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- Jan 24, 2003
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What a great thread.
People who pour scorn on Quantum Theory are in good company. Einstein famously remarked "God does not play dice" in reference to Heisenbergs uncertainty principle.
As far as parallel universes go then I would go this far. Physics is based on a set of mathematical models. As such they are all wrong. It is just the extent to which they are wrong that determines how useful they are. For instance you can go from Gallilean relativity, through Newtonian mechanics to General relativity. Each describes spacetime in a useful way. The model you choose for a particular application depends on what you want to do (e.g. drop an object from a set height, describe planetary motion or design a fusion reactor).
What all of these models has in common is that they are all capable of being disproved. Special relativity for instance is based on two assumptions. First, the laws of physics are the same for any observer anywhere in the universe, and second the speed of light is a constant for any observer. If you accept these assumptions then you can develop a model for special relativity on a single sheet of paper using pythag. The model can easily be disproved by showing that either of these assumptions does not hold (and a lot of effort has gone into doing just that).
So when I look at these articles firstly I ask, can I disprove it, or is it just a matter of faith? If it passes this test then I will tentatively accept that although it will definitely be wrong, it may model a phenomenon in a useful way.
Lastly, Bells theorum tells us that we will never know all there is to know about physics anyway.
Now Col is going to tell me just how wrong I am....... He sounds like a clever guy.
Edit: Marginally improved my atrocious spelling and punctuation.
People who pour scorn on Quantum Theory are in good company. Einstein famously remarked "God does not play dice" in reference to Heisenbergs uncertainty principle.
As far as parallel universes go then I would go this far. Physics is based on a set of mathematical models. As such they are all wrong. It is just the extent to which they are wrong that determines how useful they are. For instance you can go from Gallilean relativity, through Newtonian mechanics to General relativity. Each describes spacetime in a useful way. The model you choose for a particular application depends on what you want to do (e.g. drop an object from a set height, describe planetary motion or design a fusion reactor).
What all of these models has in common is that they are all capable of being disproved. Special relativity for instance is based on two assumptions. First, the laws of physics are the same for any observer anywhere in the universe, and second the speed of light is a constant for any observer. If you accept these assumptions then you can develop a model for special relativity on a single sheet of paper using pythag. The model can easily be disproved by showing that either of these assumptions does not hold (and a lot of effort has gone into doing just that).
So when I look at these articles firstly I ask, can I disprove it, or is it just a matter of faith? If it passes this test then I will tentatively accept that although it will definitely be wrong, it may model a phenomenon in a useful way.
Lastly, Bells theorum tells us that we will never know all there is to know about physics anyway.
Now Col is going to tell me just how wrong I am....... He sounds like a clever guy.

Edit: Marginally improved my atrocious spelling and punctuation.