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The Anthropic Cosmological Principle

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Title: The Anthropic Cosmological Principle


1
The Anthropic Cosmological Principle
  • Paul J. Miller

Paul J. Miller
2
The Problem WithScience
  • Deciding which assumptions to take as
    fundamental, or as a basis for building the
    physical laws that govern our Universe.
  • The Anthropic Cosmological Principle relates the
    Mind and our place as observers directly to the
    phenomena traditionally within the realm of
    physical science.

3
The First AnthropicPrinciple
  • Many ancient philosophers and scientists came to
    the realization that our place in the universe
    determines how and what we observe.
  • The earliest official Anthropic Principle
    states that our location in the universe is
    necessarily privileged to the extent of being
    compatible with our existence as observers.
    This is the basic assumption upon which
    everything we believe is based.

4
Interpretations of the First Anthropic Principle
  • ALL laws of the universe must be observable.
  • The universe MUST be of a type that allows the
    evolution of observers (were here arent we?).
  • The observed structure of the universe is
    restricted by the fact that we are observing it
    or in essence that the universe is observing
    itself.

5
The Weak Anthropic Principle
  • The previous interpretations of the Anthropic
    Principle lead scientists and philosophers to
    develop a more precise Anthropic Principle, the
    Weak Anthropic Principle.
  • The Weak Anthropic Principle states that
    observers must be aware of the self-selection
    which results from being observers.

6
Example relating to the Weak Anthropic Principle
  • Suppose you are a philosopher/scientist living in
    the Aztec civilization (back in the day), and
    wish to know the number of stars that exist. To
    determine this, you would simply watch the night
    sky and count (accurately) the number of stars
    you could view. However, what you are actually
    counting is the number of visible stars from our
    planet at night, and not the total number of
    stars in the universe. Also it is unlikely for an
    observer to be aware of this fact until more
    precise instruments are invented (we still cant
    know this number, only a rough estimate, due to
    the Weak Anthropic Principle).

7
The Constants of Nature
  • One of the most prominent results of 20th century
    physics has been the realization that there exist
    certain properties within the universe which
    determine the size and structure of everything.
  • The sizes of everything from galaxies to
    micro-organisms is determined by a collection of
    pure numbers (such as the proton-electron mass
    ratio) which govern the structure of the
    universe.
  • These pure numbers have become known as The
    Constants of Nature and although totally
    independent, if any were altered in the slightest
    the Universe would not exist as we know it.

8
Tweaking the Constants of Nature
  • The Constants of Nature are derived from taking
    the ratios of numerous known physical constants,
    including c, G, h, e, me, mn, etc.
  • If any of these constants were to be of a
    different value, even of the slightest, the
    universe we observe would be a very different
    place.
  • There are infinite possibilites, but it has come
    to the belief that the set of numbers we observe
    as the constants of the nature MUST be as they
    are in order for the universe to evolve and
    sustain life.

9
The Strong Anthropic Principle
  • This realization about the odd coincidences
    concerning the Constants of Nature led scientists
    to develop a stronger version of the WAP.
  • The Strong Anthropic Principle states that The
    universe must have those properties which allow
    life to develop within it at some point in its
    history.

10
Three Interpretations of the Strong Anthropic
Principle
  • 1. There exists one possible universe designed
    with the goal of generating and sustaining
    observers.
  • 2. Observers are necessary to bring the universe
    into being
  • 3. The existence of an infinite number of
    universes is necessary for the existence of our
    universe.
  • These interpretations are highly philosophical,
    and arguments can be made for and against each.
    However, it still remains that the only true
    assumption we can make about our universe is that
    we exist in a universe that allows for our
    existence.

11
The Battle Between Teleology and Modern Science
  • As science has progressed throughout human
    history, it has been the tendency of scientists
    to renounce teleological ideals in place of more
    easily understood and established explanations.
  • Example Biologists use the argument of Darwins
    natural selection as a means to explain
    evolution, which it does accurately and also
    biology can explain the numerous processes which
    grant us life. Even so, biologists can explain
    how we work but not why. Every cell in an
    organism has a purpose which serves the tissue
    that contains it, and the same can be said for
    the tissue to the organ, and the organ to the
    bodily system, and the system to the entire
    organism. It would be absurd to believe this
    chain of purpose simply ends with the entire
    body, but without teleological principles we are
    but groups of atoms running around wasting
    energy. If there were no purpose to a life, then
    why has it been created?

12
The Weak Anthropic Principle in Physics and
Astrophysics
  • It is now known that the properties of the
    natural world and its elementary components which
    determine the size and structure of almost all
    its composite objects. (The size of bodies such
    as stars, planets, and even people are neither
    random nor the result of a selection process)
  • The various sizes of observed bodies in our
    universe is instead determined from the strengths
    of the various forces that exist in nature, as we
    have seen from the Constants of Nature and the
    SAP.

