Leonard Susskind - Is the Universe Fine-Tuned for Life and Mind?

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  • čas přidán 7. 01. 2013
  • For more videos and information from Leonard Susskind click here bit.ly/1xAleZd
    For more videos on whether the universe is fine-tuned for life and mind click here bit.ly/1F9IiM0
    To buy episodes and seasons of Closer To Truth click here bit.ly/1LUPlQS
    If the deep laws of the universe had been ever so slightly different human beings wouldn't, and couldn't, exist. All explanations of this exquisite fine-tuning, obvious and not-so-obvious, have problems or complexities.

Komentáře • 2,2K

  • @sithsmasher7685
    @sithsmasher7685 Před 8 lety +262

    I like this guy. He's very clear and straightforward with his explanation.

    • @Doctor_Eightball
      @Doctor_Eightball Před 5 lety +22

      Susskind is a legend.

    • @drzecelectric4302
      @drzecelectric4302 Před 4 lety +10

      Lenny rules. Look up his lectures.

    • @redhotbits
      @redhotbits Před 4 lety +2

      he is a troll

    • @BugRib
      @BugRib Před 4 lety +1

      Lazar Otasevic - 😆🤣😂

    • @hamzariazuddin424
      @hamzariazuddin424 Před 4 lety +8

      Susskind is one of my favourites in the contemporary science space....his books are brilliantly written and his story from being a plumber to becoming a physicist is inspiring too

  • @sngscratcher
    @sngscratcher Před 10 lety +105

    “Never get too attached to your current models/theories of reality, because new ones will be coming along soon that will alter/replace the old ones.”

    • @DarthNixaNixa
      @DarthNixaNixa Před 7 lety +17

      That's true, but we're constantly getting closer and closer to the truth. *Flat earth* was very wrong, but it explained some basic things; then *Classical mechanics* and modern science explained much more, but was still incorrect in some things. The current *Theory of Relativity* and *Quantum theory* explain all of those things, and are more correct in other things, but still not quuuiitee perfect. But you'll notice we're always getting closer. So it's not like suddenly we can end up with a radically different theory that makes all of former science obsolete.

    • @cazymike87
      @cazymike87 Před 5 lety +1

      " Then we'll live in a black hole...you cant live in a black hole " .... 2019 now and the holographic principle just say that.... And well > L. Susskind its a strong suporter of the ideea now . How about that?

    • @redhotbits
      @redhotbits Před 4 lety +2

      Darth Nixa relaivity and quantum theories are worse than flat earth

    • @firnekburg4990
      @firnekburg4990 Před 3 lety

      @@redhotbits Can you elaborate on that?

    • @timeWaster76
      @timeWaster76 Před 3 lety

      "Models and theories change but nature stays with what's real".

  • @fasteddiesgarage101
    @fasteddiesgarage101 Před 8 lety +353

    I don't care how weak Gravity is .It still gets me down

    • @Planet5555
      @Planet5555 Před 8 lety +2

      precisely

    • @youdontsay7696
      @youdontsay7696 Před 7 lety +2

      if gravity was anywhere near the strength of the other forces, earth would be a black hole

    • @anders5611
      @anders5611 Před 7 lety

      Because the earth is so fucking huge

    • @stxdude830
      @stxdude830 Před 6 lety +1

      +You don'T Say ? ets fun to toy w that idea, but I've never fully understood how gravity is weak. where do they get that from, in where do they view gravity stronger than et is now to know that gravity is actually weaker than et should be??

    • @anders5611
      @anders5611 Před 6 lety +5

      A small fridge magnet is enough to create an electromagnetic force greater than the gravitational pull exerted by planet Earth.

  • @diegovaldez5067
    @diegovaldez5067 Před 8 lety +102

    What a great scientist and thinker Leonard Susskind is. Easy to understand and follow very complex topics. Need I mention what a great science writer he also is.

    • @JoshuaMSOG7
      @JoshuaMSOG7 Před 2 lety

      @Donut dude it’s was sooo awesome while trump was POTUS. Now it’s boring

    • @JoshuaMSOG7
      @JoshuaMSOG7 Před 2 lety +1

      @Donut dude sleeeepy Joe

    • @ericocccams5865
      @ericocccams5865 Před 2 lety

      @@JoshuaMSOG7 keep your bullshit political comments to your self

    • @ericocccams5865
      @ericocccams5865 Před 2 lety

      @@JoshuaMSOG7 fuck trump and his cult of personality

  • @palfers1
    @palfers1 Před 5 lety +63

    The interviewer (who is he?) does a very fine job both with Susskind and with the subject matter.

    • @TheBenevolentDictatorship
      @TheBenevolentDictatorship Před 4 lety +16

      @Tony DC
      And often has a more realistic and fundamental understanding of the science than the people he is interviewing. He's a very knowledgeable and scientifically literate individual. Closer to Truth is a fantastic program. His interviews with Paul Davies are fantastic.

    • @roqsteady5290
      @roqsteady5290 Před 4 lety +9

      Best science channel on youtube. Will also make a great archive for future generations.

    • @TheBenevolentDictatorship
      @TheBenevolentDictatorship Před 4 lety +2

      Roq Steady
      Agree 100%

    • @aladjiibrahim6873
      @aladjiibrahim6873 Před 2 lety

      The channel belongs to him

  • @sharmitoboylos7585
    @sharmitoboylos7585 Před rokem +8

    Robert knows all this stuff as well as his guests, having studied their work before interviewing them. He knows how to get these brilliant people to talk to us so that we too can know. (Though mostly what they end up saying is that nobody knows anything for sure. Which I love. Cuz it makes me feel not quite so dumb.) I do very much enjoy these interviews. Thank you, folks.

  • @nickvoutsas5144
    @nickvoutsas5144 Před 2 lety +12

    Leonard is explaining the greatest miracle of life in a scientific manner.
    Why would there be anything in the 1st place without a God. Even the creation of a single electron is a miracle.

    • @davidcotuit
      @davidcotuit Před 2 lety +3

      Research the science and you will begin to understand why the universe came into existence without a god.

    • @Aguijon1982
      @Aguijon1982 Před rokem +3

      For a lazy mind everything is a miracle.

    • @nickvoutsas5144
      @nickvoutsas5144 Před rokem +2

      @@davidcotuit please do explain

    • @SimonBrisbane
      @SimonBrisbane Před rokem +3

      @Nick While I can sit here in furious agreement with you, that answer will never satisfy many people and is simply incoherent to many. This should be no surprise to the person of faith. Unless God opened your mind to accept his reality, you would be no different. The person of faith must recognise this fundamental schism exists not because of any inherent wisdom or knowledge lest they become arrogant with pride. It also serves as a motivator for us to plead with the all powerful God to reveal himself to others - there is no other way.
      Psalms 127:1 Unless the Lord builds the house, the builders labor in vain

    • @SimonBrisbane
      @SimonBrisbane Před rokem +3

      @@davidcotuit the science makes no such claims. As Prof. Susskind so kindly articulated, there are currently 3 schools of thought and he was so generous as to accept Deity as one of them.

