Rumination, here, begins with a contemplation of the immensity of the universe. It is a subject whose interest-value arguably is fuelled more by curiosity than by the different types of emotion that can pump up reflection, whether intellectual or ruminative.
There is the vastness of the cosmos. And there is me, titchy by comparison. But am I not a world unto myself? There are billions almost without number of cells in my body as there are the planets in the universe, more even, incredibly so, say some scientists. Neuron infrastructure and the rest of what is in our bodies vies in complexity with what is in Space. A planet ‘to itself’ may be vast and so too, myself. Are there two ways of seeing the situation, neither exclusive? Is it all according to perspective?
‘Ruminative reflection’ can go on to follow this path: Perhaps, as often said these days, our intuitions bespeak our being in touch with a form of higher consciousness? We come from the stars. Is the cosmos comparable to a human being and, if we want to understand the cosmos, is it in any way a feasible idea to start by looking at, and inside, ourselves, as much as by training the Webb Space Telescope at the heavens? Just perhaps, something in our origins and our innate being may have their parallel in the universe and its formation? Speculation perhaps, and more will follow, but…
Then comes intellectual reflection, which is very different. We are curious about the data, What of the facts on which we can base our thinking? Aristotle was among the first to see that we should bring common sense beliefs to look at a topic and tidy up evidence about the data.
We are reliant on the hard work of brilliant people to know as much as we think we do about the cosmos. These by enlarge are not ideas that we could think up unaided for ourselves. How do we know – if not following astrophysics – that the moon is 238.555 miles away? The earth may not be flat ‘as a pancake’ given the mountain ranges but do we check it out, ruler in hand?
What do we make of what we are told about the mind-blowing phenomena in Space? Do some things seem odd in the current view of the Cosmos? If so, what are they?
The scientific community is venerated. Do we dare raise an eyebrow at some of its theories? Genius at experiment and marvels of technology involve separate exercises from making deductions on the findings. Scientists particularly may be fascinated by what they discover, true, but even they often aren’t of one mind.
Curiosity awakened, we can consult, for instance, an impressive tour d’horizon in ‘New Scientist’s Essential guide to TIME: Adventures in the fourth dimension’ (Guide No 19, a wonderful summation of impressive work done about this frontier of discovery.
We can think for ourselves. Pack for this magical mystery tour of ‘intellectual reflection’ John Thorn’s advice to ‘show a healthy disrespect for the printed word’ – and perhaps a flask of brandy.
‘Did Einstein say this given the deniable fact that 92.5% of all statistics are invented at the time of utterance, including this one?’ writes Dan Remenyl.
‘Western philosophers were very sceptical about intuition as a means to acquire knowledge or to use it as a form of philosophical debate given that it did not appear to have sufficient objectivity. Bergson who made it a central platform of his philosophy changed philosophy for a while and was considered an important philosopher for about 10 years. Then his star fell and the same distrust came about. Recently again he has been going through a Renaissance especially amongst French thinkers.’, writes Nigel Jackson.
Those wishing to pursue the following subject should consult scientific tracts.
PROPOSITION A: THE BIG BANG
The Big Bang is thought to be the start of time and of space. In the beginning, it exploded out of nothing then rapidly expanded… When our space-time was less than a second old, this expansion accelerated faster than the speed of light of cosmic acceleration for a very brief moment, a percentage of a second with 40 zeros after the decimal, an exponential rate of increase (with mould on a loaf, what is a little bit because a lot very quickly)…The early universe can be tested by deciphering the cosmic microwave background radiation, the flood of light released 380,000 years after the Big Bang…The only thing that can violate the universal speed limit is space-time. (ibid).
QUERIES ON PROPOSITION A:
- Something surely must have been there before that starting point even if we do not know what it was. To quote Shakespeare in King Lear: ‘Nothing can come out of nothing!’
- If space-time isn’t entirely understood, how do we know that it can’t violate universal speed?
