novaghost
The ancients
The ancient mathamaticians and phliosophers certainly had a interesting flair for the dramatic, but I have been interested in some of their ideas about math and certain ideas relating math and the physical world. For instance some of their best know ideas that they explored was the golden ratio and pi . The golden ratio was used in much in the arcitecture and art of the ancinet greeks. They had a facination with the number 1 and attribute its meaning as unity or a better way of saying it would be a "unified reality". That ultimate beauty and harmaony arrises from symetric from that comes in unity or the number 1. Often there is the idea that we live in a imperfect "shadow" world of the true one (posed by Socrates) as something like the golden mean. Where the sum of a line in a specific ratio is to the larger section what the large section is to (in ratio) the smaller section. This is a interesting fact (a mathmatical constant) that many of the ancients belived gave a perception of beauty through perfect balance to the eye (as nature seems to have the same ratio). And as many people know the sum of the angles of a triangle will always add up to 180, but the queston is not that they do but why do they? Can this say something about the reality we share? The ancients spend much of their lives trying to figure out these same questons. And I belive that they may have stumbled onto something.
Einstein
"The most incomprehensible thing about the world is that it is comprehensible" Albert Einstein
One of the best known scientist and a great thinker. He wrote on many topics and had a great insight into how the universe works in reality. I have read some of his papers where he wrote on many topics and he was indeed quite the thinker.
One of the best known scientist and a great thinker. He wrote on many topics and had a great insight into how the universe works in reality. I have read some of his papers where he wrote on many topics and he was indeed quite the thinker.
What if there was more than one You?
What if someone told you that there is more than one universe? That there are a infinite number of universes and that each universe is different by one or more factors. For example in a parallel universe we are all flying around in our cars or that the car was never invented. Would you believe that this could be true? That there is a infinite number of universes and we inhabit only a single possibility within many? What would this mean to us if it was true? How would it shape our view of the world and our place in it?
I would say that no matter how solid the evidence that most would not believe it was true. That the fear of a ever changing reality with a never ending possibilities would just be too much to handle at once (even if it was true). I would imagine that they would seek to disprove the idea by attacking the people who have found the evidence and then with no empirical proof give their own interpretation.
The reason I say this is because of history. Look at how evolution is treated in many people's mind. And that is not nearly as mind blowing as saying that there is a infinite number of universes and ours was created by the rubbing of other universes which created the big bang. And thus ultimately there is a infinite number of you's that differ by one factor or more. Think back to a decision you made that could have gone either way and in a parallel universe you did go the other way. And then that brings up the why's of you. It could be said that you are you because of a set of outcomes that have brought you to the point that you are now and that you are different if any of those outcomes were different. Well we will just have to wait and see if the scientist at the LHC find.
Profile
Calendar
math
