20181226

Einstein the agnostic

PSI Blog 20181226 Einstein the agnostic

Here is a comment from George Coyne, Director of the Vancouver, B.C. Office:

Hi Glenn

This article refers to Einstein's anti-religious, realist, deterministic views: 


[GB: This article nicely sums up Einstein’s religious views. I conclude that he really was not an atheist, but an agnostic (which is reflected in his erroneous theories). Like some other agnostics, Einstein devolved into a pantheist: One who believes that the universe is god. I imagine folks who don’t quite understand "Infinite Universe Theory" will have the same fate. The author clarifies Einstein’s position on the famous relativity vs. quantum mechanics debate. He clearly objected to the acausality being voiced by the QM guys. Of course, both sides were afflicted with the finity assumption and no resolution could be possible. Because the universe is infinitely subdividable and all those portions are constantly in motion, there is no way to get the exact same result whenever we repeat an experiment. This says nothing about a “god playing dice.” It is just the way the infinite universe behaves. Once we realize causality is infinite and that we cannot know everything about even one cause, then we can view uncertainty as a matter of ignorance. We can use probability to calculate what we know and what we do not know. That says nothing about unperceived objects being nonexistent.]

Here is the entire article:

What Einstein meant by ‘God does not play dice’

By Jim Baggott [1] / Aeon [2]

November 24, 2018, 6:45 AM GMT

 ‘The theory produces a good deal but hardly brings us closer to the secret of the Old One,’ wrote Albert Einstein in December 1926. ‘I am at all events convinced that He does not play dice.’

Einstein was responding to a letter from the German physicist Max Born. The heart of the new theory of quantum mechanics, Born had argued, beats randomly and uncertainly, as though suffering from arrhythmia. Whereas physics before the quantum had always been about doing this and getting that, the new quantum mechanics appeared to say that when we do this, we get that only with a certain probability. And in some circumstances we might get the other.

Einstein was having none of it, and his insistence that God does not play dice with the Universe has echoed [3] down the decades, as familiar and yet as elusive in its meaning as E = mc2. What did Einstein mean by it? And how did Einstein conceive of God?

Hermann and Pauline Einstein were nonobservant Ashkenazi Jews. Despite his parents’ secularism, the nine-year-old Albert discovered and embraced Judaism with some considerable passion, and for a time he was a dutiful, observant Jew. Following Jewish custom, his parents would invite a poor scholar to share a meal with them each week, and from the impoverished medical student Max Talmud (later Talmey) the young and impressionable Einstein learned about mathematics and science. He consumed all 21 volumes of Aaron Bernstein’s joyful Popular Books on Natural Science (1880). Talmud then steered him in the direction of Immanuel Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason (1781), from which he migrated to the philosophy of David Hume. From Hume [4], it was a relatively short step to the Austrian physicist Ernst Mach, whose stridently empiricist, seeing-is-believing brand of philosophy demanded a complete rejection of metaphysics, including notions of absolute space and time, and the existence of atoms.

But this intellectual journey had mercilessly exposed the conflict between science and scripture. The now 12-year-old Einstein rebelled. He developed a deep aversion to the dogma of organised religion that would last for his lifetime, an aversion that extended to all forms of authoritarianism, including any kind of dogmatic atheism.

This youthful, heavy diet of empiricist philosophy would serve Einstein well some 14 years later. Mach’s rejection of absolute space and time helped to shape Einstein’s special theory of relativity (including the iconic equation E = mc2), which he formulated in 1905 while working as a ‘technical expert, third class’ at the Swiss Patent Office in Bern. Ten years later, Einstein would complete the transformation of our understanding of space and time with the formulation of his general theory of relativity, in which the force of gravity is replaced by curved spacetime. But as he grew older (and wiser), he came to reject Mach’s aggressive empiricism, and once declared that ‘Mach was as good at mechanics as he was wretched at philosophy.’

Over time, Einstein evolved a much more realist position. He preferred to accept the content of a scientific theory realistically, as a contingently ‘true’ representation of an objective physical reality. And, although he wanted no part of religion, the belief in God that he had carried with him from his brief flirtation with Judaism became the foundation on which he constructed his philosophy. When asked about the basis for his realist stance, he explained: ‘I have no better expression than the term “religious” for this trust in the rational character of reality and in its being accessible, at least to some extent, to human reason.’