- A dissentient scientist: ‘Paul Steinhardt replaces the big bang with a big bounce and a cyclic universe.’ (ibid)
- A percentage of a second with 40 zeros after the decimal? That seems to be of an accuracy so extraordinary that one would feel more confident in the statistic if the word ‘estimated’ was added? The magnitude of the power exuded in such a minute fraction of time is so mind-bogging that one might be inclined to think it is entirely beyond present human comprehension
- The testing of the early universe as described above is indubitably a highly impressive exercise. How much of the multifarious features that must have characterised the early universe can be deduced from this observation?
PROPOSITION B: TIME DILATION
Bob sets up 2 pulses of lift to each end of the carriage. What he sees is that they hit the walls simultaneously, but this is not what Alice – an observer affected by the fact that the train has moved forward – sees from the platform.
If observers who move relative to one another cannot agree on the simultaneity of events they cannot agree on the measurement of time.
Exposition: What we think is that we are stationary but in reality we are all compared to an observer outside the planet… To Alice, the light-pulse travels a longer path than if the train is stationery. The speed of light is a constant so the time taken for one tick of the moving clock of Bob is longer according to Alice. According to Relativity Bob can make the same calculation but he regards the train as at rest – so he infers that the clock on the platform is running slow. The readings of the clocks ‘at the same instant’ can’t be compared until we decide what the same instant means; Bob and Alice think differently about it.
Example of testing: Christian Lisdat of the National Metrology Institute of Germany put a strontium atomic clock on a moving trailer with rubber dampers to mitigate (is that enough?) vibrations, climate control to stabiilise temperature, and measurements were taken in French mountains and in low-lying Turin. A year in the Alps was shown to be 84 nanoseconds longer in Turin. Tobias Boulder in 2023 in Colorado stacked hundreds of thousands of strontium atoms in a vertical stack I
QUERIES ON PROPOSITION B:
- The measurement of time, is surely what scientists can’t agree on, not time itself.
- Is the acid test of whether or not a thing exists is that ‘it can be measured’? One cannot accurately measure for instance an emotion but it may exist.
- The variation in speed may result from earth-bound factors not galactic ones?
PROPOSITION C: COSMOLOGICAL TIME DILATION
Time seems to have ticked more slowly when the universe was young. Light from ancient cosmic events travel increasingly longer distances to reach earth. Those events seem to unfold more slowly than an event here and now. Anyone around at the start would have seen time evolving normally
Exposition: Around 7 billion years ago an event appears to evolve at 60% of the speed we see today. In 2023 Geraint Lewis at Sydney University … detected a more extreme version earlier. They looked at 190 quasars, (objects at the centre of some galaxies – a supermassive black hole surrounded by a disc of hot plasma that spits out high energy particles) … The earliest quasar about 1 billion years after the start of the universe appears to run five times more slowly that quasars from today.
QUERIES ON PROPOSITION C:
- The speed of time in these examples ‘appears’ to us to be running more slowly but this may only be a consequence of our particular vantage point.
- Why is the speed of the quasar/s at the start of the universe said to be the same as that of subsequent quasars? It is a good hypothesis, not more.
- If time was ‘evolving normally’ at the start, does this beg the whole question?
- This is the tiniest of tiny differences. Need a tiny wrinkle like this affect the overall picture save in an academic sense?
PROPOSITION D: PERCEIVING TIME
Most of us can estimate time passing with amazing precision thanks to a complex network of neural mechanisms; perhaps we even create the arrow of time in our heads. Our bodies keep track of time unconsciously too – which contributes to our perception of time slowing down or speeding up
Exposition: In the absence of clocks, schedules or calendars our bodies still march to the beat of internal timekeepers called circadian (in the suprachiasmatic nucleus which relies on pendulum-like oscillations inside proteins to keep us in synch with the sun rhythms.) A connection to the spinning of earth on its axis that ensure that biological processes occur at the right time of day or night. Various organs work optimally at certain times, the way we respond to medicines etc – are our bodies operating in time with the physical world. Light hits specialised cells on the retinas of our eyes that send signals about the time of day to a master clock in the brain – it regulates a multitude of clocks in cells and organs throughout the body. ‘Place cells’ mark where in a spatial environment an animal is. If an animal walks in a linear tunnel, place cells fire in a linear line. Time cells do something similar but for the passage of time. At an event, ie a dinner party or movie, the brain recognises this as a specific or notable chunk of time, what neuroscientists call an ‘episode’. The subjective experience of time may depend on how many episodes one is creating.
