20220530

Rick Doogie Responds to the Blog on “Heat Death” Hysteria

PSI Blog 20220530 Rick Doogie Responds to the Blog on “Heat Death” Hysteria

 

Glenn,

 

Yes, the “heat death” hysteria.

 

I’ve had a couple different friends mention that to me, because they knew I liked science. These are friends who never cracked a non-fiction book and have never spoken to me about science matters ever before.

 

But still they tell me how they saw something on TV that told them the universe will eventually fizzle out into the nothingness from whence it came. I think they want to impress me with their up-to-date knowledge of scientific news.

 

I try to remain polite while I tell them what I tell other friends who share conspiracy theories about UFOs, beings from other dimensions or beyond the grave, nano-bots in Covid vaccines, and holographic hoaxes by the CIA (not to mention CIA-controlled weather and earthquakes designed to dupe the populace). I tell them that they need to get a better grip on what is science and possible in the real world, and what is science fiction and impossible no matter how advanced the technology. But I get that glazed look in their eyes because they have those religious assumptions, whether they are “churchy" religious or not. They believe in warp drive, food replicators, holodecks, telepathy, transporters, telekinesis, and all that fun Star Trek stuff. 

 

Pet Peeve and why I don’t like Star Wars. 

 

Star Wars even goes as far as to make the dead Anakin Skywalker, Obi-Wan Kenobi, and Yoda all appear to Luke at the end of the trilogy. - Why should a suspenseful fight to the death get me excited if everyone is moving on to a higher plane to live forever? I always thought that was f-cked up. I feel the same when extreme fundamentalist friends are overcome with grief at a loved one’s funeral. WTF? I can’t say anything, but shouldn’t they be overjoyed that their loved one is now in the Magic Kingdom, where we’ll all meet up very soon? I mean, … they have reason to be sad at my funeral, because they know I’m going to be barbecued eternally.

 

If I could convince my friends of just the First Assumption of Science (Materialism), they could begin to separate fact from fiction. We live in a material world! Everything is made of matter. One thing that is firmly implanted in most people’s minds is that E = mc², and if they attach any meaning at all to that sacred equation, they think that it means that matter and energy are interchangeable. On Star Trek, the crew interact with beings who are made of nothing but energy. These advanced beings can “materialize” themselves or other objects out of, not just “thin air”, but from NOTHING!

 

Thanks for you work,

Rick Doogie

 


20220523

Laplace’s Demon and Infinite Universe Theory

PSI Blog 20220523 Laplace’s Demon and Infinite Universe Theory

 

Abhishek asks:

 

What do you mean by Laplace's Demon on page 26 of TTAOS?

 

[GB: Thanks, Abhi. That was part of my explanation of the Second Assumption of Science, causality (All effects have an infinite number of material causes).[1] That form of causality is the only one consupponible with the Eighth Assumption of Science, infinity (The universe is infinite, both in the microcosmic and macrocosmic directions). It is the reason all measurements have a plus or minus. The infinite subdivision of the universe always contains yet another microcosm contributing to any particular event.

 

Although he did not intend it that way, Laplace’s imaginary demon was an illustration of the colossal failure of the Newtonian assumption of finity. In the imagined finite universe controlled by finity there are finite causes for all events. Thus, a particular event, Y, might involve collisions from three microcosms: Y = A + B + C. There would be no plus or minus. In actuality, the equation would be: Y = A + B + C…∞. This is what the quantum physicists ran into when they studied the smallest objects. Unfortunately, instead of realizing there were an infinite number causes for any event, they assumed a singular cause: probability. That saved their religious assumption of certainty        (It is possible to know everything about some things). Note how Laplace’s visualization fits with both the religious and scientific traditions, with the proclamations of today’s quantum mechanists being no different.]

 

Here is the section in "The Ten Assumptions of Science" pertaining to Laplace's’ Demon:

 

Perhaps the best explanation of finite universal causality was given by Pierre Simon Laplace, the philosopher-scientist who, independently of Kant, advanced the nebular hypothesis of the origin of the solar system. Laplace illustrated his view of determinism by hypothesizing a super intelligent being that has come to be known as Laplace’s Demon:

We ought to regard the present state of the universe as the effect of its antecedent state and as the cause of the state that is to follow. An intelligence, who for a given instant should be acquainted with all the forces by which nature is animated, and with the several positions of the beings composing it, if his intellect were vast enough to submit these data to analysis, would include in one and the same formula the movement of the largest bodies in the universe and those of the lightest atom. Nothing would be uncertain for him, the future as well as the past would be present to his eyes.”[2]

As did Einstein, a few old-fashioned “determinists” still hold to this view although it has suffered at the hands of determinists and indeterminists alike. We now recognize that Laplacian determinism is invalid because it contradicts a major Assumption of Science, INFINITY, to which Einstein, of course, did not subscribe. In his fanciful illustration, Laplace was implying that the cause of a particular effect could be determined with absolutely perfect precision, that the motion of a particular body is determined solely by a finite number of the motions of other bodies.