  • @julyguy2670
    @julyguy2670 Před 2 lety +20

    I've been EXTREMELY gifted multiple times by you guys ever since I came upon your channel. Just really phenomenal content. Seriously, phenomenal! Thank you!

  • @Neura1net
    @Neura1net Před 10 lety +26

    Susskind and Penrose allways blow my mind. Thx for this great interview.

  • @kend7597
    @kend7597 Před 2 lety +6

    This guy came out of nowhere and is explaining things so well I’m learning about this stuff from a whole new perspective. I like him!

    • @benmaghsoodi2067
      @benmaghsoodi2067 Před 2 lety +6

      He's been a physics professor at Stanford for more than 40 years. Came out of nowhere?

    • @pedroakjr2371
      @pedroakjr2371 Před 2 lety +1

      You can watch hundreds of his lectures on stanford university's channel. He teaches many topics like classical mechanics, relativity, cosmology, quantum mechanics, string theory....he's a beast.

  • @Lutz-lo7cl
    @Lutz-lo7cl Před 3 měsíci +1

    Greetings from Germany. I could listen to Leonard Susskind all day… every day. His ability to explain komplex processes understandably is simply uncanny! Grüße gen Stanford aus Göttingen.

  • @Shockprowl
    @Shockprowl Před 3 lety +1

    This is the single most fundamental moment of a human being saying things I've ever heard. Thank you.

  • @therealist1103
    @therealist1103 Před 7 lety +27

    The fine tuning is special and so are you.

  • @WitoldBanasik
    @WitoldBanasik Před 8 lety +21

    Leo- you have already won a loosing battle with gravity.
    You are gravitonless and timeless hero, an hugely intelligent and though-provoking scientist who can easilly get the matter across.
    Thanks Professor Susskind. Long live Leonard !!!

  • @sonamoo919
    @sonamoo919 Před 2 lety +17

    With all his efforts to explain how things are as they are, I wonder how he would account for how these things began to exist at all.

    • @gireeshneroth7127
      @gireeshneroth7127 Před rokem

      Allah !

    • @commandvideo
      @commandvideo Před rokem

      @@gireeshneroth7127 then who created allah ? Your answer sucks

    • @thebacons5943
      @thebacons5943 Před rokem

      @@commandvideo it’s the only logical conclusion.
      You guys stop at “I guess it’s always been there.”
      Theists go a step further and imagine what the implications of a self-existent entity would really mean.
      At least in my view. We’ll all find out, or not.

    • @efabiano82
      @efabiano82 Před rokem

      Because, wizards!

    • @donaldwilson4451
      @donaldwilson4451 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Turtles!

  • @paulerdosdaughter
    @paulerdosdaughter Před 10 lety +32

    My favourite Professor in the world.

  • @thenintendogamer9318
    @thenintendogamer9318 Před 2 lety +5

    Susskind is superb like a proper guy with the knowledge from downtown love it

  • @martynjones2819
    @martynjones2819 Před 11 lety +9

    It's hard to believe we are all here by such a minute chance.

  • @fts2663
    @fts2663 Před 3 lety +1

    I love lenny susskind. He speaks so well and has a very clear understanding of things.

  • @evanjameson5437
    @evanjameson5437 Před 3 lety +1

    Susskind... "we approaching the end of observation".. greatest statement ever!!

  • @consciously1212
    @consciously1212 Před 10 lety +9

    Thanks for sharing and thanks Leonard Susskind for speaking with us.

  • @kolebronson24
    @kolebronson24 Před rokem +5

    This reminds me of the puddle of water who one day found itself existing in a pot hole. "Wow, this pothole seems to be absolutely perfect for me... its width and depth create the perfect size to contain me... not to big not to small... almost as if it was created with my existence in mind."
    He continues to ponder this concept until a car drove over the pothole and splashed him out... splashed out of existence never to be remembered. Splashed out of awareness of its perfect universe. The most insignificant of experience.

    • @hellomjb
      @hellomjb Před rokem

      But we're special!! Hahaha

    • @kingdomofbird8174
      @kingdomofbird8174 Před rokem

      But why the puddle is sentient

    • @kolebronson24
      @kolebronson24 Před rokem

      @@kingdomofbird8174 doesn't much matter, does it?

    • @kinetic7609
      @kinetic7609 Před rokem +1

      Water will conform to the shape of any cavity, any hole will do for water.
      Not the case with life.
      This is where the analogy fails.

    • @kolebronson24
      @kolebronson24 Před rokem

      @@kinetic7609 except here on earth, we see life conform to every imaginable environment, no matter how harsh they may seem. And we see life not just existing, but thriving in places we'd never expect. Environments do not form to suit the life they support, rather life makes do with the environment it's provided.

  • @timplum5698
    @timplum5698 Před 6 lety

    Easy thumbs up. The most cogent exploration of fine-tuning yet.

  • @usertoulouse
    @usertoulouse Před 2 měsíci

    Wow, 11 years old video. Never knew this channel existed for so long. Been watching since last few years only. Great channel. Wondering how many such hidden gems are unknown until youtube algorithm recommends them.

  • @gregoryarutyunyan5361
    @gregoryarutyunyan5361 Před 2 lety +16

    If you truly remember your childhood, you will understand that you knew answers to all of these types of questions. The things is that the universe is not accidental by nature but rather incidental. This is something that children see very well because they have not yet been taught all the explanations of whatever timeline one happens to live in.

    • @richardamos5898
      @richardamos5898 Před 2 lety +3

      A man being is born ignorant, not stupid.. And he is made stupid through education

    • @yommish
      @yommish Před 6 měsíci

      or maybe it’s because their brains aren’t developed and they’re given simple explanations by their parents. Children are curious-“why? Why? Why?” It’s the same reason scientists ask these questions about the universe.

  • @larry2388
    @larry2388 Před 7 lety +14

    Isn't it amazing that constants exist at all in a world where everything is constantly changing?

    • @neonpop80
      @neonpop80 Před 6 lety +2

      +LARRY Yea, they are like pillars by which everything emerges from. Kind of tells you something..

  • @SarcastHandleNotAvailable

    There's one thing people always forget - these (let's say) 30 constants are not completely independent of each other. It's not like you have 30 knobs on a machine and "someone" sets each one individually to a "perfect" setting and makes them all magically work toghether. One affects the possibilities and the range of others. It's more like 30 people in a line, one imagines a number, tells the number to the person next to them and adds "also, add 1-3 to my number as you wish and give similar instructions to the next person". Many of them are linked and why that's important is that some values EMERGE from the values of others. Some values are not an example of "let's carefully plan this to choose a value - ok, make it 3" but rather "ok, constant x is 8 and constant y is -5 so constant z is - 3". Oversimplification, yes, but just as an illustration. This changes everything enormously, it means you do not have to imagine an "almighty perfect creator" cause nobody else could decide on 30 values to make universe with life in it. It means you may need only a few initial values to be "right" (for OUR form of life), which you have to admit is incredibly different from the other proposal. Imagine baking a cake where you mix flour and water and you have to invent what you'll get and if you imagine wrong there's no cake. No, they do their thing and you get a new third thing - dough. It emerged, you didn't have to create it separately.

