• ESA's Planck telescope yields evidence of universes beyond our own
    155 replies, posted
[QUOTE=CommanderPT;40770294]We are so fucking small. I'm scared now.[/QUOTE] Its not the size of the boat, its the motion of the ocean.
[QUOTE=Doom64hunter;40770065]Different laws of physics? What, why? Where does it mention that? Where would they even get this from? Wouldn't even make sense if the only evidence supporting this theory is our own laws of physics anyways. And I don't really understand how this implicates infinite universes. Just because we found another one doesn't mean that there's an infinite number of them. And this also doesn't state "alternate universes", or the fact that the same events slightly changed would be happening at the same time on other universes as on ours. And using "infinity" as a number in equations works about as well as dividing by zero.[/QUOTE] that's why I didn't quote any sources, and tried to convey a sense of sarcasm in what I typed. Purely conjecture. Don't take everything so literally, or seriously.
[QUOTE=Eltro102;40769631]maybe quantum happens because someone forgot to turn on universe anti-aliasing[/QUOTE] I always picture some guy going over to his friends house saying "You think your universe is good? Mine new one has a ∞ by ∞ quantum leap resolution and I can hook up my Atari to it!"
[QUOTE=JohnnyMo1;40734173]I can't say for sure, but people seem to think infinite immediately implies anything that can happen will and that's not true.[/QUOTE] I think that the Many Worlds interpretation came into people's minds
[QUOTE=Doom64hunter;40770065]Different laws of physics? What, why? Where does it mention that? Where would they even get this from? Wouldn't even make sense if the only evidence supporting this theory is our own laws of physics anyways. And I don't really understand how this implicates infinite universes. Just because we found another one doesn't mean that there's an infinite number of them. And this also doesn't state "alternate universes", or the fact that the same events slightly changed would be happening at the same time on other universes as on ours. And using "infinity" as a number in equations works about as well as dividing by zero.[/QUOTE] because if more than 1 universe exists then there would be nothing to limit the number of multiverses, like if life can exist on mars as well as earth then there is nothing to suggest that life cannot exist of Kepler 49(b) as well
Just throwing this out there: but this isn't in any way proof of more universes. It's simply an anomaly that we don't yet understand. For all we know it might be some new material or force.
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