this discussion who postulates that our universe is a 3-d brane in larger dimensions
 

1. What is the difference between the terms "universe" and "multiverse"?

The term "universe" refers to everything that exists in space and time, including all matter, energy, and laws of physics. On the other hand, "multiverse" refers to the hypothetical idea that there may be multiple universes, each with its own set of physical laws and properties.

2. Why do some scientists argue that our universe should be called multiverse?

Some scientists believe that our universe is just one of many universes in a larger multiverse. This idea is supported by certain theories in physics, such as string theory and inflation theory, which suggest the existence of multiple universes.

3. How would the concept of a multiverse change our understanding of the universe?

If the multiverse theory is proven to be true, it would drastically change our understanding of the universe. It would mean that our universe is just one small part of a much larger and more complex system, and that there may be many other universes with different physical laws and conditions.

4. Is there any evidence for the existence of a multiverse?

As of now, there is no concrete evidence for the existence of a multiverse. However, some theories and observations in physics, such as the cosmic microwave background radiation and the structure of the universe, have been used to support the idea of a multiverse.

5. How does the concept of a multiverse relate to the idea of parallel universes?

The concept of a multiverse is often associated with the idea of parallel universes, but they are not exactly the same. While parallel universes refer to multiple versions of our own universe, the multiverse includes all possible universes, including those with different physical laws and conditions.

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