gorgos said:
The information in the mother is wiped out before the daughter can arise.
Who is the mother of the mother?
heh heh, it sounds like the sort of question asked by people who are interested in religious or philos. issues rather than cosmology
remember I am not telling you what I think. I am trying to discuss PENROSE idea as best I can (not being especially up on it)
in the Penrose setup spacetime domains arise from prior domains that have reached a kind of uniform quiescent state
so it is "mothers all the way back", or better said, there is no beginning, just an infinite sequence of mothers going back indefinitely
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in scientific cosmology one does not ask what caused the whole thing to exist
one takes existence for granted and tries to understand how it works
and what possible alternatives are allowed by the system
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Personally I am most interested in a different model. Not Penrose. It is a model that they are working on at Penn State in Ashtekar's group. In the version I'm thinking of, only one bounce occurs.
There is a contracting phase which goes back indefinitely into the past. When the contraction reaches a critical density (where due to quantum effects gravity repels) contraction changes to expansion. The expanding phase is what we are in now, and it is due to continue indefinitely.
The model is not intended to appeal to the imagination or to one's philosophical preconceptions. It is intended to be simple and to generate predictions of stuff we can observe at present-----about the microwave background etc.
If it can be tested I shall be delighted either way it comes out-----whether it passes the test or is shot down. either way we win, because we learn something.
There is tons more research about Ashtekar's model than there is about Penrose. So maybe other people feel the same way I do.
If you want to see some of the research just do a keyword search at SLAC-Stanford with the keyword="quantum cosmology". Like this
http://www.slac.stanford.edu/spires/find/hep/www?rawcmd=DK+quantum+cosmology+and+date+%3E+2005&FORMAT=WWW&SEQUENCE=citecount%28d%29
this restricts to publication date > 2005
and ranks the hits by how much the paper is cited in the literature (its rough importance)
if you look at the top 20 hits, I guess none will be about Penrose model
and the vast majority will be about Ashtekar's and the other Penn State group
in cosmology where you have gotten rid of the singularity, theirs is the leading approach
at least for the present
if you want to engage with modern nonsingular cosmology (the approach getting the most attention these days) the quickest way is to get familiar with what that link pulls up and direct questions at it
notwithstanding that Penrose is a brilliant creative mathematician