Let's say we somehow find the temperatures and dT/dts, velocities and dv/dts, etc. of the stars, galaxies, planets, and general bodies of matter as well as electromagnetic forces in our universe and use that to trace back to the point of origin (the big bang or what have you). Let's say we've deduced the velocities, thermal, gravitational and electrical properties of all matter instantaneously after the universe's creation. Now I'm not saying this is possible or that we'll likely ever have the technology or computational power to do so, but let's just say that we've somehow done this, for every atom in the universe. If you were to use all the relevant math and physics to predict and follow the movement and interaction of every atom, physical, electrical, and gravitational from that point on, is it theoretically possible to predict the future of course of matter? And thus the future of all things, including this Earth and you and I?This seems plausible to me, until the origin of life and decision-making, where free will, present or not, would seem to throw a wrench into things. What do you think?
4/17/2008 2:10:46 AM
Well, if we knew everything about everything, we could probably predict anything.:E
4/17/2008 2:11:55 AM
can i buy some pot from you?
4/17/2008 2:13:51 AM
hahahai don't smoke pot
4/17/2008 2:16:13 AM
Dude, my mind is now officially blown!
4/17/2008 2:19:09 AM
I guess as long as you weren't considering any more unpredicted forces acting upon any atom in the universe, you could perhaps say this would be the case. However I feel like, within this thought experiment, that any action of a sentient, decision making being that causes a force to act upon the considered matter would change this calculated course of action, and since the actions of sentient beings cannot be predicted, then everything would go to shit. Know what I mean? Unpredictable forces would have to be nonexistent.[Edited on April 17, 2008 at 2:20 AM. Reason : thing]
4/17/2008 2:20:10 AM
haha i didn't think you did, i was just sayin
4/17/2008 2:21:14 AM
Short answer: Yes
4/17/2008 2:22:40 AM
Frosted Butts.
4/17/2008 2:23:55 AM
Long answer: Frosted Butts.
4/17/2008 2:24:12 AM
4/17/2008 2:30:25 AM
4/17/2008 2:33:50 AM
http://www.multivax.com/last_question.htmlThis isn't completely on topic, but I think you might find it interesting nonetheless. It was supposedly written by Isaav Asimov.
4/17/2008 2:41:20 AM
free will throws a wrench in it
4/17/2008 2:57:27 AM
^thats why I take one for the team & just do as I'm toldbeing a mindless drone ftw?
4/17/2008 3:03:08 AM
I would argue yes.... I think the stats argument is irrelivant you KNOW any individual outcome... so... you'd know any other outcome.Free will is a tough arguement and I don't know enough about the human mind to argue intelligently about that.:heart:~Wizz
4/17/2008 3:05:13 AM
4/17/2008 3:08:00 AM
4/17/2008 3:09:41 AM
^^ That's what I got out of it. But basically it was saying that the universe is so infinite and vast that even the most sophisticated computer we can imagine is incapable of processing all of the data.
4/17/2008 3:15:05 AM
i think you'll have to use something better than maple to solve it
4/17/2008 3:21:18 AM
But Maple is all powerful. That's what they taught me in calc 1-3 anyway.
4/17/2008 3:23:58 AM
LOLQuotes in Chit Chat.paerabol has won a life of existential wandering. Congrats!For the topic, yes. For proof:http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/news/2008/04/mind_decisionWe are itty bitty robot primate-hive creatures that are every bit as predictable as the ants we study. Only if, as observed, all the available facts, science and data are in.
4/17/2008 3:24:29 AM
^ You're wrong, and your interpretation of that study as it applies to this thread is flawed.
4/17/2008 3:30:06 AM
wacka wacka wackai can assert things
4/17/2008 3:30:57 AM
Yes, that much is already clear.
4/17/2008 3:35:29 AM
4/17/2008 4:02:53 AM
Within the parameters of this thought experiment and removing, for a moment, such possibilities as an extant deity and the probabilistic nature of atomic properties (which I won't pretend to know enough about, or concede that we "know" anything about it at all at the moment), then yes, you could predict everything, and no, there is no free will, for us or anybody else.Ultimately human beings are just piles of matter. We're not even exceptionally elaborate piles of matter. All of your decisions are the result of chemical and electrical signals that operate according to the same rules that govern all such interactions. They are not spontaneous. You do not in any meaningful sense control them.