But Einstein’s was a God of philosophy, not religion. When asked many years later whether he believed in God, he replied: ‘I believe in Spinoza’s God, who reveals himself in the lawful harmony of all that exists, but not in a God who concerns himself with the fate and the doings of mankind.’ Baruch Spinoza, a contemporary of Isaac Newton and Gottfried Leibniz, had conceived of God as identical with nature. For this, he was considered a dangerous heretic [5], and was excommunicated from the Jewish community in Amsterdam.

Einstein’s God is infinitely superior but impersonal and intangible, subtle but not malicious. He is also firmly determinist. As far as Einstein was concerned, God’s ‘lawful harmony’ is established throughout the cosmos by strict adherence to the physical principles of cause and effect. Thus, there is no room in Einstein’s philosophy for free will: ‘Everything is determined, the beginning as well as the end, by forces over which we have no control … we all dance to a mysterious tune, intoned in the distance by an invisible player.’

The special and general theories of relativity provided a radical new way of conceiving of space and time and their active interactions with matter and energy. These theories are entirely consistent with the ‘lawful harmony’ established by Einstein’s God. But the new theory of quantum mechanics, which Einstein had also helped to found in 1905, was telling a different story. Quantum mechanics is about interactions involving matter and radiation, at the scale of atoms and molecules, set against a passive background of space and time.

Earlier in 1926, the Austrian physicist Erwin Schrödinger had radically transformed the theory by formulating it in terms of rather obscure ‘wavefunctions’. Schrödinger himself preferred to interpret these realistically, as descriptive of ‘matter waves’. But a consensus was growing, strongly promoted by the Danish physicist Niels Bohr and the German physicist Werner Heisenberg, that the new quantum representation shouldn’t be taken too literally.

In essence, Bohr and Heisenberg argued that science had finally caught up with the conceptual problems involved in the description of reality that philosophers had been warning of for centuries. Bohr is quoted as saying: ‘There is no quantum world. There is only an abstract quantum physical description. It is wrong to think that the task of physics is to find out how nature is. Physics concerns what we can say about nature.’ This vaguely positivist statement was echoed by Heisenberg: ‘[W]e have to remember that what we observe is not nature in itself but nature exposed to our method of questioning.’ Their broadly antirealist ‘Copenhagen interpretation’ – denying that the wavefunction represents the real physical state of a quantum system – quickly became the dominant way of thinking about quantum mechanics. More recent variations of such antirealist interpretations suggest that the wavefunction is simply a way of ‘coding’ our experience, or our subjective beliefs derived from our experience of the physics, allowing us to use what we’ve learned in the past to predict the future.

But this was utterly inconsistent with Einstein’s philosophy. Einstein could not accept an interpretation in which the principal object of the representation – the wavefunction – is not ‘real’. He could not accept that his God would allow the ‘lawful harmony’ to unravel so completely at the atomic scale, bringing lawless indeterminism and uncertainty, with effects that can’t be entirely and unambiguously predicted from their causes.

The stage was thus set for one of the most remarkable debates in the entire history of science, as Bohr and Einstein went head-to-head on the interpretation of quantum mechanics. It was a clash of two philosophies, two conflicting sets of metaphysical preconceptions about the nature of reality and what we might expect from a scientific representation of this. The debate began in 1927, and although the protagonists are no longer with us, the debate is still very much alive.

And unresolved.

I don’t think Einstein would have been particularly surprised by this. In February 1954, just 14 months before he died, he wrote in a letter to the American physicist David Bohm: ‘If God created the world, his primary concern was certainly not to make its understanding easy for us.’

Jim Baggott

This article was originally published at Aeon [6] and has been republished under Creative Commons.









20181219

Multiverse theory and aether


PSI Blog 20181219 Multiverse theory and aether

From reader Abhi:

I had once claimed the following:

The universe contains many collections of galaxies instead of only one. Aether exists only inside one collection of galaxies and not outside it. So aether does not exist outside that collection of galaxies in which we live. So there is no light over there. So nobody has ever been able to see anything over there. So all scientists have assumed that the universe contains only one collection of galaxies i.e. the one in which we live. Since that collection of galaxies is filled with aether, scientists like you have assumed that the whole universe is filled with aether. I am making this claim because any form of matter is always finite and no form of matter can be infinite. Only the universe is infinite. Can you please look deeply into the matter?

