Theories based on observation and math are not "pure speculation", are they?
As all that epicycle math demonstrates, I'm afraid to be the bearer of bad news, but yep, it's just pure speculation with a little mathematical window dressing, not unlike numerology. Until you can empirically verify cause/effect relationships in the lab, it remains pure speculation and the math is irrelevant. Look at SUSY today. All the "popular maths" related to SUSY theory have already gone up in smoke. What remains now is an "act of faith" in "some sort" of sparticle, any sparticle, and God help you if it's not a long lived sparticle.
Nope. I'm just telling it like it is, and if it "bothers" you to think that your entire belief system is based upon "faith in the unseen" (in the lab), oh well, it's not my problem.You just call it that because you don't like it.
Nope, not me. Unlike you I *understand* the laws of physics. The energy we use on a daily has existed eternally, and it will always exist. Macroscopic life has has eternity to "beat humans to the punch" in terms of intelligent evolution. Any concept you hold related to a "creation event" as it relates to pure energy is purely an illusion of your own mind.I said, you have what the article said backwards. The article states "A particular problem is that most Boltzmann brains will exist in the far future when the universe is no more than an inky void, with a past indistinguishable from the future. This would make our experience of time's arrow highly unusual.
However, if we can demonstrate that the universe has a finite lifespan, that would deny Boltzmann brains the infinite time they need to outnumber us. "
You got what the article said wrong, didn't you?
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