4/17/2008 4:51:15 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laplace's_demon
4/17/2008 4:56:52 AM
I'm no physicist, but here's my 2 centsWith quantum mechanics these days, it seems like you can't predict anything with a certainty. When you get down to atoms, we can't even tell where the electrons actually are. We just know where they might be 90% of the time.Then there's the fact that observing something changes it. You can't accurately know a particle's position and velocity at the same time, because observing one changes the other. ^ good link. the "we could know everything" idea is based on Newtonian physics. Now that we know about irreversability and quantum mechanics, it's not looking so simple. ]
4/17/2008 10:11:36 AM
If we could observe the entire universe without changing the states of any particle, then yes. We would have to have every possible piece of relevant data within the known universe. Then you could predict anything.The only problem with that though, is that even if we had a computer where the smallest form of data was represented by the smallest known particle, we would need one of those particles for every single one we wanted to monitor. In effect, the computer that it would take to calculate the entire universe like that would be, another universe of exact dimensions of our own. We would need a parallel universe that we could control in order to predict our own. And if we had that, why the hell wouldn't we just make a universe have whatever we wanted in the first place.
4/17/2008 10:25:40 AM
paerabol, do you ever watch "the universe" on discovery? they usually have some pretty good explanations/theories. also there's a book i finished reading not too long ago, i don't remember the title off the top of my head right now...but i can look at it when i go home for lunch...that explained a lot of that kind of stuff.on a related note, this book is pretty good too
4/17/2008 10:36:38 AM
^ A Brief History of Time? plus paerabol is an NE, don't they teach you guys about atoms & shit? you probably know more about it than us.
4/17/2008 10:43:08 AM
i think you'd have np predicting star positions and orbit changes but i don't think you'd ever be able to predict if the Cubs are gonna win 30 yrs from now, of whether Katie will wear green on a certain day.if you were able to perform time travel you would need to account for spacial drift or whatever so you didn't end up time warping into empty space.
4/17/2008 10:44:01 AM
4/17/2008 10:45:55 AM
4/17/2008 11:59:18 AM
choas/mr. murphey have their placelike that part in jurrasic park when dude was explaining why the water drop went a different way every time
4/17/2008 12:29:25 PM
as I understand it, we can't perfectly predict the interactions of more than TWO bodies, because when you've got more than two you have to decide what order to do the sums init is possible for God, but practically it is impossible even in theory
4/17/2008 12:36:56 PM
dem some nice jumblees
4/17/2008 1:02:49 PM
4/17/2008 1:55:28 PM
fucki forgot to look at the book title. i will make a note to check it when i get home from work.
4/17/2008 1:56:40 PM
you're forgetting quantum fluctuation's, thusly this is not possible, ever
4/17/2008 2:59:32 PM
^ hence, irreversibility. but again, let's not get too detailed with the mechanics of HOW it's done
4/17/2008 7:57:03 PM
I was about to say "yes" until free will is thrown into the equation. But then I got to this sentence ...
4/17/2008 8:08:11 PM
the book is "The Hole in the Universe: How Scientists Peered over the Edge of Emptiness and Found Everything" by K.C. Colehttp://tinyurl.com/3s8u7k[Edited on April 17, 2008 at 10:30 PM. Reason : tiny]
4/17/2008 10:30:11 PM
Edward Lorenz said something along the lines of: we should believe in free will. If we are right we are right, if we are wrong we had no choice.
4/18/2008 1:18:19 AM
^^ hahaha I have that book. Bought it years ago and still haven't read it. ^ I like that.
4/18/2008 1:20:21 AM
you should read it. it's a pretty good read, as far as books about astrophysics and whatnot go. the author is pretty entertaining (without being corny or stupid) compared to others in the same genre.
4/18/2008 9:04:06 AM