M-Theory

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Fist and Faith
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Post by Fist and Faith »

You're right about the reason/concept/fundamental assumption possibly changing. And I guess the reason you and I are debating is because we're championing different things. You're more concerned with the concept, and I'm more concerned with our daily lives.

It could well be that the newly discovered cause of gravity will lead to new technologies, which would probably change our lives in ways. Possibly remarkable ways!

But the aspects of gravity that we discuss in mathematical terms will not change. So when Derek Jeter bunts the ball, it won't go over the centerfield fence as we curse the 11th dimension. And since we're pretty solid on the math at this point, we'll still be able to send rockets into space. And the math that was used to invent computers and the internet will not change, so we can continue this debate for much longer than Lucimay thinks necessary. :mrgreen:
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Post by matrixman »

I've nothing much to add to this discussion, except to say that I think M-Theory is awesome (purely from a lay perspective). I truly hope it is the signpost leading to the "Theory of Everything."

I've read some excellent books on cosmology by Tim Ferris (The Whole Shebang) and Dave Falk (The Universe On A T-Shirt) that explained string theory in fairly clear terms for a general readership. I hope to further enlighten (or enrich, to use a favorite word of Loremaster's :) ) myself on the subject once I get my hands on at least one of Brian Greene's books: The Elegant Universe or The Fabric of the Cosmos. I've watched the PBS Nova special based on The Elegant Universe and hosted by Greene, and he's pretty good at it. Something as seemingly esoteric as string or M-Theory certainly benefits from having a visual medium (and all sorts of cool computer graphics!) convey its concepts. I wish we had more of these kinds of quality science shows on TV and less pseudo-science and sensationalistic crap.
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Agreed MM. If nothing else, they're certainly fascinating to watch.

Although I am concerned with the concept behind the theory, Fist, my only real point of contention is effectively that they argue from their conclusion. And because of that, it means that the theory is designed to come out at their conclusion. *shrug*

If they had the concept wrong in the first place, then the math (not the effect) must be wrong too, because it's based on "assumptions."

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Avatar wrote:Agreed MM. If nothing else, they're certainly fascinating to watch.

Although I am concerned with the concept behind the theory, Fist, my only real point of contention is effectively that they argue from their conclusion. And because of that, it means that the theory is designed to come out at their conclusion.
I wouldn't say they argue M-theory and then play with the equations. M-theory came about because of the equations.
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Now that is the part I don't get. As far as I'm concerned, they postulate first, then "prove."

The previous super-string theories weren't working out, right? Couldn't be unified.

So they started imagining all sorts of crazy things, throwing them into the mix, to see what would happen. Standing waves colliding in other realities, all sorts of stuff. Nothing balanced.

So one guy said, "how about we add another dimension?" So they did. That time, the equations seemed to balance.

They added the extra dimension, then did all the math as though it was there, and got an answer that matched their postulate.

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Post by Loredoctor »

Avatar wrote:Now that is the part I don't get. As far as I'm concerned, they postulate first, then "prove."
No. M-Theory became an extension of string theory.

And anyway, as I stated earlier in this thread, all this debate about how they came to the theory doesn't matter in the end. Remember, they are claiming it as a theory, so what they did with the equations doesn't matter. They never say 'the universe is this way because our equations show it.' The theory will be backed, or not, when the data from experiments or observational studies comes in.
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Fair enough, I certainly don't think they're claiming it is the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but, and as we've often said, the beauty of science is that if it turns out they were wrong, they just try again.

But you can't prove something before you postulate it. ;)

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Post by Loredoctor »

True, but they haven't proven anything.
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So if the math isn't proving anything, what's it doing? Describing their assumptions?

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Post by The Laughing Man »

or assuming their descriptions, like science in general, heh... :P
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Avatar wrote:So if the math isn't proving anything, what's it doing? Describing their assumptions?

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Exploring their theory.
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What's the difference? ;)

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Post by Loredoctor »

Nothing set in stone.
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But my definition doesn't require something set in stone either. On the contrary, it's as flexible as it gets. :lol:

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Avatar wrote:On the contrary, it's as flexible as it gets. :lol:

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Which is its major flaw.
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Post by Fist and Faith »

Maybe Av's reservations are caused by the fact that everything humans do can be done badly just as easily as well, and is perhaps just as frequently. All this about gravity gives examples of both.

Who in history has ever thought outside the box as brilliantly as Einstein? For crying out loud, he realized time is not the same in different situations! An utterly preposterous thought. But if true, it would explain some weird things. So he tried to work it out on the abacus. And sure enough, the math worked.