  • @salasvalor01
    @salasvalor01 Před 8 lety +1

    He seems like such a sage in his craft.

  • @bigblukiwi
    @bigblukiwi Před 3 lety +4

    For anything to be 'surprising' or 'unlikely' it has to be one 'event' that is different in a series of 'events'. We only have and ever will have one example of a 'universe' so have no other 'events' to compare it with so by definition it cannot be surprising or unlikely. He says 'we can only live where we CAN live' - end of story !

  • @GreaterDeity
    @GreaterDeity Před 11 lety +7

    I want the information in this man's mind added to my own. My goodness, what a brilliant human specimen.

  • @clintwolf1557
    @clintwolf1557 Před 5 lety

    Very interesting talk. Thanks.

  • @brentonakoname1902
    @brentonakoname1902 Před 7 lety +1

    Wow such an interesting topic.

  • @BillyViBritannia
    @BillyViBritannia Před 3 lety +24

    I think this argument (or the question, rather) has some big flaws. Why do we assume that a conscious observer or 'life' can only exist in the carbon based biological form we know?
    If we assume life and consciousness (which we have no idea how it works btw) can exist in other forms then the question becomes pointless. The universe is simply always "fine-tuned" for the kind of life that can exist in it.
    EDIT: leonard said it himself that countless possibilities are a prerequisite but he seems to disregard the possibility for countless forms of life and consciousness.

    • @poetryclubofficial
      @poetryclubofficial Před 3 lety

      exactly what i thought (Y)

    • @theresachung703
      @theresachung703 Před 3 lety +3

      You need a stable molecule for anything to exist. It’s not about life. It’s about chemistry

    • @fitnesspoint2006
      @fitnesspoint2006 Před 3 lety

      @@theresachung703 so when does the mind arise in a molecule. Also dark matter is not made of molecules. Your point is moot.

    • @leechybreeze
      @leechybreeze Před 3 lety +1

      @@fitnesspoint2006 Maybe your right. Maybe there's a weird-looking monster in another universe. If that's what you believe I recommend you right a book with Dr. Seuss. I don't see any evidence that something that doesn't have our DNA can be living or counciouslly observant until you have evidence its just a speculation.

    • @paulhaggisman3238
      @paulhaggisman3238 Před 3 lety +3

      @@leechybreeze I have that evidence. She served me yesterday in my local post office

  • @troydye7971
    @troydye7971 Před 10 lety +5

    It amazes me to listen to someone as academically distinguished and accomplished as Dr. Susskind descibe the infinitesimal liklihood of our existence because of the ultra-fine-tuned cosmological constant, then repeatedly subconsciously use words like "design" and "create" throughout this interview, but literally laugh off the existence of God as a possible reasonable explanation for the knife's-edge reality of our cosmological and biological existence. Yet he just validated the hand of God.

    • @seanhamilton9022
      @seanhamilton9022 Před 2 lety +1

      Consider the possibility that your concept of "creation" is tainted by the presupposition of god

  • @waynesloane8447
    @waynesloane8447 Před 5 lety +2

    I like the way Leonard Susskind more or less leaves 'other universes' or 'multiple universes' as pockets within essential one universe with variable conditions - which in a way suggests that many of the constants, aren't so constant, and the laws of physics, broken or different in other regions of one universe. Great interviewing, too, by Steven Weinberg (am I spelling his name correctly?).

    • @broski365
      @broski365 Před 8 měsíci

      Similar to our elements on the periodic table , that create certain attributes when combing certain building blocks, other universes who, let's say dont have electrons, will create balancing atoms and create a different periodic table of elements.
      It's very true that many people are too ignorant about other possibilities

  • @clintwolf4495
    @clintwolf4495 Před 5 lety

    Very interesting! Thanks.

  • @Dayepipes
    @Dayepipes Před 10 lety +10

    This guy once dealt with plumbing and now homes in on the nature of the universe. I once dealt with plumbing and finally made it up to the 17th century and home in on the nature of bagpipes. I love the way this guy forms premises. Of all the possible places, only the few places like have life "like" us.

  • @wdjaz
    @wdjaz Před 8 lety +23

    Kudos to this educator, we need more like him! I'm with him and tend lean toward his 'reason #3', however, listen closely to his last words. "and, a way of populating those possibilities'. So we're back to where we started aren't we? I ask what is the 'prime mover' what started the whole thing? Maybe we should revisit explanation #1 and give thanks for our ability to comprehend such questions for the the 70-80 odd years we have physical existence on terra firma :)

    • @jonwolf7252
      @jonwolf7252 Před rokem

      I've thought about this. The existence of 'God' doesn't guarantee that the God knows we're here. Moreover, if we were created in his image we could use an analogy. If I create a soup I don't necessarily know what happened to each pea. Nor do I care. Maybe that pea was undercooked compared to the onion. I don't know that. I don't care. And I will happily eat it. (7/10 on that analogy, but you get it I'm sure). :)

    • @terryhayward7905
      @terryhayward7905 Před rokem

      "what is the 'prime mover' what started the whole thing?"
      There is no prime mover, life is an accident, it may have only happened once, here and now, or it may be something that happens regularly.
      The universe is not constant, it will disappear and another will start again from the energy left behind, but the next, and the one before this one, may have no similarity to this one. Life on Earth has lasted for the merest fraction of a fraction of a microsecond in the the time span of THIS universe, and even less in the infinity of universes that have been before this one. We are not important in space-time, all we can do is make life as good as possible for all life while we exist.

    • @terryhayward7905
      @terryhayward7905 Před rokem

      @@jonwolf7252 I Know God, and God's name is Pure Chance.

    • @Yusufalsylheti
      @Yusufalsylheti Před 9 měsíci

      The fact that the universe could be any other way shows that it is dependent

  • @orsteinnsverrisson9893

    Probably the best video I have seen on CZcams.

  • @MOHNAKHAN
    @MOHNAKHAN Před 6 lety +1

    Great Discussion ...👍👍👍

  • @dougrigby5626
    @dougrigby5626 Před 10 lety +6

    Thank you professor for your time.

  • @macdavy70
    @macdavy70 Před 11 lety +25

    for my self the same conclusion was made in first year Biology, i began to ask my professor questions on the origin of DNA, and the best thing he could do is point me to the Miller-Urey experiment. Evolution does a fantastic job of explaining how the DNA molecule works once it exists, evolution does not explain DNA's existence and the Fact that the earliest fossils records we have still have DNA as complex as it is today, even Anthony flew had the courage to admit this.

