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Is speculation in multiverses as immoral as speculation in subprime mortgages?

 
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Feb17-11, 10:21 AM   #1
D H
 
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Is speculation in multiverses as immoral as speculation in subprime mortgages?


The title of the thread is the same as this blog post at http://www.scientificamerican.com/bl...SA_SA_20110216 about Brian Greene's new book, The Hidden Reality: Parallel Universes and the Deep Laws of the Cosmos. A snippet:
My beef with Greene is this: He has become a cheerleader for the descent of theoretical physics into increasingly fantastical speculation, disconnected from the reality that we can access empirically.
So, has theoretical physics (or some aspects of it) stopped being science?
 
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Feb17-11, 10:57 AM   #2
 
Who really knows?!
 
Feb17-11, 11:10 AM   #3
 
Quote by D H View Post
So, has theoretical physics (or some aspects of it) stopped being science?
In the measurable set of "theoretical physics", the subset "string theory" is so tiny that it almost have measure zero! ;)
 
Feb17-11, 02:16 PM   #4
 
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Is speculation in multiverses as immoral as speculation in subprime mortgages?


The "multiverse" vision is a graphic depiction of the defeat of physics.

It symbolizes giving up on the centuries-old program to find what constitutes the world we experience and to explain how it works. Many excellent people in theory have not given up on this endeavor---and are far from accepting defeat.

So in that sense the multiverse is a false vision: it conveys the false message that we are being forced to give up on the aim of a unique testable explanation of why the world is as it is.

The string program (as physics) may or may not have run into trouble, but I see no evidence that the rest of theoretical physics is stalled or plagued by intractable landscapes of variant theory. Be that as it may, the fate of one particular theoretical initiative is irrelevant from an historical perspective and hardly warrants a change of plans .

Overall, the signs are that progress continues.
 
Feb19-11, 09:46 AM   #5
 
aim of a unique testable explanation of why the world is as it is
Given that such an explanation of the world, which is both complete and consistent, can never be found, how do we judge what is immoral - running behind one unreachable (and hence, unknowable) target OR giving up closer to the start of the game and start fantasizing about cute targets?
I would just let everyone get off and enjoy his/her own mental wa*king.
 
Feb19-11, 11:58 AM   #6
 
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Quote by crackjack View Post
...
I would just let everyone get off and enjoy his/her own mental wa*king.
I can understand your attitude, crackjack.
But I would like to put in a good word for continuing to aim for a unique testable explanation of why the world we experience is as it is.

It is something that we can approach by successive approximations, even if we never reach a final understanding. It's the traditional goal of physics as an empirical science. And there are no indications now that it is any less practical as a goal than would have seemed back 100 or 200 years ago. It is still a good goal to strive for and remarkable progress has been made in just the past 50 years.

I don't see some temporary disappointment and frustration in one or two departments of theory as signs that the overall program is ill-conceived. Note the encouraging advance in early universe cosmology just in the past 10 or 15 years. No mere mental wanking that
 
Feb19-11, 04:02 PM   #7
 
:D

I agree, but the counter-examples you cite are not the right ones. Just some people believing in multiverse does not mean that they think we should not study about unification or cosmo theories of our early verse etc. They are saying that, once all this is done and when we reach the question of "why such a specific bang?", they will come in with "there are all possible bangs".
 
Feb19-11, 04:21 PM   #8
 
Personally, I hope that the LHC will nullify supersymmetry, by the same token, String theory. Hopefully, physicists will come to their senses, and stop this nonsense of indulging into that kind of "science fantasy".
 
Feb19-11, 05:21 PM   #9
 
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http://arxiv.org/abs/0801.0246

I came across this from reading http://backreaction.blogspot.com/201...-for-life.html
 
Feb19-11, 05:26 PM   #10
D H
 
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Quote by zaybu View Post
Personally, I hope that the LHC will nullify supersymmetry, by the same token, String theory.
I suspect most physicists hope otherwise, at least in the sense that the LHC will come up with some result that the standard model cannot explain. There haven't been enough "who ordered that" discoveries in physics for quite some time.
 
Feb19-11, 05:40 PM   #11
 
Quote by D H View Post
I suspect most physicists hope otherwise, at least in the sense that the LHC will come up with some result that the standard model cannot explain. There haven't been enough "who ordered that" discoveries in physics for quite some time.
In a sense, I'm with you on that -- a particle that cannot be explained by the Standard Model would be cool, as long as it doesn't prove SuSy or ST.
 
Feb19-11, 06:15 PM   #12
D H
 
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First off, what would be wrong with that?

Secondly, a new discovery won't prove string theory. A new discovery might disprove string theory (assuming string theory is falsifiable) or it might be consistent with string theory. Consistency is not the same as proof, any more than the observation of a white swan is proof that all swans are white.
 
Feb19-11, 07:33 PM   #13
 
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The article makes a big deal about Popper. But hasn't he already been falsified by Dirac's lone monopole?
 
Feb19-11, 08:51 PM   #14
 
Quote by D H View Post
First off, what would be wrong with that?
It's my negative attitude towards extra dimensions. Basically, I don't believe in that, and anything that utilize that concept, hopefully, will never be proved.


Secondly, a new discovery won't prove string theory. A new discovery might disprove string theory (assuming string theory is falsifiable) or it might be consistent with string theory. Consistency is not the same as proof, any more than the observation of a white swan is proof that all swans are white.
Fine, but the sooner we get off the String Theory bandwagon, the better we will be, and the more hopeful the future of science will look.
 
Feb19-11, 09:07 PM   #15
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Quote by zaybu View Post
It's my negative attitude towards extra dimensions. Basically, I don't believe in that, and anything that utilize that concept, hopefully, will never be proved.
Then you are no better than, and are arguably worse than, than those who talk about truly unprovable things such as non-communicating universes. You are sounding like those who argue against relativity.

The laws of physics don't care / the universe doesn't care what you think.
 
Feb20-11, 08:14 AM   #16
 
Quote by D H View Post
Then you are no better than, and are arguably worse than, than those who talk about truly unprovable things such as non-communicating universes. You are sounding like those who argue against relativity.

The laws of physics don't care / the universe doesn't care what you think.
The difference is that there is evidence in supporting relativity, otherwise the theory would have been thrown away a long time ago. However, there no evidence supporting the idea of extra dimensions, and I don't think that can be falsifiable. To me, that smells of science fiction. At this point, I might as well believe in the supernatural, and in case you might be wondering, I don't believe in that nonsense as well.
 
Feb20-11, 10:02 AM   #17
jal
 
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This question has comes up many times and in many form.

A search... Here is what has been presented on this forum.


http://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=31263

http://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=468837

http://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=465313

http://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=460444

AND
if you have neglected or ignored my blog go to

http://www.physicsforums.com/blog.php?u=58039
jal
 
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