Hi.
I saw this:
http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/27640
Is this right -- or is this sloppily reported? As if it's true, I'd wonder about some things. Namely, the fact that we did not always exist, and that "living organisms" are so damned fragile -- how could the universe be dependent on something so fragile to exist? And how did that fragile thing arise, if no universe could have existed "before" we did, since it depends on us to exist? That would create a seemingly very strange idea: that the universe is not 13.7 billion years old (at least), but is only a few tens or hundreds of thousands of years old (so in a sense, the "young world" Creationists would be right -- kind of, though their preferred Bible-creation date of 6,000 years would not be), and only appears to be 13.7 Gyr old. This would seem to lend credence to a sort of variation on the "omphalos" theory:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omphalos_hypothesis
and it would also make one wonder what caused its bringing into existence at the young age. Did God really miraculously create it and then fabricate it so as to look old? It really starts to sound too YECy for comfort.
To me it makes much more sense the universe can go back 13.7 billion years, so I must either be missing something here, this is reported badly, or both... So what is it?
Does anyone have access to the paper, and is expert enough to figure out just what was determined by this experiment?
(EDIT: But maybe the Biblical date could be right -- we could have "observed" into existence all the fake evidence that humans existed earlier...
Lol.)
I saw this:
http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/27640
Some physicists are uncomfortable with the idea that all individual quantum events are innately random. This is why many have proposed more complete theories, which suggest that events are at least partially governed by extra "hidden variables". Now physicists from Austria claim to have performed an experiment that rules out a broad class of hidden-variables theories that focus on realism -- giving the uneasy consequence that reality does not exist when we are not observing it
They found that, just as in the realizations of Bell's thought experiment, Leggett's inequality is violated – thus stressing the quantum-mechanical assertion that reality does not exist when we're not observing it.
Is this right -- or is this sloppily reported? As if it's true, I'd wonder about some things. Namely, the fact that we did not always exist, and that "living organisms" are so damned fragile -- how could the universe be dependent on something so fragile to exist? And how did that fragile thing arise, if no universe could have existed "before" we did, since it depends on us to exist? That would create a seemingly very strange idea: that the universe is not 13.7 billion years old (at least), but is only a few tens or hundreds of thousands of years old (so in a sense, the "young world" Creationists would be right -- kind of, though their preferred Bible-creation date of 6,000 years would not be), and only appears to be 13.7 Gyr old. This would seem to lend credence to a sort of variation on the "omphalos" theory:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omphalos_hypothesis
and it would also make one wonder what caused its bringing into existence at the young age. Did God really miraculously create it and then fabricate it so as to look old? It really starts to sound too YECy for comfort.
To me it makes much more sense the universe can go back 13.7 billion years, so I must either be missing something here, this is reported badly, or both... So what is it?
Does anyone have access to the paper, and is expert enough to figure out just what was determined by this experiment?
(EDIT: But maybe the Biblical date could be right -- we could have "observed" into existence all the fake evidence that humans existed earlier...
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