13
Atoms and Molecules
  • The properties of all atomic and molecular
    systems are controlled by only two dimensionless
    physical parameters. The finite structure
    constant and the electron-proton mass ratio.
  • This ratio is determined from exact calculations
    using laws of quantum theory.
  • Quantum theory predicts that electrons can only
    exist in certain orbits, and (all objects) posses
    both wave-like and particle properties.
  • It is from quantum theory that the size and shape
    of all atoms and molecules, and thus everything
    larger, is determined and also it is from this
    necessity of quantum theory that the Anthropic
    Principle comes into play (Quantum theory is
    necessary in order for atoms to be as we observe
    them to be).

14
Nuclear Forces
  • Unlike the electromagnetic interaction needed to
    understand the structure of atoms, the strong
    nuclear force has a finite range, and is
    repulsive at a very short range.
  • The internal structure of nucleons is highly
    complex, but for the purposes of this discussion
    we need only consider the relative strength of
    the strong nuclear force.
  • For the nucleus of an atom, consisting of protons
    and or neutrons, if the strong force were not
    exactly the strength it is, the stability of all
    the elements crucial to life would be affected.
  • The dimensionless magnitude of the strong nuclear
    force could not be anything other than what we
    observe, else we could not exist thus
    strengthening the strong anthropic principle even
    further.

15
Other Players
  • The strong nuclear force, along with gravity,
    leads to the formation of stars and their
    interactions which grant us energy from their
    atoms and thus our lives.
  • Once at the size of a star (and its orbiting
    bodies), the size of larger structures in the
    universe are primarily determined by the force of
    gravity, due to the microscopic range of the
    other forces discussed.
  • Gravity pulls stars into star clusters, and those
    star clusters into galaxies, and galaxies into
    galaxy clusters, and those into what we see when
    we gaze through the Hubble telescope.

16
The little big story
  • We have seen how the constants of nature
    determine whether or not life is possible, and
    thus how observers and what they observe are
    forever linked.
  • From observation, it was learned that Newtons
    Laws of Motion were a good approximation but not
    totally accurate, and Einsteins theory of
    relativity correctly predicted the motions of
    particles. However, Einsteins general theory of
    relativity also predicted that the Universes
    history began with a Big Bang, and that the
    universe is in a continual dynamic state.
  • Relativity gave birth to the Big Bang Theory,
    which along with the previous topics has proven
    to give us an apparently accurate description of
    the history of the Universe.
  • Quite simply, the Big Bang is another part of the
    grand story of our evolution, and following with
    the SAP, we would not be here without it. It
    accurately predicts many (if not all) of the
    constants of nature we have come to observe.

17
Quantum Mechanics and the Anthropic Principle
  • In classical physics, Man seemed to be entirely
    independent of his observations. It was not
    until the advent of quantum mechanics that our
    role in the cosmos appears to be of the utmost
    importance.
  • From Heisenbergs uncertainty principle, the
    importance of the observer comes into play. Due
    to the properties involved in observation itself,
    an atomic particles position and momentum can
    not both be known with absolute precision, but
    rather the probabilities of position and momentum
    within a certain range.
  • From the complex workings of quantum mechanics,
    it has become known that many physical properties
    of atomic particles DID NOT EXIST prior to the
    act of their observation. In essence, their
    observation was necessary to bring these
    properties into existence. From these mind
    boggling aspects of q.m., the importance of the
    observer in the universe can begin to unfold,
    which leads us back to the anthropic principle.
    Would the universe exist if there were no
    observers to observe it?

18
The End of the Beginning
  • It would now seem that (at least) our Universe
    was designed with observers in mind.
    Everything that has ever been observed has been
    observed because it is the nature of the Universe
    to be observed.
  • What then, is the fate of the Universe?

19
The Fate of the Universe
  • As the end of the Universe is yet to be
    observed, it can only be speculated what is in
    store for not only us, but everything.
  • As observers evolve and survive, their knowledge
    grows. One very likely possibility is that we
    (observers) are here to survive, and at some
    point in time in order for life to survive, the
    Universe must also survive. If we as observers
    gain the knowledge to sustain that which keeps us
    alive, then theoretically the Universe could
    exist an infinite amount of time, granting us
    infinite knowledge.
  • The point of infinite knowledge is also known as
    the Omega Point. Upon reaching the Omega Point,
    infinite knowledge gives observers control over
    all of time, matter, and space, and every
    possibility that has ever been or ever will be.
    We would in fact be God.
  • Perhaps this is not the observers fate nor the
    fate of the Universe. However, the Anthropic
    Principles have given us at least a glimpse of
    the true nature of the universe and its
    observers, and only through observation can we
    survive to gain the knowledge of how to survive
    longer. Perhaps someday we will know the true
    fate of the Universe, and until then theres
    nothing we can do but observe.

20
THE END
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