I once heard an astrophysicist on NPR claim that in certain conditions at the quantum level it would be possible for an expanding bubble to be created with a different laws of physics. As this bubble expanded it would eat everything in it's path as our current reality couldn't function within that bubble. — Foghorn
The notion that reality may contain the potential for many different sets of laws is indeed fascinating. — Foghorn
Recently I've been thinking about why we live in a world with stable laws of physics — litewave
I've been thinking about why we live in a world with stable laws of physics, out of the plethora of all possible worlds. — litewave
"Physical laws" are features of physical models and not the universe itself. Our physical models are stable, therefore "physical laws" are stable. If in current scientific terms new observations indicate that aspects of the universe have changed, then, in order to account for such changes, we will have to reformulate our current (or conjecture new) physical models which might entail changes to current (or wholly different) "physical laws". E.g. Aristotlean teleology —> Newtonian gravity —> Einsteinian relativity.Anyone familiar with this explanation or any alternative explanations of the stability of laws of physics? — litewave
But the anthropic principle doesn't seem to explain why we should expect that the laws of physics will continue to be stable in the future. In fact, it may seem that such a stability is very unlikely because there are many ways our world could be in the future but only one way in which it would be a deterministic extension of the world it has been until now. — litewave
This is where the Solomonoff induction comes in, which seems to imply the opposite: it is more likely that laws of physics will continue to hold. — litewave
But the larger point is clear. The laws of physics are historically contingent ideas made up by people. — fishfry
But perhaps by "laws of physics" you mean the "ultimate" laws of physics that our contingent theories are only approximations to. But what makes you think that (1) there are any such things; and (2) even if there are, that they don't change over time? Those are two metaphysical assumptions, not supported by empirical proof. — fishfry
Your point of view has a name, Scientific realism. It is a metaphysical stance, not an established fact. — fishfry
The first question I have is whether the 'plethora of possible worlds' is simply a figment of the imagination. — Wayfarer
That there might be 'other worlds' or 'other universes' seems like the most idle of idle speculation - what light does it cast, what explanatory advantages does it provide? — Wayfarer
And what evidence could there ever be for it? — Wayfarer
Why is that such speculation is regarded as scientifically respectable, when, for instance, speculation about any form of higher intelligence is inevitably dismissed as creationist? — Wayfarer
Second point is to consider that the stability of the laws of physics are conditions for the existence of anything whatever, and questioning them is tantamount to questioning why two plus two equals four, and not an elephant. They are simply so, in order that anything might exist whatever. — Wayfarer
As is well-known, there are a small number of fundamental constants that seemed to be poised according to minute tolerances, in the absence of which a Universe would not have been formed in the first place (per Lloyd Rees, Just Six Numbers.) — Wayfarer
The laws of nature are simply patterns in the way matter & energy interact and that they've been as they are now for quite some time — TheMadFool
So, take a deep breath, strap yourselves in because the so-called laws of nature (the order/ the pattern) could devolve into utter chaos at any time. — TheMadFool
"Physical laws" are features of physical models and not the universe itself. Our physical models are stable, therefore "physical laws" are stable. If in current scientific terms new observations indicate that aspects of the universe have changed, then, in order to account for such changes, we will have to reformulate our current (or conjecture new) physical models which might entail changes to current (or wholly different) "physical laws". E.g. Aristotlean teleology —> Newtonian gravity —> Einsteinian relativity. — 180 Proof
A change in a law would raise the question, what changed it? In all other things, inertia is a sign of being left the hell alone: change suggests something driving that change. — Kenosha Kid
That seems explained by the anthropic principle: we could have evolved only in a world where the laws have been stable for a long time. — litewave
Solomonoff induction seems to show that this is very unlikely. — litewave
So, take a deep breath, strap yourselves in because the so-called laws of nature (the order/ the pattern) could devolve into utter chaos at any time. — TheMadFool
Even random things have reasons. What would make a randomly selected value for c change to another randomly selected value of c? — Kenosha Kid
A world where the speed of light randomly changes is less simple than a world where it is constant (all other laws and initial conditions being equal). — litewave
I always worry that the anthropic principle explains nothing by explaining too much. The reason the world is just-so is because, if it weren't, then we wouldn't exist. — Cuthbert
Yet in your example with objects falling down, all the historical theories from Aristotle to Einstein say that objects consistently fall down rather than up or in random directions. The later theories give more accurate predictions than earlier ones but from all of them it seems that the phenomenon of objects falling down is highly stable. How do you explain that if not by a stable regularity in the world? — litewave
There are obviously persistent regularities in the world that we know have been observed for millennia and have been used to make successful predictions. — litewave
This doesn't mean that the regularities cannot change but they are obviously highly stable. — litewave
Your point of view has a name, Scientific realism. It is a metaphysical stance, not an established fact.
— fishfry
Yes but I don't know of a better alternative. — litewave
Realism explains that our theories work because they correspond to reality while Instrumentalism offers no explanation why our theories work. — litewave
A change in a law would raise the question, what changed it? — Kenosha Kid
If you go to the moon, the gravitational acceleration is different than on earth — fishfry
And I took the trouble in my post to give the striking example of dark matter, which shows that we still don't understand gravity. — fishfry
If you deny that human-created physics is historically contingent, you must not be familiar with the history of science. — fishfry
The Ptolemaic system that placed the earth at the center of the solar system fit all known observations and was accepted for millennia. — fishfry
"Obviously" is not a scientific principle, it's an anti-scientific one. Newton's ideas were obvious. Einstein's are much less so. — fishfry
That can only be because you didn't bother to read the Wiki and SEP articles I linked. — fishfry
I'm not arguing for the falsity of scientific realism; only noting that it's a metaphysical stance and not a scientific one. — fishfry
Whether there's really a consistent reality "out there" or only seems that way due to our highly limited observational experience, is not something we can know for sure. — fishfry
After all others have noted in this thread that the latest theories suggest that perhaps the only reason our laws of nature are the way they are is that we just happen to live in this particular branch of the multiverse; and that nature could be quite different in other ones. — fishfry
Indeed. I can't even be sure that you are not just a figment of my imagination. But I am pretty sure that whatever you are, you are what you are and not what you are not. In other words, you are a consistent object, identical to itself. To assume otherwise would be a nonsense which would lead to a logical explosion that would make discussion, science and understanding meaningless. — litewave
:up:A world where the speed of light randomly changes is less simple than a world where it is constant (all other laws and initial conditions being equal). — litewave
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