ThazzarBaal
Registered Senior Member
Sounds a lot like the big bang theory without the possible intelligent design addition.
"Chaos Theory" (from the "scientific scriptures") ....Definition
A quantum creationist is a believer in quantum creationism. Quantum creationism is any happenstance or intentional creation event where a highly ordered physical reality spontaneously materializes out of nothingness.
Theorem 1
This definition is well-defined.
Proof:
Keyword: "arbitrary choice of starting point", i.e "no intent required".What is the chaos theory equation?
The equation x(n+1)=3.95[x(n)][1-x(n)] is chaotic because it is deterministic, as can be seen by the multiplication of the previous term in the equation. The equation begins by an arbitrary choice of a starting point. The table shows the equation with three different starting values: 0.892, 0.893, and 0.894.
https://mathmusic.pages.roanoke.edu/chaos-theory/#
The main difference between chaos and randomness is the deterministic factor of chaos. This means that the system has order even if it is difficult to see. Chaotic systems are recursive meaning that each data point was found by using the point value before it. These connections are rarely obvious and that is why people assume that these points were created from randomness (Liebovitch 118).
Chaotic equations are interesting because they are sporadic, and they are greatly affected by seemingly minute differences. Some of these small changes happen when different values are used as the first value of a function, also called initial conditions.
Initial conditions are a large part of this because one of the definitions of chaos is that, “if a system is rerun with almost the same starting conditions, the values of the variables measured at the same time of the two runs separate from each other exponentially fast as a function of time” (Liebovitch 168).
https://mathmusic.pages.roanoke.edu/chaos-theory/#This explains why when initial conditions are off by small amounts, the end result is different from the original by a noticeable amount. Many chaotic equations are shown side by side with other cases that have nearly identical initial conditions, because this shows the extent of the chaos. The most famous chaotic idea is the butterfly effect which states that if a butterfly flaps its wings on one side of the world it will affect if a tornado occurs or not somewhere else in the world (Chaos 2019). The butterfly flapping its wings is the initial condition and the tornado or lack thereof is the exponentially different result that can occur from this scenario. Thus that one small difference of the butterfly’s wings changed the recursive relationship of the Earth’s climate to create a tornado or not.
Don't forget MICROTUBULES!
From what to what? IT's easy to throw insult out, but it is a little harder to support the ad hominem with facts.Another thread hijack…….
1) Chaos theory has nothing to do with speculations about the start of the universe.From what to what? IT's easy to throw insult out, but it is a little harder to support the ad hominem with facts.
If that sentence confuses you, it is not in the message enfolded in the delivery, but your inability (or refusal) to give it some thought and unpack it before you kick the stool with a knee-jerk inanity.
Are you making the argument that the universe started in an orderly "designed" manner and not as the result of a spontaneous probabilistic event?1) Chaos theory has nothing to do with speculations about the start of the universe.
Then, pray tell, what are quanta if not expressions of interactive "values". To space-time, quanta are potential values that may become expressed in reality as matter.2) quanta are not “probablistic value potentials”.
Does space-time permit dynamic interactions?2) a “permittive dynamic fabric” is not a “condition”.
Do you think that the "beginning " was different for you than it was for me?In physics, spacetime is a mathematical model that combines the three dimensions of space and one dimension of time into a single four-dimensional manifold. Spacetime diagrams can be used to visualize relativistic effects, such as why different observers perceive differently where and when events occur.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spacetime
No, you refuse to give thought to a different perspective of the same thing.You are, as usual, trying to wrench this thread round to your personal religion.
My mom.What then caused the gradual ordering of spacetime into dynamic regular and irregular causal patterns?
I agree, I do not believe in "irreducible complexity", but occasionally probabilistic mutations spawn new configurations that allow for new survival techniques. I see that as Quantum Creationism. And evidence can be found wherever you look. And it has nothing to do with religion.Were this to be so, it follows that things far, far simpler than an entire universe should pop into existence far, far more often.
Voted best comeback. 5 stars.My mom.
There is no reason to call a mutation a 'probabilistic mutation', it adds nothing.but occasionally probabilistic mutations spawn new configurations that allow for new survival techniques. I see that as Quantum Creationism.
A moment’s googling will tell you the entropy of the very early universe was extremely low. This implies a high, not a low, state of order. So no, “chaos”, whatever you mean by that rather biblical choice of term, is an extremely poor description of it.Are you making the argument that the universe started in an orderly "designed" manner and not as the result of a spontaneous probabilistic event?
Then, pray tell, what are quanta if not expressions of interactive "values". To space-time, quanta are potential values that may become expressed in reality as matter.
Does space-time permit dynamic interactions?
Does that suggest that space=time IS by definition a permittive condition?
Do you think that the "beginning " was different for you than it was for me?
No, you refuse to give thought to a different perspective of the same thing.
Chaos was not an "initial condition" of space-time? What then caused the gradual ordering of spacetime into dynamic regular and irregular causal patterns?
Motive? " Intent"?
Chaos, as you have already quoted, refers to the nature of a system.Are you making the argument that the universe started in an orderly "designed" manner and not as the result of a spontaneous probabilistic event?
Quanta, in physics, are the smallest parts of a physical entity that are involved in an interaction.Then, pray tell, what are quanta if not expressions of interactive "values". To space-time, quanta are potential values that may become expressed in reality as matter.
I think you are confusing "permittive" with either "permissive" or "permitted".Does space-time permit dynamic interactions?
Does that suggest that space=time IS by definition a permittive condition?
Maybe you want to argue this line when you're actually addressing Quantum Creationism yourself?No, you refuse to give thought to a different perspective of the same thing.