    • @manofgod7622
      @manofgod7622 Před 3 lety +1

      DNA is formed from stuff like nitrogenous base, molecules etc (stuff we can make easily) but it contains also adenine, thymine, guanine and cytosine from which (as you already know from Miller-Urey experiment) we can create only adenine, but I see no reason why we shouldn’t one day be able to create cytosine etc also.

    • @manofgod7622
      @manofgod7622 Před 3 lety

      So, the conclusion is that DNA *most* likely formed from chemical soups from under the ocean.

    • @jcoats1203
      @jcoats1203 Před 3 lety

      An Atheist Incorrect. Absolutely not. If you think the cosmological constant is small, what you are suggesting is trillions and trillions of times less likely.

    • @primeminister1040
      @primeminister1040 Před 3 lety +3

      @@manofgod7622 yeah as if nature is the same as a controlled environment with pure chemical substances like a human lab, fuck off

    • @alfonstabz9741
      @alfonstabz9741 Před 3 lety

      @@manofgod7622 that's the point "able to "create" cytosine etc also." the word "create" implies a creator. amen!

  • @ManyHeavens42
    @ManyHeavens42 Před 2 lety +1

    Anytime you Evaluate Something It loses Appreciation ! And the longer, You must keep It Fresh, totally unbiased .

  • @ntak7716
    @ntak7716 Před rokem +2

    What an incredibly intelligent and intelligible man Leonard is.

  • @FMasamune
    @FMasamune Před 11 lety +3

    I also found that interesting. All of the things that he concludes after discussing the "edge of the knife" are merely speculations that just beg further questions. I find it quite odd how, him being a scientist, puts so much faith in a mere "mathematical possibility" based on string theory. Its interesting how so many scientists hold to this theory that is a mere possibility, without much evidence. Then they are quick to conclude other mathematical possiblities like white holes don't exist.

  • @fahadusman3538
    @fahadusman3538 Před 2 lety +5

    "why gravity is so much weaker than the other forces...well we don't really know but here is we do know even if it was a little bit stronger...stars will burn out too quickly...they wouldn't live long enough for life to evolve.." if this is not fine tuning then what is fine tuning? 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @tinetannies4637
      @tinetannies4637 Před 2 lety

      If you watch the whole video, Susskind suggests that there may simply be numerous random possibilities within what he calls the megaverse, and ours is just the one that happens to work.

    • @fahadusman3538
      @fahadusman3538 Před 2 lety

      @@tinetannies4637 I did watch the whole video actually. You're welcome to keep the notion that 'ours just happens to work' without any reason or its just a fluke?

    • @247artsnsourcing6
      @247artsnsourcing6 Před 2 lety

      @@tinetannies4637 Or it can also mean if it is not fine tuned find one example where you can say that look this planet also happens to have life. But you can't yet find any example and thus rely on other possibilities to prove it as an accident. And we are not even discussing the prime mover of all such possible megaverses

  • @DenianArcoleo
    @DenianArcoleo Před 3 lety

    An enormously important and illuminating interview.

  • @binjm3a
    @binjm3a Před 10 lety +1

    The design argument is one of the most powerful argument that human being created . But its very deep to understand it in its different way

  • @dougg1075
    @dougg1075 Před 4 lety +7

    The beauty of this universe is that it does ask questions through us. It seems it would be an amazing waste of a bubble universe ( that is huge as ours ) if nobody was around to admire it... or a mindless empty universe. Aren’t we the mind of the universe?

    • @system-error
      @system-error Před 2 lety +3

      Somebody says something like that in Werner Herzog's documentary 'Encounters at the End of the World'. That the universe created us to look at itself, we are the universe admiring itself. But frankly I think those UFOs zipping around the skies and oceans, defying all known laws of physics, I think those guys have some explaining to do. I think we need to know what's up with those guys, before we can claim to be the mind of the universe.

    • @timorean320
      @timorean320 Před rokem

      "Blueprints" are always created by an Architect.

  • @gresach
    @gresach Před 3 lety +7

    Conway's "Game of Life" says that even with silly simple rules, intelligent life would evolve from a sufficiently-large universe sown with a random starting situation. Maybe there is the possibility for life in many other universes, although it wouldn't look much like us

  • @nivasnaturelife5338
    @nivasnaturelife5338 Před 7 lety +1

    Wow. The term Megaverse was on my mind even before I knew about the Multiverse concept. Not exactly same but my term was "Mega-Universe"

  • @HajirJMoghaddam
    @HajirJMoghaddam Před rokem

    Really good explanation

  • @marklarkento2043
    @marklarkento2043 Před 9 lety +18

    Backwards question.
    Life & mind are tuned by the universe.

  • @girlsgathering
    @girlsgathering Před 10 lety +9

    Susskins bio is interesting. Read it!! He was working as a plumber before he studied physics....." When I told my father I wanted to be a physicist, he said, ‘Hell no, you ain’t going to work in a drug store.’ I said no, not a pharmacist. I said, ‘Like Einstein.’ He poked me in the chest with a piece of plumbing pipe. ‘You ain’t going to be no engineer,’ he said. ‘You’re going to be Einstein.’"

  • @jachmoodyable
    @jachmoodyable Před 8 lety +1

    "Cosmological constant"; how fascinating...

  • @easywind4044
    @easywind4044 Před 2 lety

    This is a good explanation of the anthropoid principle.

  • @BronsonM6049
    @BronsonM6049 Před 7 lety +5

    What was the name of this interview? I really enjoyed it, want more!

  • @rumraket38
    @rumraket38 Před 9 lety +8

    So, can any one here tell me why they think the universe is fine-tuned for life, instead of just fine-tuned to produce carbonaceous chondrites? Or methane? Or carbon dioxide? These things are dependent on all the same constants and laws as life as we know it, so why do people think life is *more important* than these other things? Why are they so incredibly anthropocentric? Also, who says there aren't other possible combinations of laws that also allow life, but life not as we know it? Life dependent on other kinds of laws of attraction and repulsion, laws that produce completely different kinds of particles and different kinds of interactions? Why do you think our current, carbon-base life is the only possible form of life?

    • @megag52
      @megag52 Před 9 lety

      yes there is a bias. one could say "maybe the universe is finely tuned for ipads" the reason there is a human bias is because it might make some sense that a big magic man would be motivated to make a universe for people but doesn't seem like he would for apple products.
      the fact is the world is finely tuned for life (as well as electronics) and that does demand an explanation, naturalistic or otherwise.
      i do agree that life most likely could evolve in very very different conditions, even if it took trillions or Quadrillions of years, because life is statistically inevitable that if life CAN possibly form sooner or later it will. However you do need a universe for that and some if some parameters were diff there would be no stable universe so thats a factor
      i recommend Sean Carroll on this topic

    • @megag52
      @megag52 Před 9 lety +2

      Shehzad Ahmed
      not true. there is not reason the universe couldn't be rearranged in such a way that there are no atoms but energy is rearranged in such a way life can occur. its easy to imagine life without atoms

    • @jameswhyte1340
      @jameswhyte1340 Před 9 lety

      The roll of the dice, probabilities. You wouldn't be alive to know any other alternative than this one. I am speaking of course of the theory of the multiverse. If true, which it seems it may be. Then there are many Universes and we just happen to be in the lucky one that can produce life with this random set of variables.