To track the passing of time we may also need ‘ramping cells.’ Time cells wait till it is their turn to fire, a ramping cell will fire intensely to mark the beginning of an episode, then gradually slow down. So…the brain combines information from place cells about where an event is happening and sensory information about what is going on…then add in the time and ramping cell activity, and the brain puts all the information into the appropriate time frame. It’s packaged into episodic memories and stored allowing us to perceive the temporal order of our lives.
But there may be other rhythms. Theta rhythms – waves of brain activity that oscillate at around 4 to 8 hertz – may timestamp activities, depending on where within the wave they occur…there is one model proposed in which theta oscillations are happening in multiple places in the hippocampus and where other neurons fire relative to this wave. Some researchers believe that the brain can tell time without time and ramping cells.
QUERIES ON PROPOSITION D:
- This all seems an excellent way of mapping what is going on in our bodies and their extraordinary complexity. Is there an overriding query about whether all this fundamentally ‘explains’ what is going on? Are the above factors the result of something else? For instance, is there an actuating spirit in each of us? Are the above-given factors the physiological markings of this?
- ‘In synch with the sun’ – why is it in synch with just the sun? Surely this internal time clock, assuming it exists as an independent variable, is in synch with other cosmological bodies?
- An observation: ‘A ramping cell will fire intensely to mark the beginning of an episode, then gradually slow down.’ If we come from the stars, is the above-described process comparable to the order of the universe speeding up exponentially?
- The range of possible, seemingly contradictory explanations given implies that each explanation must remain for the time being as only a hypothesis.
- An animal – examples are given – may perceive time as passing at a different rate from human beings. Insects can live for just a day, a lifetime for them. Time being perceived by man in a way that suits man can be understood as having a subjective dimension on grounds of common sense.
PROPOSITION E: CAUSE AND EFFECT IN THE QUANTUM REALM
The lack of straightforward cause and effect in the quantum mechanical world muddles our understanding of how time works in the smallest realm.
Predicting the way a glass will shatter is easier than the process in reverse. Can objects be in two different states at the same time? Cause and effect doesn’t exist in the Quantum world; an object can be in two separate states at the same time.
Exposition: Quantum superposition (is defined) as an object being in two different states at the same time… In 2012 it was proposed that the temporal sequence of two events, just like the positions of a particle or the path it took, could also exist in superposition. Thus the arrow of time could have abrupt kinks in its trajectory. A Viennese University professor, Herr Walther, saw a photon pass through two gates, A & B, but it was impossible to tell which it went through first. This might hold true for causality. The idea that the present can influence the past is ‘retrocausality’ – follows from superposition
General Relativity doesn’t sit easily with quantum mechanics. General Relativity is a set of equations that describe the way classical objects are affected by gravity. The 3 dimensions of space and the 4th dimension of space are part of the same entity, woven into pace-time. Hence space-time bends around large masses. Time slows down when objects move close to the speed of light. Anything that concerns the dynamics of things larger than an individual particle.
Quantum mechanics by contrast shows that atoms and sub-atomic particles are governed by the other three fundamental forces of nature, the electromagnetic force and the strong and weak nuclear forces. Partciles can appear to be in two places at the same time, information passing between them even though they may be separated by large distances.
Particles can seem affected by events that happen in their future.
QUERIES ON PROPOSITION E:
- An observation: Retro-causality: the present can influence the past. It opens up an area of speculation that is hardly touched on in this account. It may be a way of explaining the circularity of time and the hypothesis mentioned above that surprising things that one felt keenly at an early phase of one’s life may hove into significance in the light of subsequent events.
