T
Touchstone
Guest
Indeed, but I suspect we have nearly opposite ideas of what makes a poor or proper definition as regards the state of the world around us.Or, has that point in time not arrived yet? (Perhaps that gives new meaning to the theory of universe contraction! It is one thing to consider these questions from a perspective of poor definitions; it is quite another to ponder them from the perspective of proper definitions, is it not?)
Yes, but that is why falsification is so crucial as a foundation for knowledge. Hypotheses and postulations abound, and many cannot be dismissed *a priori. *‘Absolute space’ might have been right on, if the universe were structured differently. It might have been true, and relativity falsified. That’s why we need falsification, to provide some epistemic grounds for dismissing some of the candidates. So here you have a competing idea, that the universe is part of an eternal chain, stretching back infinitely, and now you are stuck. You have no way to discredit that idea nor your idea based on what we observe, test or see happening around us. Even a “Big Bang”, as “start-like” as I can think of for a universe could possibly be just one link in an infinite chain. If it were, we wouldn’t know any better. If weren’t we wouldn’t know any better, either. Neither the affirmative or denial of that idea is even possibly in danger of being falsified by our experiences in the world.To consider the universe as merely something that is a part of something else – that just always was – is a postulation.
The problems inherent in a concept of a multiverse that is infinite brings us back to the problem of that point in time when a suffocating infinity of beings could have existed somewhere along the way. I think it is safe to say that even a multiverse would have to be finite. For, if all of this was infinite, then there is no good reason that we are here now, nor any good reason that what is here has not undergone a complete suffocation (and annihilation) by an infinite multitude of material beings. There cannot be any infinity of matter or material beings that does not cause the ultimate and utter internment of all mobile beings.
If your claim were true, you’d have no way to show it. If it were false, you’d have no way to show it. And crucially, you have no way to tell, even in principle, which is false. Again this is straightforward to apply: if “infinite multiverse” or “finite multiverse” or “finite universe” or “finite multiverse” is false as a model of reality, what would you anticipate discovering that would be dispositive, effective in falsifying any or all of them, showing how that idea cannot work?continued . . .
-TS
OnEdit: Should be “Michelson/Morley” above. Too late to edit the response before this one.