Blind Luck?
By Mangone
- 2010 reads
I’ve heard that Hawking believes that gravity would be enough to create our universe.
If you look at gravity as universal love, an unconditional love that draws all material things together, then it doesn’t seem all that unlikely so long as you allow that certain extra conditions can be added over time to allow development.
However, I presume Hawking is thinking of the Big Bang model and I can’t actually see that it would work so well for that.
If gravity is going to be enough what caused and allowed the Big Bang?
I would have thought that the gravitational force generated by the condensed Universe would make it a Black Hole of the highest order that not only light or other radiation could not escape from but, indeed, that nothing could escape from.
So we would have to imagine that either there was no gravity or that whatever the Universe was composed of at that time was unaffected by gravity i.e. the Universe was weightless.
It would seem much more likely that if you want to believe in a Universe that is expanding at around the speed of light that it is not due to an explosion but rather to the limit that something can expand into nothing.
If you imagine that a powerful light was suddenly switched on in, an infinitely large, dark room then the light would spread out like a growing sphere weakening in intensity with the square of the distance it had travelled.
So, you would imagine, would an expanding Universe…
expanding because there is nothing opposing it since it is expanding into nothing. Hence there is no Black Hole because there is nothing there yet to contain it but space itself expands to fill the void.
It is difficult to know whether all the laws which physics proposes as Universal truly are - since we know such a tiny amount about the Universe and not that much more about our own Solar System.
Certainly it would seem likely that as the Universe expands the so called ‘constants’ might, like the expanding light intensity in the spreading sphere, alter with the square of the distance to the centre.
Yet, in any case we must be amazed when we consider how miraculous it was that a universe learned how to order itself. Not just that it found ways to create stronger attractions than gravity but also that it must have learned how to repel too - unless of course the Big Bang was gravity in reverse and the gravity that we know is not the whole story…
Even more miraculous was that the Universe not only formed particles but managed to find laws that would allow these particles to form families (which we name Elements) and rules that govern the amalgamation of families to form communities (molecular compounds) with an almost unlimited number of varying properties.
It reminds me of the old argument of the pocket watch (which at the time was a clockwork contrivance) as being an undeniable indication of a clock maker. Similarly, surely the presence in the Universe of such finely tuned laws is an undeniable indication of a Law Maker.
Yet how would these laws be found? Trial and error, blind luck?
Perhaps we just have a totally wrong idea of what the Universe is...
We don’t imagine that our bodies grow without a complex interaction of laws and rules.
Yet they obviously grow according to a plan - their DNA - and it is only on the rare occasions that there is a flaw in the development and a Siamese twin or perhaps a Thalidomide baby is born that we realise just how miraculous it is that the laws and rules that determine our physical bodies manage to govern such a complex process with so few mistakes.
So again how did these laws and rules develop - trial and error, blind luck?
Wouldn’t it seem more likely that luck has little to do with it?
That the Universe is not a product of blind chance - for how could it be argued that the Universe developed by survival of the fittest?
Surely, the development or evolution of all things is guided by something which we cannot understand but never the less exists...
or the laws and their interactions were predetermined.
I can’t see a need to attribute this guidance to a God, although I can’t see a need not to either, but I do argue that there must be an ‘awareness’ of what is necessary for the Universe to develop and some means for this ‘awareness’ to adjust the rules or even the local laws to facilitate this development.
I’m not arguing that this process is infallible but just as the laws and rules that govern new life tend to prevent most serious deformities most of the time I would argue that the Universal laws and rules would have a similar guardianship.
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