    • @TheRobdarling
      @TheRobdarling Před 4 lety

      One word answer... ego.

  • @servandobeltran7842
    @servandobeltran7842 Před rokem

    I like this interviewer he is tough and demanding for complicated explanations, i seen several other interviewers.

  • @matthewa6881
    @matthewa6881 Před 7 lety

    excellent, very clear

  • @MrAvidLearner
    @MrAvidLearner Před 7 lety +4

    I'd really appreciate if someone explained the image on Mr Susskind's shirt....

    • @orchidleo
      @orchidleo Před 7 lety +5

      M1KA3L it's a drawing of the way one string decays into two strings, sort of a short hand like Feynman diagram in QED( quantum electrodynamics). the diagrams are a simple expression to help understand how strings behave. but the math behind it is extremely difficult both in QED and string theory.

    • @jessemastenbroek7343
      @jessemastenbroek7343 Před 7 lety +2

      I'm pretty sure there are two snails crawling in that diagram

  • @terrifictomm
    @terrifictomm Před 2 lety +6

    This fine-tuning sounds like the one miracle physicists need in order to explain everything else by natural laws.
    Nope. Can't have it!

    • @jamesgrey7031
      @jamesgrey7031 Před 2 lety

      Go pray some more

    • @terrifictomm
      @terrifictomm Před 2 lety

      @@jamesgrey7031
      Non-sequitur. Off topic. Come back when you have something relevant to add.

  • @liningwzgl
    @liningwzgl Před 5 lety

    I'd like to listen to this man talking for all day long.

  • @ErgoCogita
    @ErgoCogita Před 9 lety +12

    This is rather as if you imagine a puddle waking up one morning and thinking, 'This is an interesting world I find myself in - an interesting hole I find myself in - fits me rather neatly, doesn't it? In fact it fits me staggeringly well, must have been made to have me in it!' -Douglas Adams

    • @TheZacdes
      @TheZacdes Před 8 lety +2

      ErgoCogita A perfect analogy in a few words that ime damn sure very few people got when reading:)

    • @jonesgerard
      @jonesgerard Před 8 lety

      +ErgoCogita The weak anthropic argument has been solidly refuted, you didn't get the memo.

    • @ErgoCogita
      @ErgoCogita Před 8 lety +1

      jonesgerard
      I'm not sure how you think I disagree with you when the entire point to the quote above is too highlight the fact.

    • @mibraliy
      @mibraliy Před 8 lety +3

      Well, if you change the shape and size of the hole in your analogy, the water will still exist even if it's in another hole; however if you change the 'shape and size' (the numbers) of the cosmological constant even so slightly the universe itself wouldn't exist. So if the pond was conscious and had any sense at all, it should reason that 'hey, if someone used their pinky finger to move a bit of mud from my hole; then I, and the hole that shelters me, as well as any possible configuration of holes that could ever shelter me, would dissappear to nonexistence'. Unfortunately not all holes think this way though.

    • @jonesgerard
      @jonesgerard Před 8 lety

      +ErgoCogita What is the consequence of the puddle fitting the hole.? nothing.
      It doesn't produce a universe does it?
      It does nothing. But you think its the same thing.

  • @LazlosPlane
    @LazlosPlane Před 5 lety +52

    "I have proof for the multi-verse!" said no one ever.

    • @u.v.s.5583
      @u.v.s.5583 Před 5 lety +3

      I do.
      There is the trivial multiverse, equivalent to the empty set, and this exists trivially.
      The next smallest multiverse contains one universe. We observe one, hence we live a multiverse which contains within itself this next smallest multiverse. Hence, nontrivial multiverse exists.

    • @bombdottcom111
      @bombdottcom111 Před 4 lety +1

      @@u.v.s.5583 interesting- what do you mean in layman's terms?

    • @u.v.s.5583
      @u.v.s.5583 Před 4 lety +1

      @@bombdottcom111 If I have one bottle of beer, I have beer. The quantity of BEER in BEER is not specified. The number of universes in a multiverse is not specified either, and it is not at all clear that we speak of multiverse only if it has at least two elements - at least two universes. One may be enough.

    • @bombdottcom111
      @bombdottcom111 Před 4 lety

      @@u.v.s.5583 yeah that's what's weird and mysterious about this theory.

    • @kvaka009
      @kvaka009 Před 4 lety +1

      @@u.v.s.5583 sounds like the ontological argument for God. Just as useful too.

  • @MikkoHaavisto1
    @MikkoHaavisto1 Před 9 lety +4

    First our planet looks fine-tuned, then our solar system, then our galaxy and then scientific progress has shown that our planet, solar system and galaxy are not the only ones, but there might be infinitely many. Now our universe seems fine-tuned? In my opinion the best explanation is that our universe is just one of many.

    • @exiledfrommyself
      @exiledfrommyself Před 9 lety +1

      The universe is not finely tuned for anything nor does it have some sort of goal it's trying to reach. Everything in this universe conforms to the laws of this universe and if the numbers were different, everything in that universe would conform to the laws of that universe. From the universe's perspective we're no different from a rock or for that matter, anything else in the universe but we try to give ourselves more importance.

    • @jonesgerard
      @jonesgerard Před 9 lety +3

      exiledfrommyself "we're no different from a rock"
      So you consider yourself to be as unimportant as a rock.
      Atheist physicists accept the element of fine tuning. If they didn't they wouldn't have to resort to a multiverse.
      But its important to note the multiverse idea has only one purpose,
      and that purpose is to elude the implication of a designer and nothing else, its not even science.

    • @exiledfrommyself
      @exiledfrommyself Před 9 lety

      jonesgerard I consider humans more important than rocks but that's just my subjective opinion. In the eyes of the universe, rock human - same difference.
      If any Atheist physicists say there is such a thing as "fine tuning" they don't know what they're talking about. The universe is what it is and everything in it is just an unintended consequence of the expansion.

    • @exiledfrommyself
      @exiledfrommyself Před 9 lety

      *****
      There is no "fine tuning problem". Science can only tell you what the numbers are. Trying go beyond that is not science. Things like the meaning and purpose behind something are all creations of the human mind; they don't exist outside of it.
      The numbers are what they are and everything in the universe conforms to those numbers. I'm sure you've heard the example of someone looking at a puddle and then claiming the hole in the ground was fine tuned for the water because the water fits the shape of the hole so perfectly. The water took the shape of the hole and if the hole was different the water would take that shape. What would give me pause is if the universe was made up of different numbers and we still managed to exist in our current form. Us and everything else in the universe conforming to the laws of the universe is expected and shouldn't lead anyone to believe that there's some sort of design element.