Does that prove time passes at different speeds under different circumstances? Of course not. It just proves Einstein was able to invent a theory that could hold up in the mathematical world. But is he right? Can it be proven? Here's a very short bit of reading that shows how it can be proven in a way that actually has bearing on many of our lives:
www-astronomy.mps.ohio-state.edu/~pogge/Ast162/Unit5/gps.html

OTOH... Einstein, of all people!, blew it. His calculations also told him that our universe is expanding. And somehow, the guy who could come up with the idea of relative time couldn't see past the assumption of his day that the universe was static. But gravity is an undeniable part of the universe. And if all planets and stars always remain the same distance from each other, something must be countering gravity's influence. So he figured there must be some unknown force, which he called the cosmological constant, that does the opposite of gravity. NOW the math works!! Yee Haa!! When they discovered the universe is expanding, Einstein said this was his biggest blunder. (The fact that there is reason to believe some force similar to what Einstein concocted really does exist does not change the fact that he assumed something that was untrue, and invented something so that the math would work.)

But where are we now, with this M stuff? After all this time, the math isn't able to fit gravity into the theory that unifies the nuclear forces and electromagnetism.
Avatar wrote:Now that is the part I don't get. As far as I'm concerned, they postulate first, then "prove."

The previous super-string theories weren't working out, right? Couldn't be unified.

So they started imagining all sorts of crazy things, throwing them into the mix, to see what would happen. Standing waves colliding in other realities, all sorts of stuff. Nothing balanced.

So one guy said, "how about we add another dimension?" So they did. That time, the equations seemed to balance.

They added the extra dimension, then did all the math as though it was there, and got an answer that matched their postulate.
You're not appreciating what they have been doing all along. Yes, they "imagined all sorts of crazy things." But you said it yourself: nothing balanced. The math would not support them. So, one by one, those things were thrown out. There is no question that gravity exists, and there isn't any reason to suspect that we can't understand its relationship with the rest of the universe much more deeply than we currently do. So let's try different ideas, and see if any of them hold. A? No. B? No. C? No. But do any of these things fail in a way that helps us learn? That suggests anything? Did somebody really come up with an 11th dimension entirely out of left field??? If there was no hint of such an outlandish idea, how long would it be before somebody came up with the idea out of nowhere? We'd probably get Shakespeare out of those monkeys sooner.

And if the math holds, is that the end of it? Certainly not.
Avatar wrote:If the experience comes first, math is nothing more than an explanation of the way we think it works. It's "made up" / formulated/whatever to account for the observable and testable phenomenon, based on our perception it. The math is not the phenomenon.
It's one thing to see certain phenomena, and come up with math that will initially support the crazy notion that matter is not infinitely divisible, but made up of atoms, which, in turn, are made up of protons, neutrons, and electrons. It's another thing to see the implications of that math, and invent things like atomic bombs. As with relativity and navigational satellites, the math does more than merely explain what we do see; it also tells us what we should be able to see - and do. If these shoulds don't pan out, we know the math was just a pretty picture derived from a false premise. Time to find another premise, and see if its shoulds work.
Last edited by Fist and Faith on Sun Mar 12, 2006 11:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by matrixman »

Bravo, Fist! (And bravo, Einstein! Can I call him Al?) Yeah, someone else said that no single person peered more deeply into the structure of the universe than Einstein.

Thanks for the informative article on GPS navigation. :)
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Post by Fist and Faith »

Oh, you's doesn't have to call him Al. You can call him Ein. Or you can call him Stein. Or you can call him...

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you can call me Ray, you can call me Jay...... :R
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Fist wrote:OTOH... Einstein, of all people!, blew it. His calculations also told him that our universe is expanding. And somehow, the guy who could come up with the idea of relative time couldn't see past the assumption of his day that the universe was static. But gravity is an undeniable part of the universe. And if all planets and stars always remain the same distance from each other, something must be countering gravity's influence. So he figured there must be some unknown force, which he called the cosmological constant, that does the opposite of gravity. NOW the math works!! Yee Haa!! When they discovered the universe is expanding, Einstein said this was his biggest blunder. (The fact that there is reason to believe some force similar to what Einstein concocted really does exist does not change the fact that he assumed something that was untrue, and invented something so that the math would work.)
And that really is all that my reservations are about. He hypothesised this force, and made his math work.

The fact that we discovered afterwards that it was wrong is wholy down to the wisdom and, dare I say beauty, of science. Those are the very virtues which LorMaster extols, and which I join with him in so extolling.

But it is the inherent short-coming which makes those virues so valuable that I'm pointing out. :lol: Excellent post Fist.

--A
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