“In 5 billion years, the expansion of the universe will have progressed to the point where all other galaxies will have receded beyond detection. Indeed, they will be receding faster than the speed of light, so detection will be impossible. Future civilizations will discover science and all its laws, and never know about other galaxies or the cosmic background radiation.They will inevitably come to the wrong conclusion about the universe......We live in a special time, the only time, where we can observationally verify that we live in a special time.”
― Lawrence M. Krauss, A Universe from Nothing: Why There Is Something Rather Than Nothing
They will inevitably come to the wrong conclusion about the universe.
They will inevitably come to the wrong conclusion about the universe.
This should serve as a warning to scientists of today. What if we have it wrong? We could also be in a similar situation like those 5 billion years from now. The present state of the universe could be just a ''phase'' in its evolution and our habit retracing the steps to the so-called Big Bang could be faulty. — TheMadFool
I heard Krauss say that, and it annoyed me. i’m sure they’ll eventually discover space is expanding and then put 2 and 2 together. — Fool
Physics is so mathematical that laws governing nuclear chemistry have cosmological implications. — Fool
I have used this quote to argue with cosmologists over the years. We may live in a special time but how can you know if all the evidence of the universe's creation is still available? — Codger
This is not cosmology, this is just sophomoric philosophy. — SophistiCat
How would they figure that out? Expanding space is validated by precisely the sort of astronomical observations that would not be available in that hypothetical future.
Oh no they don't. You can have all of nuclear chemistry and a static universe, no problem.
I'm suggesting this evidence may not be necessary. Even if we had to rely on red or blue-shifted light, Doppler Effects within our own galaxy may compel the same hypothesis - not that I'm convinced we could only discover the expansion of space through shifted light. — Fool
The point is the mathematical nature of physics connects seemingly unrelated phenomena in unforeseeable ways, so it seems premature to rule out all possible evidence. — Fool
Our current theory of the fundamental forces tells us which structures/substances can exist, under what conditions they can come about and how long they would take to form. — Fool
So no, the current situation (observable galaxies or not) isn't consistent with the universe coming about last Thursday. — Fool
The thing is, you need much larger scales in order to detect redshifting due to expanding space. On the scale of a galaxy gravitational attraction overcomes this effect.
I think you are underestimating the underdetermination of theory by evidence in general, and the autonomy of physical theories at different scales/energies in particular.
Oh no, nothing can rule out Last Thursdayism :) This is where other, non-empirical considerations come in.
I have used this quote to argue with cosmologists over the years. We may live in a special time but how can you know if all the evidence of the universe's creation is still available? All it takes is one key component to be missing, yet you'd never know that it was. — Codger
Hey, you’re making a lot of the same points I would make if I held your view. What’s your background? — Fool
It’s smart to distinguish frequency shifting from different sources. It’s standardly used to measure front-back motion within our own solar system, where inflation is negligible. The flip side is that the mechanics describing motion throughout the galaxy will entail increasingly precise frequency shifts. — Fool
(How would you distinguish a tiny systematic bias in the data from noise? Noise doesn't have to be perfectly unbiased!) — SophistiCat
I don't think much about Krauss's philosophizing, but on this question he is undoubtedly an authority that ought to be taken seriously. He may be wrong, but it is far more likely for you or I to be wrong about this than it is for him.
There is no good reason to think that scientific theories inevitably converge towards some fixed final shape.
A civilization with no access to the same observations that we have might nevertheless entertain theories that predict those same observations, and might even in some cases find strong indirect support for such predictions.
Math is non-empirical. This is why no discovery in science has ever overturned a theorem.
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