    • @exiledfrommyself
      @exiledfrommyself Před 9 lety

      *****​ I cling to what is, not to what someone speculates. If you think the numbers have some sort of meaning behind them I'm more than willing to hear and examine your evidence.

  • @machina_aeterna
    @machina_aeterna Před 2 lety

    Marvelous Exchange. 2 masters at their best. Per the video, there are couple of dozen constants that rest on razors edge, if they were different, we couldn't be here. Chiefly among these is the tiny cosmological constant. We're talking a force with 123 numerical places to the right of the decimal. Nobody knows why it is so small but if it were bigger stars and planets could not have formed. Physicists don't understand why it is so small, but it is curious that this universe is so fine tuned for life. At then end of this video, Suskin makes the analogy that just as there are an infinite way of rearranging DNA do make life forms, so it is with matter. We only see one configuration of matter in this universe, but there may be other universes out there with very different properties than ours.

  • @ngcastronerd4791
    @ngcastronerd4791 Před rokem

    Third option blows my mind to this day.

  • @dennisboyd1712
    @dennisboyd1712 Před 5 lety +10

    WOW It makes one feel like someone wanted us around

  • @TomekSamcik69
    @TomekSamcik69 Před 10 lety +5

    I love this guy

  • @tthd
    @tthd Před 5 lety

    This is the best thing i ever seen on some sort of monitor....

  • @0308JJ
    @0308JJ Před 7 měsíci

    Thanks!

  • @aaronshure3723
    @aaronshure3723 Před 9 lety +3

    The Universe was clearly fine tuned for death. It is an instrument "tuned" to a sadistic melody.
    Life for individuals is unimaginably short. As a more general concept, life itself (and planets and stars for that matter) are possible only in a tiny fraction of the universe and for only a relatively small part of the Universe's expansion until it spreads out into an infinitely cold empty void.

    • @ShroudTheSky
      @ShroudTheSky Před 9 lety +1

      The smaller you are, the faster you die. Of course there are some exceptions. But how long does one of your skin cells live? How long do you live? How long does a planet live? How long does a sun, a solar system, a galaxy, how long does a universe live? The bigger you are, the longer you live.

    • @mikesubban1883
      @mikesubban1883 Před 9 lety +2

      Aaron Shure evil comes from somewhere I m sure if you dig deep enough you ll be able to figure it out.

    • @mastertheillusion
      @mastertheillusion Před 9 lety +1

      Mike Subban it comes from the shadowy parts of human imagination

    • @catherinedagreatful2172
      @catherinedagreatful2172 Před 9 lety

      Aaron Shure LMHO!!

    • @ibbjos08
      @ibbjos08 Před 8 měsíci

      The more I learn about these topics the more thankful I am to have experienced life and consciousness. No matter how painful and short it can be.

  • @jakestone1394
    @jakestone1394 Před 7 lety +74

    Thank God for Fine Tuning.

    • @irasthewarrior
      @irasthewarrior Před 5 lety +4

      God was fine tuned to meet our primitive needs.

    • @zagyex
      @zagyex Před 5 lety +4

      God is the point where you stop asking.

    • @mrcurly1147
      @mrcurly1147 Před 5 lety +1

      Yes, thanks to the Great Moogly Googly for the universe. And thanks to him for tuning this .00000000000000000001% that we can survive in, just for us.

    • @GJ-dj4jx
      @GJ-dj4jx Před 5 lety +1

      What if he's a an asshole?

    • @ethanezrahite1800
      @ethanezrahite1800 Před 5 lety

      @@zagyex WHAT?! God is the point where you start asking!

  • @scottgreen3807
    @scottgreen3807 Před 3 měsíci

    People get mad at me for loving this stuff. They don’t want it. I love it. This last year at 65, I’ve been taught quantum physics by our new buddy AI with utubes help. This is exactly where it leads me. This ocupies my mind as I work all day. Good stuff. solution three is inevitable. I’ve number four. God, er no the universe itself is using tests, observation, research, information ect just the way humans do to decide what’s next. It creates a paradox of the unsolavble because the test beds interact. Call it Scott quantum observable quantum paradox, It seems we found the computer code to simulate the universe, organization, but the computer itself is absent. You, your mind and the data, the universe together we create this consciousness so yes it is conscious too solving much. I theorize more. I love it some like it. I discuss this with AI and my current coworkers so so great.

  • @SuperOlivegrove
    @SuperOlivegrove Před 2 lety

    I could listen to susskind all day and all night

  • @scottfree1776
    @scottfree1776 Před 3 lety +9

    Regardless of the miracles he describes in the Universe & the miracle of existence itself, God still still seems out of the question. Christianity sent science on a mission to find God, and he keeps showing up, only to be denied his existence.

  • @JoshYates
    @JoshYates Před 7 lety +8

    Other life could live in more extreme conditions, not just where water is present....even if it's a single cell organism. Extremities.

  • @zeyada.elbaser7213
    @zeyada.elbaser7213 Před 2 lety +1

    "And He created everything and ordained it in full measure.” - Holy Quran

  • @MrVikingsandra
    @MrVikingsandra Před rokem

    I'm gonna get myself some of his books for sure 👍

  • @michael4506
    @michael4506 Před 7 lety +55

    "Physicist never understood why it's so small" - that's what she said 😂

  • @brootpk
    @brootpk Před 4 lety +4

    One of my favorite living physicists hands down! Thanks to CZcams and Stanford I’ve sat through HOURS of his lectures. Oddly enough, THIS video, from my favorite atheist physicist, is one of many reasons why I believe in a God/Supreme being. #CosmologicalKnifeEdge

    • @Gatorbeaux
      @Gatorbeaux Před 4 lety

      BrootPK I came to Jesus while studying biology (DNA) in college and found Susskind and was amazed at his simple way of explaining such amazing singly complex subjects- I bet a lot of these scientists truly believe behind the scenes (I actually know hundreds of biologists who are Christians but cannot admit this as to lose grant funding and so on). This guy is terrific- my dad read about him in the early 70s.....

    • @walterdaems57
      @walterdaems57 Před 4 lety +1

      Go ahead as long as you don’t attach a religion to it

    • @Gatorbeaux
      @Gatorbeaux Před 4 lety

      Walter Daems what if the facts support a religion? Would you still turn a blind eye? The Big Bang was the creation event described in Gen 1:1. The scientific facts we have today prove the universe had a supernatural beginning (because there were no laws of nature before the Big Bang) I was an atheist scientist for about 10 mins back in the 90s and science is what revealed GOD to me. I let the facts speak for themselves and it exposed complexity that no natural causes could “ create” ...... that’s truly a case for “Naturalism of the gaps “. We don’t know but we can dEF cancel out a supernatural occurrence because our “faith” won’t allow it. Just follow the evidence . It’s all black and white

    • @walterdaems57
      @walterdaems57 Před 4 lety +1

      Bad Gator the ‘facts’ support all and none religions and are completely supportive in the eye of the beholder. People tend to transform their wishes into beliefs but believing and thinking are two different exercises. Unfortunately, once people are caught up in a belief system they are not longer approachable in a rational way. I confess that I don’t know if God(s) exist but I’m pretty sure that he, she or it won’t have a high opinion from a flock, preachers and pope’s who are so arrogant to pretend that they know what he, she or it is thinking and I’m even more convinced that he, she or it doesn’t give a rats ass about abortion, gays and all matters that make believers wave with one or another religion.

