That doesn't really sound right... maybe I'll go check it out myself.
Yeah, I did that part wrong. At this moment Earth's pull on you is what it is because you're 6,300 kilometers away from the center of mass. If the Earth became a black hole (with its center of mass in the same place) its pull on you would remain the same if you also remained in the same place--6,300 kilometers away from the singularity. Move closer and it goes up, though I don't know how much.
Of course there could be different objects. If your parents didn't meet, you wouldn't be around.
Then it seems to me that one's parents must meet (in the same place and time) in all universes.
Would Saddam have died in all universes when he died in ours?
Letsee.....regardless of where Saddam exists in the higher dimensions, he exists at a particular location in the first four. If you viewed Saddam from the 8th dimension at this moment (i.e. from our current location in the fourth dimension, time) Saddam's position in the first three dimensions is still the same: wherever his grave site is. So if he's alive in some other dimension, he would have to be sitting still. Permanently. Which would be kind of a bummer for him.
So I probably gave some bad examples: the Trojans would most likely still have lost, Hector would still be dead, Saddam would still have died at the same time. And George Bush would still be President from 2001 to 2008, which I'm sure must bum out some of you.
In the same way that a square, viewed from a different position in three dimensions, can appear to be a trapezoid (but is still a square), I'm thinking that our universe would only look different when viewed from other dimensions, but would still act the same.
Changing the physical constant neither invalidates nor creates new interactions, it just changes the strength of them. So your point is invalid.
Fine. So it changes the strength of interactions. Thereby bringing into play interactions that you hadn't predicted.
And we could test it by building a quantum simulator in which we engineer the Hamiltonian to simulate a system with these different constants.
Have we....?
And here's another thought: suppose it's not possible for the physical constants of the universe to be anything else? "If they were" is currently only a thought exercise (that hasn't been tested), just as "what if rap music didn't suck". We can imagine it even though it's impossible. Take gravity. Drop that bottle of Zima you're drinking and it will move towards the floor at a velocity that increases by 32 feet per second, every second. The physical constant known as gravitational acceleration is always the same. Whenever you're exactly 6,300 kilometers away from the center of mass of an object that has a mass of one Earth, the gravitational pull on you will always be the same.
It cannot be any different. Because the property known as gravitational acceleration is completely dependent on
other physical laws. The amount of light produced by a 100-watt light bulb is controlled entirely by movements in electron shells when propelled by electrical currents; electrical currents are controlled by the physical constants governing electrical and magnetic fields. And God only knows what a magnetic field is--yes, we know what a magnetic field does, but we don't know what it's made of.
If the strong interaction was a bit different and hydrogen was the only stable isotope, the only molecule capable of existing would be the H2 molecule. And the only systems you could build with those would be a lot of hydrogen together. But even that would be quite dull, as no nuclear fusion would be possible and thus you would have no star but just a ball of hydrogen.
And you're
sure hydrogen couldn't possibly do something you hadn't predicted....? (rhetorical question--the answer is no)
And your knowledge of the building blocks is quite limited as your statements are just wrong. The universe is not built from three building blocks, but there is a whole zoo of particles that we know of (and we do not even know what dark matter is made of).
And there is not just one quark, but there are twelve different types of quarks
Yeah. And twelve different types of quarks are still called quarks. Point remaining the same, whether it's one or three: you can still produce remarkable complexity from a very small number of fundamental particles. Conway's "Life" simulation uses only one. Yet it results in patterns that, paradoxically, always produce exactly the same outcome every time, but cannot be predicted without actually running the pattern.