[GB: Thanks for the comment. You are hypothesizing a reason for our inability to see beyond 13.8 billion light years even though you assume macrocosmic infinity. Your hypothesis will be severely tested when the Webb telescope replaces the Hubble after March 2021:


This is my prediction on p. 289 of "Infinite Universe Theory": “Improvements in instrumentation soon will result in the discovery of cosmological objects older than 13.8 billion years.” Of course, that probably would not be taken as a falsification of the Big Bang Theory—there are always recalculations and ad hocs the cosmogonists will come up with. It would not help your theory or any of the other multiverse theories, because, according to Infinite Universe Theory, there will be no aether-less gap beyond what we see now.

You give me too much credit. Many famous scientists of the past have assumed aether is universal. Still others have, like you, assumed that some regions of the universe may contain nothing at all. Of course, that is only an idealization (reread the IUT Glossary on “MATTER-SPACE CONTINUUM). The empty space assumption also is the petard that threatens to destroy Einstein’s Untired Light Theory.

You say “any form of matter is always finite and no form of matter can be infinite.” You may reject microcosmic infinity all you want, but that is a theoretical dead-end. Matter is infinitely subdividable, with each division producing what appears to us as ideal “solid matter” and ideal “empty space.” Matter is an abstraction implying that all things must contain other things. As I have mentioned many times, macrocosmic infinity and microcosmic finity are not consupponible.]
 
Abhi: Now I can prove my claim to be correct by using what mainstream physics calls a black hole. See the first sentence on 
It says that nothing—not even particles and electromagnetic radiation such as light—can escape from inside it. Actually this claim is wrong. There is no light over there because there is no ether over there. So particles which go there cannot be seen anymore because there is no light over there. So there are actually no such things as black holes in the universe. Since particles which go over there cannot be seen anymore, mainstream physics has assumed that the region is a black hole from where particles cannot escape. That region is only a place in the universe where ether does not exist. Can you please look deeply into the matter?

[GB: As far as I can tell, “Black Holes” certainly are not “holes” and no one has ever seen one. They appear to be the product of mathematical imagination. Before he died, Hawking recanted, admitting that, at most, they were “grey holes.” My interpretation is this: Any physical evidence is really evidence for a galactic nucleus as we see in this NASA photo of Andromeda:  





It looks like the nucleus is where stars go to die. Typical of many vortices, the center therefore contains the great mass assumed for “Black Holes,” but without the “blackness” initially calculated by cosmogonists such as Hawking. With the new claim that they actually are “grey holes,” your "lack of aether" hypothesis is unnecessary.]

20181212

Where does Infinite Universe Theory get us?


PSI Blog 20181212 Where does Infinite Universe Theory get us?

In a piqué over the general lack of interest in IUT, I asked Rick (Director of the Michigan Office) this question.

As usual, Rick put it on the line in the way only he can do it:

I'd say IUT gets us to logical reasoning in all areas of philosophy. IUT is a devastating blow against immaterialism and indeterminism, for those with ears to hear it.

There are many podcasting atheists out there who I enjoy listening to, but some of them talk about a "respectable" Jungian value that religion and spirituality bring to humankind. Some sense of purpose or sense of wonder. BS! I couldn't disagree more. 

I think even the most harmless, touchy-feely, lovey-dovey, new-age "I'm not religious, but I'm spiritual" preacher perpetuates immaterialism, anti-naturalism, and anti-life. It's the poison that Plato injected into our cultural thinking long ago. All his highly-respected talk about "non-physical forms" that are the "true reality". That kind of attitude leads to unnecessary suffering in so many non-religious pursuits - technological, political, cultural…you name it. It leads people to worship words instead of matter, after-life instead of life here and now. I about puke when someone says at a funeral, "she's in a better place now".

I'll paraphrase something that comes to mind, "Materialism builds jet airliners. Immaterialism flies jet airliners into buildings." Or how about, "Good people do good things, bad people do bad things, but only religion and politics make good people do bad things"? Religion and politics are cultural insanity brought on by indeterminism and immaterialism.