- What might be true of the smallest realms doesn’t necessarily make it true of all other realms? Why because an observation happens at a nano-level does it have to hold good at a cosmic scale level? Why must there be just one such law governing all creation?
- This is of relevance to the ‘Schrodinger’s Cat’ conundrum (the mere fact of inspecting whether a cat inside a sealed box is dead or alive can alter its fate). The observer interferes with the observed. This may be logical given the results of ‘entanglement’ – whereby a particle might be in two places at the same time – but is the cat just a sum total of its’ particles?
- Two entangled particles might at different times exhibit the same phenomena, but why does it necessarily mean that one is able to affect the past by seeing a future event? In some contexts, that seems a possible outcome. What holds good with particles may not invariably apply to human stories?
- ‘Quantum superposition: an object can be in two different states at the same time.’ That surely doesn’t mean it cannot be in one state as well as the other. Why does the situation have to be perceived in a binary manner?
- If ‘the temporal sequence of two events also can exist in superposition, the arrow of time could have abrupt kinks in its trajectory.’ That doesn’t prove that time actually can go ‘backward’?
- Note the words ‘might’ and ‘hypothetical’ and the sentences ‘the experiment was tricky and the device had to be built in such a way that until the very end you cannot know or extract which was the result. ,,,,It is hypothetical that a photon fired near a planet with a strong gravitation pull which would cause nearby clocks to slow so one would get the photon before the start time’ They are the giveaway that we are in the further realms of hypothesis. It is admitted that testing the theory mentioned properly is not at present possible.
- Why is what holds good with particles – in particular the ‘retroactive causality’ – invariably apply to human stories? Is it going too far to claim on the basis of this theory, however well attested, that the future can retroactively influence the past?
PROPOSITION F: STEPHEN HAWKINGS’ FINAL THEOREM
Why is the universe just right for life to arise? Twiddle ever so slightly with any of the numerous laws of physics and habitability would often hang in the balance.
All that there is to know about the interior of Black Holes can be encrypted on their event horizon surface. Maldacena saw the universe like a hologram. A system of entangled particles located on a surface may contain within it all the information of a higher-dimensional cosmos with gravity and curved space-time. Einstein’s theory of gravity works with quantum theory. History itself is hologrammatically encrypted – in the dimension of time that holographically pops out. Time emerges in the ex post facto manner, contingent on the present. It’s not the laws that are fundamental but their capacity to change.
Exposition (a): It seems that some properties of physical laws were not carved in stone but could be the accidental outcome of the particular manner in which the early universe cooled after the big bang. Random transitions, so it there perhaps more than one universe? (p 74). Maybe there is a multiverse – an enormous inflating space with a variegated patch work of universe, each with its own big bang, leading to its own local physical laws.
Exposition (b): The Higgs boson (it weighs as much as 133 protons – this is a 100 million billion times lighter than what many physicists would consider a natural mass) couples to other particles of matter and so imbues them with mass, which adds to the Higg’s own matter, so one would expect it to be far weightier. The unbearable lightness of the Higgs is critical for life. Higgs keeps electrons, protons, neutrons etc and light as well, and this ensure that DNA, proteins and cells don’t collapse under the force of gravity.
Exposition (c): consider the expansion of the universe. In 1998 cosmologists discovered that the expansion of space has been accelerating for about 5 billion years. Because of Vacuum Energy, predicted by Quantum theory BUT the density of vacuum energy seems to be 10 x 120 times lower than expected of the theory. If the vacuum energy density of the universe were just a tad larger, however, its repulsive effect would be stronger and acceleration would have kicked in much earlier. This would have meant that matter was so sparsely distributed that it couldn’t clump together to forms stars and galaxies.
Hawking is not happy with a multiverse: ‘We are not angels who view the universe from the outside’. Multiverse cosmology needs ‘metalaws’ governing all the universes, but they don’t specify in which of the habitable universes we are supposed to be in. Without a rule that relates the metalaws of the multiverse to the local laws within our universe, there is a spiral of paradoxes.
