Hi
@kimbyd:
I have found this thread quite interesting, and in particular the very clear explanations you made regarding the OP. However, the above quote does not quite make sense to me. There seems to me to be two problems with this assumption.
I assume the universe we are discussing to be the current best cosmological model for out actual universe.
(1) Each observable universe (OU) has its own history based on it's "initial conditions" at some arbitrarily chosen past time T using comoving coordinates. If we assume that there is some other very distant OU to ours which is identical to ours now, it must have been identical to ours at the earlier time T. My thought is that the influences of interactions among the various components of the two OUs dependent on QM effects, would necessarily introduce small changes between the two OUs over the time between T and now, and each small change would grow to become a significant change. Thus the two OUs would not be identical now even they were identical at time T.
(2) For the purpose of presenting this problem I ignore the QM influence in (1). I think you are confusing two different kinds of infinity: ℵ
0 and ℵ
1.
The number of OUs is ℵ
0. The number of possible configurations of time T initial conditions is ℵ
1.
Therefore the likelihood that there is another OU with initial conditions identical to ours in infinitesimal. If the initial conditions are different, even when the difference is small, they will produce current configurations which will be greatly different for chaos theory reasons.
If you disagree with either the (1) or (2) conclusion, I would much appreciate your explanation.
Regard,
Buzz