People think it's admirable to believe weird and spooky ideas without any proof except the family tradition or cultural "norms". Stories made up by cave-dwellers or sheep-herders sitting around the campfire. So, if female genital mutilation is a "tradition", it must be hunky dory. If honor killings are considered sacred, go for it. If everyone says "support the troops" instead of "bring home the troops", we're in trouble if we make any observations about how military adventurism wastes lives, money, resources, time, and energy. (Not to mention the mega-pollution from depleted Uranium and other toxic chemicals used in warfare.)

My idea of fun:

With the upsurge in the popular belief in ghosts, I like to ask believers if their pet ghosts are affected at all by gravity or physical barriers like walls and floors. When they say, "no they are not affected by gravity or walls", I tell them that if that's so, the ghosts would go flying past us at 1,000 mph, as gravity holds us mere mortals to the earth while it rotates. And then I throw in the idea that we physical beings who are affected by gravity and inertia are traveling 66,000 mph, thanks to gravity keeping us attached to the earth as it orbits the sun. Any "non-physical entity" not affected by gravity would zip right past us at incredible speed. (And I don't use that word "incredible" lightly. It's such an overused word.)

Happy holidays,
Rick Doogie


20181205

Minor progress in the regressive community according to Steve Puetz


PSI Blog 20181205 Minor progress in the regressive community according to Steve Puetz

This is from my co-author, who is Director of the Hawaii PSI office:

Hi Glenn,

A few days ago, on the "Science Channel", I watched an interesting show called "How the universe operates". They still believe in the Big Bang Theory, however, it seems that astronomers have slightly changed their views over the past 10 years. Following, are some of their comments.

1) They noted that "dark matter" (aetherial matter) might actually be interactive (rather than the previous idea of mass-less dark matter that only has a gravitational effect). They came to this conclusion by studying how two galaxies collide. Of course, I still believe that "baryonic dark matter" exists, and helps explain the rotation of galaxies. The key take-away is that some astronomers seem to be rejecting the idea of mass-less dark matter (aetherial dark matter).

2) The moderator said that Zwicky's ideas are now being accepted by mainstream astronomers. He said that even though Zwicky was hated by his peers 30 years ago, the prevailing view now is that Zwicky was just too far ahead of his time. As Doogie noted in one of his e-mails, once new observations and new ideas are out there, they cannot be taken back. If the observations and ideas are correct, then scientists will eventually accept them. That appears to be true for Zwicky, as it has for many other unfortunate researchers who were too far ahead of their time. (For example, Borchardt's 10 Assumptions ... :smile.)

3) Mike Rampino was also on the show, discussing his theory of how dark matter causes cycles in asteroid strikes. If you recall, Rampino reviewed our paper on mass-extinctions (which I still have not rewritten).

In summary, the ideas within the scientific community continue to evolve -- slowly moving in the direction that we anticipate as they try to resolve contradictions and new observations. Of course, the progress is at a snail’s pace. I'm not sure when the 10 Assumptions will become mainstream....


20181128

Why does matter always contain other matter in motion?


PSI Blog 20181128 Why does matter always contain other matter in motion?

Abhishek asked this question. Here are my answers and his follow-ups:

[GB: For the same reason that a balloon contains matter inside to resist the matter outside--univironmental determinism, remember?]

Abhi:

Then what would happen if all forms of matter were not in motion?

[GB: There would be no universe.]

Abhi:

But why? Besides, when Einstein said that nothing can travel faster than light, he put an upper limit on maximum velocity in the universe i.e. 299,792,458 m/s. But what he said was actually wrong because faster than light is possible and there is no upper limit on maximum velocity in the universe. Similarly when you say that matter must be in motion, you are putting a lower limit on minimum velocity in the universe i.e. velocity of matter must be greater than 0 m/s and never equal to it. So it may be possible that this may also be equally wrong because there may not actually be any lower limit on minimum velocity in the universe just the same way there is no upper limit on maximum velocity in the universe. Can you please look deeply into the matter?

[GB: Look at the balloon example again. For the balloon to keep its shape, it simply must have enough pressure inside (submicrocosms in motion) to counteract the pressure outside (supermicrocosms in motion). This is true for all microcosms (things). Decrease the pressure inside and the microcosm implodes; decrease the pressure outside and microcosm explodes. The velocities of the submicrocosms and supermicrocosms are secondary.

