I just had dinner with my family and I sat down at my computer to kill a few minutes before we head over to the extended family's place for some desert...and I read over a reply to a post I made on an astronomy forum...and I thought, "How incredible is it that our existence, the existence of the universe even came to be?"
The fact that anything exists at all is really fantastic.
I just had to get that out...it was really relating to my thoughts on a topic regarding the creation and evolution of universes:
A reply suggested that perhaps if this were the case then we could part of an infinite, ever-expanding metaverse and that the only thing that can overcome the gravity of a black hole is the expansion of space itself.
Just had to get it out.
The fact that anything exists at all is really fantastic.
I just had to get that out...it was really relating to my thoughts on a topic regarding the creation and evolution of universes:
me on a different forum said:I'm sure most of you have heard of Lee Smolin before, who discusses a theory regarding the multiplication of universes through black holes and natural selection in the macroscopic scale.
Here's a link to a summary:
http://www.edge.org/3rd_culture/bios/smolin.html
I read a comment (I believe it's actually in that article) by a critic that it would be necessary for these universes to appear in strange dimensions, and it's likely that they would collide with eachother. It's an interesting argument against the theory, but is it really necessary for these universes to just appear elsewhere?
If we consider the immense time dilation caused by the gravity of the black hole, it's possible that it won't reach singularity until the moment the universe is destroyed in the first place. [Please correct me if I'm misunderstanding at any point] Applied to the idea of the "big rip," would it be possible that these black holes reach singularity and breed a new universe at the point of destruction of the old one? Not to say that all the black holes that are left would exhibit this behaviour, but perhaps the most massive of them. If this is the case then it may not be necessary for these new universes to exist in other dimensions or anything strange like that, they would appear where the old one was destroyed...even if just one results from the old one.
http://www.space.com/scienceastronom...ip_030306.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Rip
A reply suggested that perhaps if this were the case then we could part of an infinite, ever-expanding metaverse and that the only thing that can overcome the gravity of a black hole is the expansion of space itself.
Just had to get it out.