We
have long been socially conditioned to accept as gospel
truth any statements that scientists keep making again and again. We
should not be following such a thought habit, because some of the
assertions that scientists keep repeating over and over again are
little more than speech customs of a particular belief community, rather
than things that have been established by observations or
experiments.
One
claim that scientists keep repeating with great confidence is a claim
about the age of the universe. We are told repeatedly that the
universe is 13 billion years old. But there are reasons why such claims cannot be made with very
much confidence.
Claims
about the age of the universe are based on the Big Bang theory. But
that theory has not been conclusively proven. One problem is that we
can never observe the Big Bang, nor can we even observe the universe
at any state within 300,000 years after the Big Bang. Our
cosmologists tell us that for its first 300,000 years, the universe
was so dense that all light photons were scattered and shuffled every
minute. Only when this scattering of light photons ended, at a time
called the recombination era, was it possible for light photons to
start traveling without being hopelessly scattered. We are told that
because of this scattering, it will always be physically impossible
to observe what was happening during the first 300,000 years of the
universe's history. But this means we can never have the direct
observation of the Big Bang (or even very dense universe conditions)
that we would need to have in order to be completely confident that
the Big Bang theory is correct.
Philosophers
of science refer to the underdetermination of
theory by data. When data does not prove that a theory is
true, and does not rule out possible rival theories that can equally
well explain observations (called empirical equivalents), such
a theory is said to be underdetermined. There is a serious question
as to whether the Big Bang theory is doomed to be a permanently
underdetermined theory, because of the impossibility of directly
observing the first 300,000 years of the universe's history.
There
are purely scientific reasons why we cannot be certain about scientist claims
that the universe is billions of years old and claims that our planet is billions of years old. The chains of reasoning used to reach such claims are complex, and involve some not-quite-certain assumptions. Claims that the universe is billions of years old depend on assumptions that the expansion rate of the universe has not changed very much over billions of years. Claims that the earth is billions of years old depend on claims that the decay rates of certain radioisotopes (used to date old rocks) have not changed very much over billions of years. We are not sure that such assumptions are true.
What is very interesting is that such chains of reasoning depend crucially on a "assume that the physical rates have not changed" principle, but such a principle is not at all consistently followed by modern cosmologists, the scientists who study the universe as a whole. Most modern cosmologists seem to believe in a cosmic inflation theory which tells us that the expansion rate of the universe has undergone the most drastic change, changing from an exponential rate at the beginning to a enormously lower linear rate after the universe's first instants. So while the whole chain of reasoning used to establish a universe age of billions of years depends crucially on a "assume the physical rates have not changed" principle, such a principle is violated in the most spectacular manner by cosmologists, who postulate pretty much the most dramatic change imaginable in the universe's expansion rate. If the universe's expansion rate changed so dramatically near the time of the Big Bang, why should we have any confidence that there have not been other changes in that rate, and in other physical rates such as radioactive decay rates? If either thing has occurred, we can have little confidence in current estimates of the age of the universe and the age of the Earth.
There is another reason why we do not know for sure the age of our universe. One is that if the universe was deliberately created, then we absolutely cannot tell whether it is actually billions of years old or even older than a million years. Our universe could have been created much more recently -- in fact, at any arbitrary point in the past.
What is very interesting is that such chains of reasoning depend crucially on a "assume that the physical rates have not changed" principle, but such a principle is not at all consistently followed by modern cosmologists, the scientists who study the universe as a whole. Most modern cosmologists seem to believe in a cosmic inflation theory which tells us that the expansion rate of the universe has undergone the most drastic change, changing from an exponential rate at the beginning to a enormously lower linear rate after the universe's first instants. So while the whole chain of reasoning used to establish a universe age of billions of years depends crucially on a "assume the physical rates have not changed" principle, such a principle is violated in the most spectacular manner by cosmologists, who postulate pretty much the most dramatic change imaginable in the universe's expansion rate. If the universe's expansion rate changed so dramatically near the time of the Big Bang, why should we have any confidence that there have not been other changes in that rate, and in other physical rates such as radioactive decay rates? If either thing has occurred, we can have little confidence in current estimates of the age of the universe and the age of the Earth.
There is another reason why we do not know for sure the age of our universe. One is that if the universe was deliberately created, then we absolutely cannot tell whether it is actually billions of years old or even older than a million years. Our universe could have been created much more recently -- in fact, at any arbitrary point in the past.
There
is a line of reasoning that could be used to support belief in a
universe 13 billion years old, regardless of whether it was divinely created.