By using the analog for sound in air, I have speculated that short-range travel of aether particles might occur at velocities 50% greater than what the medium produces for long-range travel. If you have a reference for faster than light travel, I would like to read it.

The reason c appears as an upper limit on velocity is because that is the velocity characteristic of wave motion through the aether medium. All media have a characteristic for wave velocity (e.g., air transmits sound at 343 m/s). Particle accelerators cannot exceed c because they use electromagnetic wave motion to perform the acceleration. Also, the aether medium is filled with aether particles that provide resistance to the motion of other particles.

Sorry, but to say there are velocities less than 0 makes no sense. On the other hand, you could say there are infinitely small velocities in the same way we can approach absolute zero, but never reach it. That is an experimental fact that provides support both for the Eighth Assumption of Science, infinity (The universe is infinite, both in the microcosmic and macrocosmic directions) and for the Fourth Assumption of Science, inseparability (Just as there is no motion without matter, so there is no matter without motion).]



20181119

Print copies of “Infinite Universe Theory” now available!


PSI Blog 20181121 Print copies of “Infinite Universe Theory” now available!

Finally, IUT is available in paperback. You have a choice of black and white ($19.95) or color ($49.95). Purchasers of either of these can get a copy of the e-Book for $2.99. 

If you are on a tight budget, you can get the black and white version. You can see the color versions of the photos in the e-Book and use the links to check out the definitions and to visit my links to important web pages. 

Of course, the color version of the paperback is wonderful. Not many of those will be printed, so I suspect it will become a collector’s item.

All three versions are at:







20181114

Egads! Hawking says time travel possible!


PSI Blog 20181114 Egads! Hawking says time travel possible!


The passage of the premier propagandist (Stephen Hawking 1942-2018) for the Big Bang Theory has just been marked by his recent posthumous last words:


His claim that time travel is possible also makes him only second to Einstein as the most famous regressive physicist.

As our readers know, the correct assumption is irreversibility. Here is the brief passage I wrote starting on page 80 in Infinite Universe Theory :

 Seventh: Irreversibility


All processes are irreversible.

“Irreversibility deals with the abstraction of motion that we call time. In its broadest application, universal time is the motion of all things with respect to all other things. In its narrowest application, specific time is the motion of one thing with respect to another thing. Again, time is motion, and therefore does not exist—it occurs. Time is not part of the universe. It is what its various parts do. Time is irreversible because each motion of each microcosm in the Infinite Universe is unique. Folks who still believe that travel into the past might be possible are either delusional Sci-fi fans or victims of relativity.

One way to view it is this:

1.   It is a fact that the planets, stars, galaxies, etc. are in motion with respect to each other.
2.   That makes the night sky unique. It is never the same even two seconds in a row.
3.   “Going back in time” would entail moving those heavenly bodies back to the positions they had on the night targeted for this fanciful adventure. Good luck with that.

The opposing assumption, reversibility, underpins systems philosophy, which tends to overemphasize the system and neglect the environment. Lab technicians often believe they can demonstrate reversibility by providing a semblance of former experimental conditions. When we ignore the environment, reactions in such systems seem like they are reversible. However, when the environment is included, then each reaction properly appears unique and unprecedented. With perfectly empty space being impossible and with the ubiquity of aether, our inability to produce perfect isolation prevents us from getting exactly the same result each time we perform an experiment. Even though the idea of reversible time makes great stories for science fiction, it holds no relevance in the real world. Prospective time-travelers are destined to be forever disappointed.”

That is simple, but not so if you fail to get your assumptions in a row. Looks like regressive physics will be wallowing in its mess for quite some time…




20180815

Why will the adoption of Infinite Universe Theory be the “Last Cosmological Revolution”?


PSI Blog 20180815 Why will the adoption of Infinite Universe Theory be the “Last Cosmological Revolution”?


In his fine YouTube review of my Blog on why the universe exists, David de Hilster objected to the implication that Infinite Universe Theory [1]would be the last of the cosmological revolutions. Normally, in science, we can have no “last” or “ultimate” theories. That is because all theories have finite components and all are subject to impacts from the infinite macrocosm, which then force necessary revisions. A good example is my revision of Newton’s laws of motion after I assumed infinity.[2] An “ultimate” theory would have to contain an infinite number of factors—an impossible feat.

