OK, this is just getting silly.
Andy Resnick said:
1) We may want to have a TOE to satisfy human notions of elegance and completeness, but that is very different from *requiring* that a TOE *must* exist due to physical principles. The question is not "Why should we try to discover a TOE?", but rather "Why must a TOE exist? "
A theory of everything is just a complete description of as much of the universe as is visible to us. If you were to make a list of every detail of event humans will ever observe throughout all time and space, you would have a TOE, in a certain sense. In such a raw, uncompressed form, this list would be extremely unwieldy, but nonetheless useful. I'd love to know what next week's lottery numbers are.
Saying that such a raw set of facts does not exist just doesn't make sense to me. Are you denying that there is any reality?
2) What garuntee do we have that a TOE, if written down, is useful? For example, if I wanted to make a map of a region, the only way that map can contain all the information of the original is if the map is a 1:1 scale mapping (unintentional, honest!) of the original, which makes for a very useless and unwieldy map. Thus, it could be stated that a complete TOE will be likely unwieldy and useless.
Compression works when information contains at least some patterns somewhere. If you truly believe that the events in the universe cannot be reduced at all, and therefore that they contain absolutely no patterns whatsoever, and are therefore totally random, think about what that would mean. Everything as it is in exactly this instant in time has zero relationship to everything in the next instant. There are no places, no things, no stillness, no motion, no rules, just pure white randomness throughout the universe. A particle existing now has virtually no chance of existing in one nanosecond. There are no forces. No bodies which continue to hold the same shape across multiple instants in time. No processes. Certainly no stars and planets, let alone life forms, let alone language, let alone computers, let alone the patterns of letters and words displayed upon the patterns of display pixels you are looking at right now.
Of course the universe has patterns. And another name for a pattern is a rule, which may also be called a law. We already know there are laws. We're just working out some of the finer details. In fact, our existing set of rules is
much smaller than the whole universe and already seems to correctly predict an awful lot of what's out there.
As to your example, you're not correct. Maps are not random. Look at a map, then generate a plot of random pixels. See the difference? You can certainly compress map data. There are lots of patterns. Things tend to be similar to things near themselves. Go make a very detailed map out of a bunch of pixels and then turn it into a GIF. Congratulations, you just made a
perfectly accurate map of that original map, with fewer bytes than the original. And it's obviously useful!
3) The current research focus of a TOE, to reconcile GR and QM in the high energy, small distance regimes,
I think the current state of unification is to finish unifying the electromagnetic and weak forces, and then to try to pull in the strong force. I think pulling in gravity (GR), while certainly a goal, is much, much further off. Correct me if I'm wrong.
does nothing to explain numerous phenomena we already know about and cannot explain from elementary principles- friction, turbulence, Hofmeister series, colligative properties, constitutive relations, to name a few. Why try to understand black holes when we don't yet understand water?
I was under the impression that at least turbulence and friction were well known to arise from elementary principles, and that both appear spontaneously in simulations of more fundamental laws. If you're just saying that we haven't found easier mathematical tools to describe them than such brute force simulation, I fail to see your point. I don't see why the difficulty of dealing with some of the results of the fundamental laws means that we shouldn't finish figuring out what the rest of those fundamental laws are and finding out what else they have to teach us. If we had waited for better mathematical tools for modeling friction before trying to understand electromagnetics, we wouldn't have computers.
Claiming to understand 'the big bang' is specious- we cannot observe and perform controlled experiments, thus the result is little better than an educated guess.
Claiming to understand what my computer will do in 10 minutes is specious- I cannot observe and perform controlled experiments on the future until it gets here, thus the result is little better than an educated guess.
Oh, wait, no, that's silly. I know that most rules tend to hold true through some contiguous region of time and space, so it's a reasonable assumption that my computer will behave the same way in 10 minutes -- or 10 miles away -- that it does here and now. It is also reasonable to assume we know what Mars' surface looks like, even though man has never been there. Yes, we're assuming that the laws of physics upon which the rovers are based continue to operate in the Martian environment, even though it is very different from our environment. But it turns out that's not a terrible assumption, even if it isn't perfect.
GR and QM have successfully predicted things that happened very far away. No doubt one or both gradually changes as you get near crazy things like black holes, but just like we've done in the past, we can probably use those situations to fine tune the laws to make them even more general. And no doubt this will reveal all kinds of cool (and maybe even useful) stuff, just as it has in the past.
For example, it was stated that "There are certain situations in which GR predicts one thing will happen, and QM predicts something else." What are these situations, what experiments have been performed, and what are the results?
I mentioned one such situation: black holes. I believe there are examples in particle physics as well, beyond our current accuracy threshold. If experiments had been performed to resolve these problems, then they would have been resolved by now. The reason these things are unknown is that the necessary experiments are beyond our current ability to conduct.
Many things have been predicted by theorists before they were found by experiment. Einstein found a way to reconcile the observed constancy of the speed of light with observed everyday-scale mechanics. The result he came up with was relativity. Astronomers later confirmed most of this theory by experiment. So why would you be opposed to today's physicists attempting to reconcile the observed laws of quantum mechanics with the observed behavior of gravitation?
Lacking that, we are simply demanding that the universe conform to a particular human desire for understanding rather than trying to gain understanding of the actual universe.
What? I would think that "trying to gain understanding" is the result of "human desire for understanding". I don't see how those things are different. In any case, the best we can do is to come up with the simplest rule that explains everything we know at any given time, and make it more complex as more is discovered. And that's what everyone is trying to do.