    • @Gatorbeaux
      @Gatorbeaux Před 4 lety +2

      Walter Daems do you believe in objective truth or is your truth good for you and mine is good for me? Does 2+2= 4 in your world? It does in the real world and in every world. This has nothing do for with subjectivity or “wishes turning into beliefs” or I’d totally be following Buddha. Christianity doesn’t make anyone comfortable. Quite the opposite. If calls out what’s wrong in the world and gives a playbook in which to live a moral life by with an objective standard for those morals.

  • @darwinlaluna3677
    @darwinlaluna3677 Před rokem

    Thank you, im fully aware

  • @sandrajeffares1023
    @sandrajeffares1023 Před 4 lety +1

    Fined. Tuned to me means perfect music that this Earth and occupants only hear November 2019 sound comes first then movement occurs

  • @KebunH
    @KebunH Před 8 lety +15

    How about this: life is fine tuned for the universe. I really dont get it why scientists keep debating its the other way around

    • @atheistlehman4420
      @atheistlehman4420 Před 8 lety +5

      +Kevin van den Hoek
      Because people have very strong beliefs about God and are willing ignore their training in order to lead the evidence to their own preferred conclusion.

    • @enhaxed7839
      @enhaxed7839 Před 8 lety

      +Michael Hurwitz copout or not it may still be correct

    • @nathanhopkins7976
      @nathanhopkins7976 Před 8 lety +2

      +Kevin van den Hoek
      This seems for right, honestly. After all, isn't evolutionary theory essentially about life adapting itself to environmental conditions, not the other way around?
      That and, fine-tuning overestimates how suited for life the universe is. Even on earth, many environments are ill suited for life, most planets are ill suited for life. It seems arrogant to say the universe is the way it is so we can exist.

    • @DeusExAstra
      @DeusExAstra Před 7 lety +4

      I think you missed the point. Yes life is fine tuned for the universe, but why is life even possible in the universe? Given the possible ranges of the constants, most possible universes should not allow ANY life, much less ours. So why are we in a universe that's incredibly unlikely?

    • @enhaxed7839
      @enhaxed7839 Před 7 lety

      This is the old conflict between the weak anthropic principle (WAP as earlier mentioned) and the strong anthropic principle and you haven't added anything new to the debate.
      It's unlikely to be settled until there is a definitive answer as to whether we live in a multiverse or not, I'm not holding my breath.

  • @bobthebuilder4660
    @bobthebuilder4660 Před 4 lety +4

    the professor and others like him seem to have stumbled into philosophy - we have not observed anything like a multiverse or detected the necessary extra dimensions nor charted the vastness of the landscape, yet he speaks as if it is.... what we have is the observable universe... and that is incredibly fine tuned.... draw your own conclusions....

  • @MrSlovanprofessor
    @MrSlovanprofessor Před 6 lety

    very good talk

  • @keithbell9348
    @keithbell9348 Před 7 lety

    You have to appreciate the candor in AE's explanation: theories, ideas, investigation, even in recognizing these approaches seek to offer explanation as to how the universe may behave but not in how it arose.

  • @dfergus04111972
    @dfergus04111972 Před 9 lety +3

    Maybe I'm just being dense, but it seems to me we are the way we are because the universe is the way it is. The universe is not the way it is simply to support us. This just doesn't seem to be a valid question to me.
    If the universe weren't the way it is now we simply would not be. For me it is something like we are in the Goldilocks zone of the univers timewise. It's as simple as that. No big mystery.
    Life takes hold where can. At some point our current universe will not exist. Then there will be something else. Perhaps that something else will be completely hostile to life. Would we then if we were able to perceive that time think gee, existence must really hate us because we are unable to exist here. This place is fine tuned against us...?
    Anyway you get my point.

    • @catherinedagreatful2172
      @catherinedagreatful2172 Před 9 lety

      David F I sure do, and so it goes...

    • @teezzur
      @teezzur Před 8 lety

      David F finally a brain.... YAY! You are correct sir!

    • @TheZacdes
      @TheZacdes Před 8 lety

      David F At last, someone who sees it like i do, simple:/ We exist because the random conditions of the verse..the constants, came out in a way that allowed the formation of atoms, galaxys, stars, etc:/ It could be no other way and still have us here arguing about "fine tuning",lol. AS he said, taking earth as example, wow, what a miracle the earth just happened to be just right for us:/ Got the donkey by the tail, we are here only because conditions are right for life like ours, so thats what you get! Could have been different, probably is in one of the many other verses that i have little doubt exist out there. His "pocket universes", only i see it as many individual verses, each with its own laws, not connected by physical space as he suggests. Why do they over complicate shit:/ It does NOT cry out for an explanation, its pretty bloody obvious:/

    • @Teralek
      @Teralek Před 8 lety

      David F That's fine and logical. I used to think like you until I understood the Boltzmann brain paradox.
      So I cant just quickly answer a question like you did. This is still unknown. Mystery... it's fascinating.
      www.preposterousuniverse.com/blog/2008/12/29/richard-feynman-on-boltzmann-brains/
      I warn you though this is hard concept to grasp totally...

    • @dfergus04111972
      @dfergus04111972 Před 8 lety

      I've heard of the Boltzman brain paradox. Need to refresh my memory. Will look into it again more closely. Maybe we can discuss the ideas presented. Thanks for the idea.

  • @defenderoftheadverb
    @defenderoftheadverb Před 9 lety +3

    The Anthropic Principle implies that this sort of thing is just what we should expect. Not "fine tuning" but the apprehension that there is such a thing as "fine tuning".
    If you come to it from a theistic point of view the "fine tuning" is there to see. If you come at it with no preconceptions the apprehension disappears.
    What we can say with some certainty is that the universe is what it is and life is a product of it. Any assumption of purpose, design, fine tuning etc. is guesswork.

    • @ShroudTheSky
      @ShroudTheSky Před 9 lety

      Good statement sir.

    • @defenderoftheadverb
      @defenderoftheadverb Před 7 lety

      @Jon. We don't. That response is provoked by the same anthropocentric bias that gives us the fine tuning illusion.

    • @chriswaters926
      @chriswaters926 Před 2 lety

      Life is the flexible component.

  • @peterc4447
    @peterc4447 Před rokem

    To the fine tuning parameters add all the accidents and collisions that produced our sun, our world and eventually life. They greatly exceed the fine tuning parameters. The mega verse not only has to produce a world with water, but must do it countless times until life gets its lucky break.

  • @MrRamon2004
    @MrRamon2004 Před 10 lety

    la creación es hermosa, saber que soy parte de ella me hace feliz, somos energia inteligente. somos luz. ramon.