But any concept of knowledge also requires the concept of subject and object. In 1927 Werner Heisenberg presented the Uncertainty Principle, which demonstrated that the knowledge required of some objects, at least, could not be obtained without interfering with those objects. The interference produces changes in motion that, in turn, cannot be evaluated without additional interference with the object. This leads to an infinite progression in which, theoretically, Laplace’s Demon would require infinite time to determine the position and momentum of a single object. The demon would be so busy in this effort, that it would be forced to ignore the rest of the universe. Unobtrusively, the assumption of INFINITY, the materialist theory of knowledge, and the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle presided over the death of Laplacian determinism and the theory of finite universal causality.”[3]

 

[GB: Now, isn’t it strange, ironic, and even silly that our finest brains still believe the imaginings of long ago. But, perhaps not so. Remember how difficult it was for you to give up the belief in finity, a myopic, "common sense" assumption that has been with us for millennia. And what is it with this claim there are an infinite number of causes for a single event? How can that be possible? How could you ever prove that? The truth is that the Infinite Universe, by its very nature, will never allow that to happen. Popper was right although he didn’t know why he was right. The empiricists are slowly learning they will never be able to prove everything because the universe is infinite. So, what do we do with this so-called infinite universal causality? We have no choice; we can only assume it.

 

Be reminded, however, that fundamental assumptions such as those in "The Ten Assumptions of Science" are derived from the natural world. They are consupponible even though they are not completely provable. Those plus or minuses actually appear whenever we perform more than one suitably precise measurement. There are no two identical snowflakes. No portion of the Infinite Universe is exactly like any other. In spite of the aether denialists, there is no evidence perfectly empty space actually exists. In spite of the cosmogonists, there is no evidence for an “end to the universe” or that it had a beginning without a cause that was not completely imaginary. The upshot is that there is no harm in theoretically assuming an infinite number of causes for any event even though practice allows only a few of them. By doing so, our understanding of the Infinite Universe will be changed forever.]

 

 

  

 



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

[2] Quoted in Castell, Alburey. An Introduction to Modern Philosophy. 3 ed. New York: Macmillan, 1976, p. 520.

[3] Borchardt, Glenn, 2004, The Ten Assumptions of Science: Toward a new scientific worldview: Lincoln, NE, iUniverse, pp. 25-26. [http://go.glennborchardt.com/TTAOS].

20220516

Front stage at the End-of-the-Universe trope

PSI Blog 20220516 Front stage at the End-of-the-Universe trope

 

Regressive physicists and cosmogonists invariably assume the Eighth Assumption of Religion, finity (The universe is finite, both in the microcosmic and macrocosmic directions). Without that critical assumption, the Big Bang Theory could not exist. Without the propaganda provided by equally gullible media, the lay public would be spared such illogical nonsense. Among the chief propagandizers is New Scientist, a popular “science” magazine I have been following for over 4 decades. It has some good stuff, but beware: You better use some good winnowing and sifting.

 

With the invention of the Internet, the staff has become increasingly aggressive in spreading the Word. Along with their more expensive “New Scientist Academy” the latest is the “BIG THINKERS” lecture series designed to mislead us all down the right path. The example below promotes Katie Mack as the heir-apparent to deGrasse. I hope she replaces him on the Late Show. At least we would get someone new to continue the old BBT BS.

 

Sorry that this notice is a bit late—you missed your chance to become a “BIG THINKER.” It is a shame for you to miss it if you still don’t believe the Sixth Assumption of Science, complementarity (All things are subject to divergence and convergence from other things). On the other hand, you have not wasted your time and still have the $18.82 that was the cost of admission.

 

 

Here is my latest screed on this subject stolen from a chapter in “Infinite Universe Theory”:

 

“17.6 Will the universe suffer “heat death”?

No. This is a logical offshoot of a misinterpretation of the Second Law of Thermodynamics (SLT) by systems philosophers. The Sixth Assumption of Science, complementarity resolves the SLT-order paradox as I pointed out as early as 1984.[1] The indeterministic assumption is just the opposite: Noncomplementarity. The Second Law of Thermodynamics states that all isolated systems eventually run down. In the regressive interpretation, constituent matter supposedly is converted into “energy,” which escapes the isolated system as unusable heat. Another way of stating it from a mechanical viewpoint is that the constituents of the system will diverge or expand into its surroundings via their own momenta. Either way, both interpretations fit the expanding universe of the Big Bang Theory with divergence being assumed greater than convergence.