QUERIES ON PROPOSITION F:
- Hawking’s question makes sense. What is odd is the fact that none of Hawkins’ collaborators teachers had appeared to ask the question ‘Why is the universe the way it is?’
- Hawkins’ doubts about a Multiverse seem likewise grounded. That there could be an infinity of universes each spinning off every nano-second, defies our credulity in what is more than just a typical counter-intuitive way that these theories sometimes have.
- ‘Without a rule that relates the metalaws of the multiverse to the local laws within our universe, there is a spiral of paradoxes’ – It is not just the fact that we don’t have this convenient rulebook that renders the idea way beyond comprehension.
- It is hard to see how all information that lies within an ‘event’ like a black hole can be deduced from what is on the surface; several facets or features no doubt, but that the entire interior can be gauged by its surface seems prima facie a bridge too far?
PROPOSITION G: Re: The expansion of the universe
In 1998 cosmologists discovered that the expansion of space has been accelerating for about 5 billion years.
Exposition: Because of Vacuum Energy, predicted by Quantum theory BUT the density of vacuum energy seems to be 10 x 120 times lower than expected of the theory. If the vacuum energy density of the universe were just a tad larger, however, its repulsive effect would be stronger and acceleration would have kicked in much earlier. This would have meant that matter was so sparsely distributed that it couldn’t clump together to forms stars and galaxies.
QUERY ON PROPOSITION G:
Why, when the universe is apparently 14.5 billion years old has it been accelerating for ‘only’ 5 billion years?
PROPOSITION H: Molecular Clocks
‘ticks using vibrations of strontium that could be used to test Einstein’s theory of relativity or search for forces that have yet to be described’.
QUERY ON PROPOSITION H:
- It is an admission that scientists are aware that there are forces yet to be described.
- The second law of thermodynamics may state that in a closed system (nothing goes in or out) entropy will always increase, with entropy being the measure of a system’s thermal energy per unit that is unavailable for doing useful work. To assume of a state like the entire cosmos that it is a closed system is begging one fundamental question: is the cosmos a closed system for any purpose other than making our theories about it sound neat?
- Or take ‘entropy’, a concept associated with a state of disorder, randomness, or uncertainty: to get from there to the idea that: ’the degradation of the matter and energy in the universe (will be) to an ultimate state of inert uniformity.’ may need so much unpacking that the packaging itself may obscure our gaze on what we can perceive as the reality
Back to Ruminative reflection
A kaleidoscope of staggering facts has been unfurled if we retain the faculty of wonder.
So much that we do not understand or can interpret with certainty about the cosmos! But then we ourselves, conscious beings, do not know what is our own essence. A soul, or our essence, is not able to render itself in language or be properly understood but yet there it is – if it is – actually inside of us, and we still don’t know what it is.
Like the cosmos, we came into being from nothing. We can see stages in which we came into existence but cannot unpack the mystery of the origin of semen or womb. Much as we can analyse the birth process for our understanding, we did not create it.
If a particle can be in two places at the same time – a mystery we can hardly hope to fully comprehend – and the same applies to atomic parts of planets as to us, it seems from this and other evidence that there is an interconnected system including us, and we are at least in part the stuff of stars. A key to fathom some mysteries in the cosmos may be closer at hand than astronomers currently think, namely in our own bodies?
Ruminative Reflection itself can need to relax from active to passive mode. This subtle change can be observed when one falls back onto tried and tested formulae such as:
On a particular day one can hear a great message of wisdom and it could have no meaning to one at all. The mind might not be tuned into that appropriate wavelength at that particular time. On another day the same message could change one’s life.
Hamlet’s homily that ‘there are more things in Heaven and Earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy’ has been overshadowed by an exponential increase in knowledge. We should take on board how much more we do not know that was not even suspected at the time Shakespeare was writing. If we consider all the questions, this journey may be more important than the arrival at a state of total knowledge about everything. Our perspective on our lives our attitude about our place in the universe and what is important in life, as we don’t know it, may have shifted towards reality – if that is of relevance…
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