We then need to review the nature of revolution. “Revolution” is actually a misnomer implying a complete rotation. Instead, the word usually describes a 180-degree or half rotation, such as when those on top are displaced by those on the bottom. Similarly, a revolution in thought occurs when one abandons a particular viewpoint to adopt its opposite. The First Cosmological Revolution occurred when we abandoned the Earth-centered universe in favor of the heliocentric one. The second was when we realized our Sun was only one of the billions of stars in the Milky Way. The third was when those fuzzy objects in the night sky thought to be “island universes” actually were a few of the 2 trillion galaxies now observed.

Through all that time, we stood steadfast in our assumption that the universe was finite. Logically, that meant that the universe had a beginning and would have an end, just like each of the things within it. However, when we assume just the opposite—infinity, we produce a revolution in thought. When applied to the entire universe Infinite Universe Theory amounts to the “Last” cosmological revolution. Sure, the theory will be revised and modified as more and more infinite detail is discovered, but the revolutionary aspect of the theory will never change. We can never really go back to the idea that the universe is finite. Sure, one can assume either finity or infinity. There never can be a complete, final proof of such a fundamental assumption.[3] We never can go to the “end of the universe” to answer that question. Logically, we are forced to assume one or the other. My whole project has been to show how the assumption of infinity leads to answers to the many paradoxes and contradictions plaguing today’s “modern” physics and cosmology. Sure, there will be counter-revolutionary attempts, but eventually all will fail.
   



[1] Borchardt, Glenn, 2017, Infinite Universe Theory: Berkeley, California, Progressive Science Institute, 325 p. [http://go.glennborchardt.com/IUTebook].

[2] The universe is infinite, both in the microcosmic and macrocosmic directions.

[3] Borchardt, Glenn, 2004, The Ten Assumptions of Science: Toward a new scientific worldview: Lincoln, NE, iUniverse, 125 p. [http://go.glennborchardt.com/TTAOS].




20180808

Why does the universe exist? An update.


PSI Blog 20180808 Why does the universe exist? An update.


See the original, as revised at PSI Blog 20180718.

20180801

Believers gotta believe: The Shroud of Turin and its falsification


PSI Blog 20180801 Believers gotta believe: The Shroud of Turin and its falsification

In the 14th Century, the Catholic Church in what is now Turin, Italy fell short of funds. It was left to some Einsteinian-type genius to come up with some way to get folks to renew the faith and fill the coffers. This was achieved by preparing a shroud, or cloth upon which was impressed an image remarkably similar to the one imagined by many and seen in artwork of the time. Ever since, this “Shroud of Turin” has been visited by the devout and prayed over as if it actually was Christ’s burial cloth.

The debate over authenticity was finally settled when a tiny piece of the cloth was carbon dated at between 1260 and 1390 A.D., falsifying the authenticity of the shroud and proving it was a fake.[1] That did not end the debate. There are many “scientists” who have continued to root for authenticity. There is even one fellow who claims that carbon dating is not valid—this despite the fact that we have thousands of C-14 dates nearly identical to dates obtained in other ways. For instance, redwood trees with 2000 rings began growing about 2,000 years ago according to C-14. Believers gotta believe and the church in Turin continues to call the shroud “holy” and to display it occasionally, presumably to benefit financially from the miseducation of the gullible.

Recently, the shroud has entered the news again, with an analysis of some of the stains that make up the image.[2] Once again, the conclusion from the new investigation is that it is indeed a fake. That, of course, will not satisfy those who wish with all their heart that it wasn’t so. Believers gotta believe.[3]

For those opposed to the current cosmogony, there is a clear lesson here with regard to the nature of falsification. Because the universe is infinite, scientific theories cannot be completely proven, although they can be falsified. That is, it only takes one observation or experiment (like C-14 dating) to prove a theory false. To save a theory from such reprehensible collisions with reality, we often invent ad hocs, which are exceptions that, if included, help the theory fit the data at hand. The ad hocs eventually may prove to be valid—infinite universal causality being what it is, one can always include an additional factor that might just do the trick. More likely, they just make the theory more cumbersome, challenging Ockham’s razor and often stretching believability. Still, believers gotta believe.