But, if you have been following my argument in favor of univironmental determinism, you know that no systems are ideally isolated. If they were, then the Second Law of Thermodynamics would not even work. The system’s boundaries would have to be “leaky” or stretchable for the heat or matter to escape its confines. Of course, if one treats the universe as a finite, isolated 3-D system, one could argue it would expand into the perfectly empty surroundings, that, for some reason, escaped the imagined creator’s touch. On the other hand, if one treats the universe as a finite, self-contained 4-D system with no surroundings as the Big Bangers do, one could imagine its expansion without having to imagine its surroundings being empty. In either case, one must use the indeterministic assumptions of finity and noncomplementarity and the deduction divergence could occur without an equal amount of convergence.

There is a bit of truth to the correlation of expansion with death. Except for the Infinite Universe, all microcosms come into being via convergence and undergo death via divergence. The assumptions the universe had a beginning and will have an ending are logically derived from our everyday observations of everything in the universe. The only problem is that they cannot apply to the universe as a whole.

I guess the heat death hysteria may be fading away as the standard Big Bang Theory comes under attack and modifications are suggested to handle some of its major contradictions. Cosmogonists are moving slowly toward Infinite Universe Theory by suggesting oxymoronic solutions called “parallel universes” or “multiverses,” while holding fast to the indeterministic assumption of finity.

Each of those oxymoronic “universes” is based on the expansion hypothesis, which, in turn, is based on Einstein’s Untired Light Theory. These steps out of the cosmogonic box are admirable and perhaps one of them could be the “super great attractor” responsible for the galactic flow discovered by Kashlinsky and others.[2] It is true that, in the future, Infinite Universe Theory always will be subject to change. For instance, Stephen Puetz and I presented a hierarchical version in “Universal Cycle Theory” in which the observed universe revolves around a “Local Mega Vortex.” That is highly speculative, but we consider it superior to the oxymoronic alternatives. Nonetheless, we stand by the view the universe is eternal and extends infinitely in all directions.”[3]

 



[1]Borchardt, 1984, The scientific worldview. [Early manuscript version of the 2007 book. Also, an early version of the resolution was rejected by Science in 1980 and finally published as Borchardt, 2008, Resolution of the SLT-order paradox.]

[2]Kashlinsky and others, 2010, ibid.

[3]Borchardt, Glenn, 2017, Infinite Universe Theory: Berkeley, California, Progressive Science Institute, 327 p. [http://go.glennborchardt.com/IUTebook].

 

20220509

Time is Motion and Events are Caused by Collisions

PSI Blog 20220509 Time is Motion and Events are Caused by Collisions


Thanks to Marilyn for this heads up:


https://go.glennborchardt.com/Time-and-Events

 


By Sam Baron, Associate professor, Australian Catholic University


 

This short article is worth checking out. It demonstrates two tiny steps on the way for regressive physicists to finally realize time is motion and that all events require collisions. Also, note the agnostical wording here: “might not exist.” This is typical of regressive physicists and of reformists who are still trying to escape the training and propaganda that keeps them in the paradigmatic fold. Like all agnosticism, it is a half-way measure for faint-hearted folks to have feet in two camps as they transition from one to the other when push comes to shove.

 

The first step was well enunciated by my esteemed colleague Steve Puetz in his objection that stimulated my highly popular “Time is Motion” blog post written on 20111130:

 

“I still disagree with the statement....  Time is motion.  To be more precise, it should be worded as....   "Time is an aspect of motion."  According to almost all conventional descriptions of motion, it has three aspects -- an object, a path, and time.  To suddenly state that motion only has one aspect (time) is confusing to many readers, including me.”

 

By that time Steve and I had already finished our book on “Universal Cycle Theory.” It takes a long time to change paradigms. Of course, some come around faster and earlier than others, depending on how intense the indoctrination was. For instance, here are the last of about a hundred comments we got on that blog:

 

April 20, 2021 at 2:34 PM 

Unknown said...

Well, I'm not sure if I understood everything as I've always been incapable of apprehending physics and maths to an even basic level. But when I was young, probably around the age of 13, while watching a cartoon where they "froze" time, I realised that what actually happened is that all movement stopped, and that time was the measure of specific movements (astrological or atomic for example). I'm happy that more than a decade later, what I thought to be obvious although contrary to the popular idea, is backed by people far cleverer than I am and with a much finer understanding of this universe.

April 13, 2022 at 2:54 PM 

Glenn Borchardt said...

Anon:

Congratulations on your most astute observation at the age of 13. You were way ahead of me. As far as I can tell, I did not write the phrase "time is motion" until sometime between 19800607 and 19810418 when I was 38. You probably had trouble with modern physics for the reason I did: It was a mishmash that made no sense.