The argument would go something like this:
- The universe appears to be 13 billion years old, based on factors such as the Big Bang theory, the expansion rate of galaxies, and so forth.
- A universe creator would not be a deceiver creating a universe younger than it appears to be.
- So even if the universe was created, we should still believe it is about 13 billion years old.
This
argument is not particularly compelling. It seems quite possible
that a universe might be created that is younger than it might appear
to be under certain calculations. I can give an example helping to
support this idea.
Let
us imagine a very simple creation scenario. Imagine a deity creates
a very simple one-planet universe. The planet has nice grass, very
tall trees, mountains and oceans. There is a sun in the sky that
provides light. When people on this planet look up at the sky, they
see a lovely star-filled sky, with some beautiful astronomical
sights. The planet has various types of stones and rocks, including
lots of attractive marble rocks. The deity creates a race of people
to live on the planet.
Now,
most of us would agree that there would be nothing deceptive about
such an act of creation. But it could be argued that creating such a
planet would be a big act of deception. You could reason that the
people on the newly created planet would see the tall trees, and
reason that very tall trees take more than fifty years to grow, and the
planet must therefore be older than fifty years. You could reason that
the people on the planet would reason that marble takes thousands of
years to form, and that the planet must be at least thousands of
years old. You could argue that the people on the planet would reason
that a newly formed planet takes ages to cool, and that a sun forming
from gravitational attraction of dust and gas takes ages to develop into a
bright shiny star; and that they would therefore conclude that the
planet was millions of years old. You could reason that these people
on the planet would reason that the distant starlight would take
thousands of years to reach the planet, and that their
planet must be thousands of years old. Finally you could argue that
on these grounds it would be a great act of deception for a deity to
create such a world, because it would wrongly give the people on the planet
the idea that their planet was old, when it was instead very young.
If
we followed such reasoning to its reductio ad absurdum, we
might conclude that any honest deity would only create an environment
in which every newly created thing looked like it was newly created –
and that the entirely newly created planet would therefore be made of
gleaming plastic and shiny stainless steel.
But
there seems something very wrong with this whole line of reasoning.
It does not actually seem to be a real moral principle that honest
minds never create things that look much older than they are. For
example, you might study the techniques of the French Impressionists,
and create some paintings in their style. If you hung such paintings
in your home, someone might think that they are very old paintings
dating from the time of Renoir and Monet. But you have not done
anything dishonest by creating these paintings. Or, you might
have a new house built in the Colonial style popular at America's birth, but you are not some
deceiver because many might think the house is older than it is.
We
really don't have any sound basis for concluding that a created
universe would be as old as it appears to be according to certain
lines of scientific reasoning. If our universe was created, it could
be 13 billion years old, one billion years old, 10 million years
old, or only 1,000 years old. A universe could be created in any
state of complexity or any state of motion. A freshly created
universe might either have some “spanking new” look, or it might
appear to be something much older. The fact that we may find fossils
that we can radioactively date to millions of years ago does not
necessarily mean that corresponding organisms lived millions
of years ago. Such items might be kind of just part of interesting
details added to a universe created much more recently.
For some reason we have the idea that if a deity were to create a universe, the universe would always be created in a simple state -- maybe something like the simplicity of the Big Bang, or the relative simplicity of a Garden of Eden. But an omnipotent deity could create a universe that started out in a state of the utmost complexity, such as a state that included minds packed with memories, books packed with words, and freeways packed with moving cars. Let us consider the complex state of the universe at 3:00 PM EST on June 1, 1950. Given the existence of a deity of vast power, a new universe could be divinely created in exactly such a state, so that at the moment of creation newly created cars were traveling down newly created roads at 50 miles per hour, and newly created baseballs were traveling between newly created baseball pitchers and newly created baseball catchers, and newly created libraries were packed with newly created books, and so forth. Persons created in such a universe could be created with memories, so that they were convinced they had lived for a long time, even though they had just been created an instant ago.
Because of such a possibility, we cannot at all be certain of how old the human species is. Mankind could be 40,000 years old, or 10,000 years old, or 1000 years old, or only 100 years old. For example, the universe could have started out in the state that it was in on the instant of 12:00 AM EST on January 1, 2019. Such a creation could have included a very complex planet Earth packed with living things, buildings, technology, moving cars, flying planes and humans with minds already filled with memories.
The possibility that the human race is much younger than we think is a very interesting possibility relevant to discussions of whether a deity might have permitted the amount of suffering that seems to have occurred on our planet. History books tell us of enormous human suffering that occurred between 3000 B.C and 2000 AD, but philosophically we cannot be sure that all of this suffering actually did occur. As I just mentioned, the universe could have been divinely created so that its first moment was a state of very high complexity and order, such as the state the universe was in at 3:00 PM EST on June 1, 1950.