We see this with regard to the Big Bang Theory, which is founded on the interpretation that the universe is expanding. That is based on Einstein’s Untired Light Theory, which is based on eight ad hocs[4] needed to explain why the imagined light corpuscles did not behave like the classical particles falsified by Sagnac[5] and by de Sitter.[6]  These particles, subsequently called “photons,” are truly miraculous. They are massless, always travel at the same velocity, do not collide with each other, never take on the motion of the source, etc. Unlike other particles, photons supposedly travel for billions of years through the idealist’s completely empty space without losing energy, in violation of the Second Law of Thermodynamics. Nothing we know of, whether particle or wave can travel from point A to point B without losing energy. That, of course, is what we observe with the cosmological redshift—light waves become longer as they lose energy. And yet, regressive physicists assume the increase in wavelength is due to the “Doppler Effect” or the assumed “expansion of empty space” and the resulting assumed galactic recession. They are not bothered by the violation of the Second Law of Thermodynamics. Believers gotta believe…


[1] Damon, P. E. and others, 1989, Radiocarbon dating of the Shroud of Turin: Nature, v. 337, no. 6208, p. 611-615. [https://doi.org/10.1038/337611a0].

[2] David, Ariel, 2018, CSI Study of Shroud of Turin Proves Again: Jesus Relic Is Fake, Accessed 0719 [http://go.glennborchardt.com/shroudofturin2018].

[3] For an extensive review of the fiasco, see Wikipedia, 2018, Shroud of Turin.

[4] Borchardt, Glenn, 2017, Infinite Universe Theory: Berkeley, California, Progressive Science Institute, 325 p. [http://go.glennborchardt.com/IUTebook].

[5] Sagnac, Georges, 1913a, The demonstration of the luminiferous aether by an interferometer in uniform rotation: Comptes Rendus, v. 157, p. 708–710.

Sagnac, Georges, 1913b, On the proof of the reality of the luminiferous aether by the experiment with a rotating interferometer: Comptes Rendus, v. 157, p. 1410–1413.


[6] de Sitter, Willem, 1913, An Astronomical Proof for the Constancy of the Speed of Light (English translation): Physik. Zeitschr., v. 14, p. 429. [http://go.glennborchardt.com/desitter13light].



20180718

Why does the universe exist?


PSI Blog 20180718 Why does the universe exist?



The universe exists because it cannot not exist. Nonexistence is impossible. That is because nonexistence would require perfectly empty space, which is completely imaginary. Space is one of the ideal end members of the empty space-solid matter continuum. As with all idealizations, empty space and solid matter cannot exist. According to “Infinite Universe Theory,” everything in existence has both characteristics. We use those idealizations to avoid hitting walls and to go through doorways even though walls are not perfectly solid and doorways are not perfectly empty.

In other words, the universe exists because empty space is impossible. The universe produces an infinite number of things, but it cannot produce perfectly empty space. Production requires the convergence of other “things”. “Perfectly empty space” is not a thing, so the convergence of “nothing” to form more “nothing” is oxymoronic. However, when we consider “space” as matter, it fits our definition of matter as an abstraction for all things.[1] Also, according to infinity[2] , all things contain other things. That is why we have never been able to find any perfectly empty space[3]; and why perfectly solid matter is impossible.[4]

Although the infinite universe cannot be completely understood by anyone, we gradually accumulate knowledge that allows us to survive and to “make sense” of our surroundings. Again, the scientific answer to why the universe exists is simply that it is impossible for it not to exist. When folks ask: “Why is there something instead of nothing?” they are sensing “something,” but only imagining “nothing.”

Idealists inclined to ask these questions are unlikely to be satisfied by the answer provided by Infinite Universe Theory. That is because idealists tend to think in absolute terms. For them, space is empty and matter is solid. By its nature, the infinite universe always “passes the buck.” They will continue to ask the question: “But where did it all come from?” Each thing in the infinite universe is a complex formed from still other things in the universe. The nice, tidy finite universe of the Big Bang Theory appeals because everything we have observed had a beginning. To finally realize those observations do not apply to the universe as a whole is a grandiose step. It is to finally reject cosmogony[5] and to join the Last Cosmological Revolution. 