April 13, 2022 at 8:05 PM

 

The second point brought up in Baron’s article, is the growing realization that all events are the results of collisions per Newton's Second Law of Motion. In recent discussions with Steve, it was obvious that he still has problems with the Second Law—so much so that I had to decline co-authorship on a recent manuscript. That is not particularly usual, as Newton himself had the same problem. Over 300 years ago, he realized gravitation was an acceleration but did not realize there had to be an equivalent deceleration. When I pointed out that necessity in the intro to “Aether Deceleration Theory,”[1] it was met by reviewers with a resounding thud. They already knew the cause of gravitation was Einstein’s magical “space-time.”

 

So, dear readers, we are left with today’s radical and now “progressive” ideas that time definitely does not exist (it occurs) and that events are caused by things colliding with things (whether or not you can actually see the colliders). Let us all enjoy watching the great ship christened by Hoyle as the “Big Bang Theory” as it gradually sinks into the garbage heap of history.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                        

20220502

Why the Velocity of Light is not Constant

PSI Blog 20220502 Why the Velocity of Light is not Constant


Abhi asks:

 

“In that sub-chapter [15.5] of IUT, you wrote the following sentence:

 

"Because there is less aether pressure and more aether density, light will travel slower near sea level than at high altitude where there is greater aether pressure and less aether density."

 

Can you explain why?”

 

[GB: Thanks, Abhi. You should know that the velocity of a wave is dependent on the properties of the medium through which it travels. The best example is the change in the velocity of light when it enters water. In air, light travels at 300,000,000 m/s; in water, light travels at 225,000,000 m/s. Physicists have various explanations for this with the absorption/emission hypothesis being most popular. Here is a simpler way of thinking about the effect: Suppose you were running as fast as you can across a grassy pasture devoid of trees. Now suppose you entered a nearby woods in which the trees were so close together you could not avoid colliding with some of them. That sure would slow you down.


Baryonic matter would perform the same function in the above analogy. When baryonic matter is particularly dense, as in a steel wall, light can’t get through at all. Again, the medium for light transmission is aether—baryonic matter just gets in the way.

 

Decelerated aether also interferes with light transmission, but in a slightly different way. Distal aether (i.e., aether particles far from baryonic matter, in the “free field,” or in intergalactic regions) is highly active. I speculate that many of these particles have local inter-particle velocities as great as 1.5c, the same way interparticle velocities of nitrogen in air are up to 1.5 times the speed of sound. In the distal free field aether particles collide with one another producing accelerations and the corresponding decelerations in relatively equivalent amounts. This high activity amounts to a relatively high pressure. In other words, the “push” from these regions would be greater than it would be in regions where aether particles were less active and therefore had relatively low pressure.

 

Why would the aether particles in some regions be less active and demonstrate reduced pressure? The answer is simple: They would have lost some of their motion to other microcosms due to unreciprocated acceleration. In other words, they would hit something, accelerate it, but not be hit by an equally high-velocity microcosm. This is why aetherial pressure around baryonic matter is relatively low. And even if high-velocity aether particles from the far field collide with relatively low-velocity aether particles in the near field, they would not, in turn, be accelerated as much as those in the free field where each aether particle is hit by other relatively high-velocity aether particles.

While the above paragraph explains pressure differences in the aether medium, it actually applies to any baryonic medium. The interparticle motion of nitrogen molecules in the atmosphere behaves in the same way. High-pressure regions form by heating of Earth’s surface while low-pressure regions remain so where the heating effect is low.

The importance of inter-particle motions is reflected in the ability of the atmosphere to transmit sound. The velocity of sound increases with pressure and temperature; and decreases with density (https://www.engineersedge.com/physics/speed_of_sound_13241.htm). The increases reflect the high activity of the nitrogen molecules, while the decrease reflects the low activity of nitrogen molecules after they have been decelerated and become more densely packed. The water-steam system is analogous, with liquid water being densely packed and having less activity than steam.

The upshot of all this is that distal aetherial pressure is greatest wherever those particles have not been decelerated either by hitting baryonic matter or particularly sluggish proximal aether particles. On Earth aetherial pressure increases with altitude, while atmospheric pressure decreases with altitude because aether particles are the cause of gravitation and the entrained atmosphere is the effect of gravitation. As explained in “Infinite Universe Theory, Chapter 15.5,” the Pound-Rebka experiment proved light velocity increased with altitude and decreased with nearness to Earth. Of course, in support of Einstein’s assumption that the speed of light was constant, they had to use that old magical trope “time dilation” to provide the regressive interpretation ever since misnamed as the “gravitational redshift.” Thus, as you can see, we will be plagued with that silly “time dilation” as long as physicists remain aether denialists.