The possibility that the human race is much younger than we think is a very interesting possibility relevant to discussions of whether a deity might have permitted the amount of suffering that seems to have occurred on our planet. History books tell us of enormous human suffering that occurred between 3000 B.C and 2000 AD, but philosophically we cannot be sure that all of this suffering actually did occur. As I just mentioned, the universe could have been divinely created so that its first moment was a state of very high complexity and order, such as the state the universe was in at 3:00 PM EST on June 1, 1950.
When
we consider the philosophical possibility called idealism, we
discover another reason why we cannot be sure about how old the
universe is. Idealism is the possibility that nothing exists other
than minds. Under this philosophical possibility, things such as
stars and planets only exist to the extent that they are observed by
minds. To really understand the theory, it helps to read a classic
philosophical work such as George Berkeley's A Treatise Concerning
the Principles of Human Knowledge (which you can read online here).
Critics
may claim that idealism means believing that matter isn't real. But
an idealist will counter that matter is real, but that it exists
(really and substantially) not outside of minds, but only inside of
minds. Critics
may also claim that idealism requires us to believe in some external
ordering reality outside of our minds that is causing all of us to
perceive the same things such as the moon and sun we see in the sky.
But an idealist would encounter that such a thing is no real difficulty, and that materialism requires us to
believe in something similar, since it requires us to believe in
intricate fine-tuned laws of nature that make our existence possible. There are actually a great many difficulties involved with the idea that a universe that had no minds for billions of years turned into a universe containing minds. A theory of idealism (that minds are all that exist) is one way of getting around such difficulties. It is not at all clear that a theory of idealism (that only minds exist) is less plausible or more far-fetched than conventional ideas about the relation of mind and matter.
Under
the theory of idealism, how old is the universe? Apparently only as old as the
earliest age of the first minds or mind. If idealism is true, then the age of the universe is very much uncertain. An idealist will reject the idea that he has to believe the universe has existed for 13 billion years, and will say there was never actually a time when there existed nothing but matter and no minds. The idealist will claim that all that has ever really existed is minds, and that the universe is no older than the oldest mind that existed in it.
All of these considerations lead to the conclusion that we really don't know either how old the universe is or how old mankind is. We merely have algorithms that allow us to produce calculations about the age of the universe and the age of man, but we don't know whether those algorithms are giving us the correct answer. We can put the matter succinctly by saying that if the universe was divinely created, or if everything is mental, then "all bets are off" regarding the age of the universe and the age of mankind.
My proposal is that there are two dimensions of time.
ReplyDelete1) That which is experienced
2) That which is calculated
Prior to any human experience, the age of the universe can be calculated mathematically.
Once there is human experience, a new dimension of time comes into being.
The universe came into being at the moment it was first experienced.
The universe came into being at the moment it is calculated to have begun inflating.
Taken as a whole, the universe quivers in space-time.
This quivering is what makes it dynamic, and why the future can be changed.
Of course I could be wrong.
.
This is a very interesting article, and cosmologists are extremely dogmatic about the Big Bang, without any proof. I have found a way of calculating Hubble's Constant simply from geometry. The equation is:- 2 X a mega parsec X C, divided by Pi to the power of 21 = 70.98047 K / S / mega parsec. For this equation, a parsec is the standard unit 3.26 light years. This keeps all the units correct. Interestingly, the reciprocal of Hubble's Constant in Big Bang mindset is the age of the universe, but as the equation always gives Hubble as fixed in value, so does its reciprocal, so as it's also fixed, it does not increase with passing time. In the calculated Hubble, this is 13.778 billion light years, so is not the universe age, but the Hubble Horizon Distance ONLY. This equation comes from 'The Principle of Astrogeometry' (Kindle Books). This shows the universe is governed by an 'intelligence', and not the result of a chance all by itself Big Bang! That notion becomes more ridiculous the more you analyze it. Comments are very welcome, David Hine
ReplyDeleteIf one accepts the physicalist paradigm, then one accepts an arbitrary universe. Multi-verse does not solve the problem, because then the multi-verse becomes arbitrary. If one resorts to an infinity of infinities physicalism, then one abandons cause-and-effect cosmology, and replaces it with pure randomness which is itself arbitrary, because randomness can operate only within non-random parameters (the dice must be designed and manufactured to specifications). Intelligent Design is therefore the most plausible explanation for the origin and structure of the universe.
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