[1] Borchardt, Glenn, 2004, The Ten Assumptions of Science: Toward a new scientific worldview: Lincoln, NE, iUniverse, p. 17 [http://go.glennborchardt.com/TTAOS].

[2] The universe is infinite, both in the microcosmic and macrocosmic directions.

[3] Absolute zero (0oK) cannot be obtained and the “vacuum” of outer space contains enough matter to yield a temperature of 2.7oK.

[5] The study of the origin of the universe. Cosmogony, of course, assumes that the universe is finite and that it had an origin, with the additional implication that it will have an ending (see also “Blog 20160330 The death of heat death”).

20180711

Why acceleration requires collisions


PSI Blog 20180711 Why acceleration requires collisions


Abhi asks:

“In your newly released article ’The Physical Cause of Gravitation',[1] you wrote that the unseen particles involved in these collisions provide the acceleration that drives gravitation. But if those particles stop existing, will gravitation also stop occurring?”

[GB: Per Newton's Second Law of Motion, all causes (i.e., events, changes, etc.) involve collisions resulting in the acceleration of the collidee and deceleration of the collider. This is the guts of the philosophy of mechanism and its proposition that the universe consists of matter in motion. Indeterminists, especially regressive physicists and religious folks, do not necessarily believe this. That is why some especially naïve people still believe in ESP (Extra Sensory Perception). It is why many of today’s physicists say that Einstein’s relativity overthrew classical mechanics. It is why I say they are regressive. It is why my gravitation paper was just rejected outright by the editor of Physical Review Letters (returned in 24.46 hr without review). It does not take much training in regressive physics to reject the first sentence in that paper:

The physical cause of gravitation is simple: the collision of one thing with another.

As I pointed out in that paper, gravitation is acceleration. Every acceleration results in a deceleration—simple. The fact that the particles doing the accelerating are unseen is no big deal. Air particles cannot be seen either, but they do plenty of accelerating. Abhi, you are right that if aether particles stopped existing, there would be no more gravitation. Similarly, if air particles stopped existing, there would be no more breathing or hearing.

You also ask: “Besides, why do you assume they are “aether” particles when we do not know exactly what these particles are?” There is a lengthy history in which aether has commonly played a part.[2] Reread my paper to review Newton’s effort at hypothesizing a medium accounting for gravitation. Aether is theoretically necessary because, according to Newton’s three laws, there are no true pulls in nature. The recent LIGO experiments show that light and galactic shock waves (regressives call them gravitational waves) both travel within the aether medium at the same velocity—the speed of light. All waves require a medium. That is what Sagnac found in 1913, correctly calling it “aether.”[3]

The Michelson-Morley experiment[4] was searching for a medium in which their hypothetical particles were not assumed to collide with matter. I now use the “ether” spelling for that kind of particle, which we now know does not exist—all things are in motion, capable of colliding with other things. Aether, on the other hand, does exist, comprising the “dark matter” entrained around all matter. It is entrained because it becomes decelerated upon colliding with other matter as explained in my paper.]


[1] Borchardt, Glenn, 2018, The Physical Cause of Gravitation: viXra:1806.0165.

[2] Whittaker, E.T., 1951, A history of the theories of aether and electricity: The classical theories: New York, Harper Torchbooks, v. 1, 434 p. [http://go.glennborchardt.com/Whittaker-I].

Whittaker, E.T., 1953, A history of the theories of aether and electricity: The modern theories, 1900-1926 II: New York, Harper and Brothers, v. 2, 319 p. [I have a pdf of this. Just let me know and I can send a copy.][BTW: Jesse Witwer and I are working on a sorely needed update.]

[3] Sagnac, Georges, 1913a, The demonstration of the luminiferous aether by an interferometer in uniform rotation: Comptes Rendus, v. 157, p. 708–710.

Sagnac, Georges, 1913b, On the proof of the reality of the luminiferous aether by the experiment with a rotating interferometer: Comptes Rendus, v. 157, p. 1410–1413.

[4] Michelson, A.A., and Morley, E.W., 1887, On the relative motion of the earth and the luminiferous ether: American Journal of Science, v. 39, p. 333-345. [http://www.anti-relativity.com/MM_Paper.pdf].