Chaos doesn't cause anything, which is the implication of your second question after the first.Chaos was not an "initial condition" of space-time? What then caused the gradual ordering of spacetime into dynamic regular and irregular causal patterns?
Not sure that the latter is quite correct - i.e. I'm not sure that the suggestion is that you can control it. At least not according to this site. Well, at least not from a science point of view. It does seem to wander into the idea that you create your own destiny, and seems pseudoscience at best. But this may not be what "Quantum Creationism" is. It's not as defined in the OP, for example.Quantum Creationism, however, is the idea that we create reality through observation.
It is linked to quantum mechanics through the Copenhagen interpretation, as I understand QC, and is given a new-age spin by trying to suggest that you can be in control of what is created.
W4U said: Chaos was not an "initial condition" of space-time? What then caused the gradual ordering of spacetime into dynamic regular and irregular causal patterns?
Yes, I don't think my statement lends itself to your interpretation. The statement was in reference to the probabilistic self-ordering of chaotic systems (see chaos theory). Entropy is a result, not a cause.Chaos doesn't cause anything, which is the implication of your second question after the first.
Chaos is surely a description of the system, not itself a cause.
A new Northwestern study, combined with an early-universe model, shows that the universe was born inherently chaotic.
EVANSTON, Ill. --- Seven years ago Northwestern University physicist Adilson E. Motter conjectured that the expansion of the universe at the time of the big bang was highly chaotic. Now he and a colleague have proven it using rigorous mathematical arguments.
The study, published by the journal Communications in Mathematical Physics, reports not only that chaos is absolute but also the mathematical tools that can be used to detect it. When applied to the most accepted model for the evolution of the universe, these tools demonstrate that the early universe was chaotic.
more..... https://www.northwestern.edu/newscenter/stories/2010/09/universe-chaotic-from-beginning.html#Certain things are absolute. The speed of light, for example, is the same with respect to any observer in the empty space. Others are relative. Think of the pitch of a siren on an ambulance, which goes from high to low as it passes the observer. A longstanding problem in physics has been to determine whether chaos -- the phenomenon by which tiny events lead to very large changes in the time evolution of a system, such as the universe -- is absolute or relative in systems governed by general relativity, where the time itself is relative.
On the contrary, it is you who is arguing "entropy", not Quantum Creationism.Maybe you want to argue this line when you're actually addressing Quantum Creationism yourself?
You don't seem to be.
Q: Can we infer the Big Bang from the law of entropy? In a past-oriented timeline, entropy should decrease until a point of minimum entropy (the singularity).
A: No. The Big Bang is about the expansion of space. Nothing about entropy says anything about space one way or the other.
The second law of thermodynamics does imply that entropy was lower in the past, but there’s really no such thing as “minimum entropy”. You could say there is one at absolute zero, but the Big Bang certainly wasn’t that.
You could say that there is one if everything is at a point, but that’s not really the Big Bang, either; that’s a singularity to which thermodynamic laws don’t apply. The actual amount of entropy in the universe actually changes as the universe creates more space and more energy.
more… https://www.quora.com/Does-the-entr...crease-decrease-or-remain-the-same-over-time#So yes, we knew that the universe must have had a more ordered past, but you can’t derive any of the specifics of the Big Bang from that.
Quantum Creationism -- Is It Science Or Is It Religion?
IMO there is something that is sufficient in and of itself, not as a causal force, but more as a "guiding equation" in a dynamic fractal environment.Whereas this sounds more like a [proposed] ideological subcomponent of a potential religion, than something that would in and of itself be sufficient for accomplishing all that.
Not sure that the latter is quite correct - i.e. I'm not sure that the suggestion is that you can control it. At least not according to this site. Well, at least not from a science point of view. It does seem to wander into the idea that you create your own destiny, and seems pseudoscience at best. But this may not be what "Quantum Creationism" is. It's not as defined in the OP, for example.
"differential equations" are important! They are a sign of creative "guiding principles".The Penrose interpretation is a speculation by Roger Penrose about the relationship between quantum mechanics and general relativity. Penrose proposes that a quantum state remains in superposition until the difference of space-time curvature attains a significant level.[1][2][3]
more .... huhhh...Penrose's idea is inspired by quantum gravity, because it uses both the physical constants ℏand �
. It is an alternative to the Copenhagen interpretation, which posits that superposition fails when an observation is made (but that it is non-objective in nature), and the many-worlds interpretation, which states that alternative outcomes of a superposition are equally "real", while their mutual decoherence precludes subsequent observable interactions.
Chaos Theory is a biblical paper?A moment’s googling will tell you the entropy of the very early universe was extremely low. This implies a high, not a low, state of order. So no, “chaos”, whatever you mean by that rather biblical choice of term, is an extremely poor description of it.
I have no idea what you mean by a “permittive condition”. Permittivity to me is the degree to which an electric field is transmitted in a medium.
Indeed, and what are the implications of a "permittive condition"?Permittivity, however, is to do with electrical energy, and electric fields, as explained by exchemist.
Electromagnetic (EM) waves are changing electric and magnetic fields, transporting energy and momentum through space. EM waves are solutions of Maxwell's equations, which are the fundamental equations of electrodynamics. EM waves require no medium, they can travel through empty space. Sinusoidal plane waves are one type of electromagnetic waves. Not all EM waves are sinusoidal plane waves, but all electromagnetic waves can be viewed as a linear superposition of sinusoidal plane waves traveling in arbitrary directions.
Quanta ...... busy creating stuff!Electromagnetic waves transport energy and momentum across space. The energy and momentum transported by an electromagnetic wave are not continuously distributed over the wave front. Energy and momentum are transported by photons in discrete packages. Photons are the particles of light. http://electron9.phys.utk.edu/optics421/modules/m1/emwaves.htm#:~:text