  • @ErgoCogita
    @ErgoCogita Před 10 lety +8

    We are fine tuned for physical law. Not the other way around. I like how he was influenced by biological "design space" but I strongly suggest he should use a somewhat more accurate term of recipe, not blueprint, for a variable law universe. Most evolutionary biologists would tend to suggest the same regarding DNA. There is no representation of the finished product within DNA so blueprint fails to convey the emergent effect of simple chemical reactions.

    • @ErgoCogita
      @ErgoCogita Před 10 lety +1

      ***** "Technically, the system as it functions via DNA already contains all the possible calculable blueprints/products"
      You tried to slide the word blueprint right back into a statement that is supposed to explain _WHY_ the word "blueprint" should be used. A blueprint is a representation of the finished product. Nowhere within DNA is there any such representation, in whole nor in part.
      "But the "tuning" is not in the above... It is, as you've said, in the "effect of simple chemical reactions", meaning - all the Universal constants, all chemical constants, the nuclear forces, the electromagnetic constants of Nature..."
      That effectively destroys any power in the fine tuning argument as it is used by theists. What is left in it's ashes is an argument for deism.
      "If the Universe wasn't fine-tuned, then they should be "evolving" in separate parts of the cosmos differently"
      Your conclusion does not follow from the single premise you gave. However, it does suggest that it is possible that some constants _ARE_ different in other patches of the Universe. After all, if the Universe can evolve/change from it's primordial conditions at different times/places, then why can't some of the conditions be different in disparate patches and/or at different times? Nobody is arguing that they _ALL_ have to be subject to change, merely some. And a little change goes a long way in a causal chain.
      In the end, I think Feynman said it best with :
      _If it turns out it’s like an onion with millions of layers and we’re just sick and tired of looking at the layers, then that’s the way it is, but whatever way it comes out it’s nature is there and she is going to come out the way she is, and therefore when we go to investigate it we shouldn’t predecide what it is we’re trying to do except to try to find out more about it. _ -Richard Feynman

    • @ErgoCogita
      @ErgoCogita Před 10 lety

      ***** "because there are Laws that supersede things, which govern everything past the size of Planck units. You won't find much on this angle in your public physics courses schoolbooks."
      Are you just practicing sophistry or what? Do you really think physical laws and the Planck scale are somehow an arcane "angle"?
      "It is very arrogant of mankind to devise and to put forward "Theories of Everything","
      Audacious, not arrogant.
      "But have Faith. ;=)"
      Meh, I have no need for faith. Reason is a far superior tool.

    • @WmTyndale
      @WmTyndale Před 10 lety

      It is Doubtful whether you have even reached the ERGO!

  • @trentbell2718
    @trentbell2718 Před 8 lety +41

    This is just confirmation bias. If we were not in a universe able to foster life we wouldn't be able to ask the question...

    • @iainmacbeth4543
      @iainmacbeth4543 Před 8 lety +4

      +Trent Bell The anthropic principle encapsulated .

    • @sayenshin
      @sayenshin Před 8 lety +4

      +Trent Bell Maybe not, but the problem is still there. There IS a Universe/World/Reality (whatever you'd like to call the entierety of the world) and the ''laws'' are very precise for life to form at some point when the right conditions happen. Then, the Universe from which we are a part of gets self-concious of itself. Strange paradox really and I'm not confident to say it's either confirmation bias or some strange selfawareness mecanism the Universe possesses.

    • @nathanhopkins7976
      @nathanhopkins7976 Před 8 lety

      +Trent Bell
      I think part of the problem with this is, without knowing how consciousness and thought themselves work, the best we can say is "We know life of the kind we have in this reality (organic beings primarily made of Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen, etc.) would not exist." Perhaps organic life exists on a knife's edge, but other kinds of thought or awareness as allowed in a material universe do not. This is not an explanation by any means, merely an acknowledgement of the limits of our current understanding. And while it is certainly no disproof, I think it does do merit to weaken the "spookiness" of fine tuning in this way.

    • @DeusExAstra
      @DeusExAstra Před 7 lety +2

      Saying that doesnt solve the problem, it just ignores it.

    • @nathanhopkins7976
      @nathanhopkins7976 Před 7 lety

      DeusExAstra
      You're assuming it's a problem with a solution, and excluding the ones which don't match your personal criteria for what a solution is. The truth is, it's only a problem in the first place because humans exist. Without people to think about the problem, there is no problem, only the existence mathematics, laws, and constants.

  • @cedb3360
    @cedb3360 Před 8 lety +1

    I heard a lot about the Multiverse before; and the Megaverse of Susskind is a very new and nice way to put it. Talking about bubble Universes in a Multiverse make it seems like the bubbles are evolving in something. As I understand it from Leonard, It is really one Mega Universe in which quantum fluctuations make the physic different from places to places. I like it

    • @cedb3360
      @cedb3360 Před 8 lety

      Must be God's work right?

    • @cedb3360
      @cedb3360 Před 8 lety +1

      inelegant and ridiculous right; but I dont expect more than that from a guy named AnarchoRepublican.

    • @Yusufalsylheti
      @Yusufalsylheti Před 9 měsíci

      The fact that the universe could be any other way shows it’s dependency… requiring a necessary being

  • @debyton
    @debyton Před 3 lety

    The ongoing trouble with our expectations for the physics of a living universe is we continue to believe that life and individuality are defined by the host form. Individuality is in fact defined by a position-of-view (POV) in space-time instantiated to any viable hosting entity that may arise, naturally or not, in any given universe or location therein by its indigenous laws of physics. In fundamental hosts, ergo cells, the POV is an instantiated antenna state maintained within every living cell by the natural entanglement between its cellular entanglement molecules (EM) with a nonlocal type of matter particle called meta-matter. All living QE channels, ergo; POV's are established at unique degrees of freedom of the QE spectrum. These DOF are called the quantum entanglement frequency (QEF). It is the unique QEF that most fundamentally defines individuality and its universal mobility. Further, meta-matter is as necessary to life as dark matter is to galaxy formation. Certain DOF of the instantiated cellular QE channel is shared among cellular organelles to establish life in inanimate matter. In complex hosts, an emerged POV is established by specialized cells called entanglement cells (EC) which have evolved to heterodyne or combine their own unique QE channels to establish a new unique POV, your POV, established at unique values of the degrees of freedom of the QE spectrum. The POV is the most fundamental target of a living being for whatever telemetry any host form is capable of producing. Your instantiated POV places you where you are in space-time. Wherever viable host may emerge in nature you may be instantiated by this mechanism regardless of distance or host form. The physics that underpins this natural mechanism are completely compatible with the physics of this universe. www.amazon.com/dp/B07JHFDLSC

  • @tedgrant2
    @tedgrant2 Před 3 lety +3

    If my street was just two houses shorter, my house wouldn't fit in it.
    I guess I'm just lucky.

    • @patgabo9686
      @patgabo9686 Před 2 lety

      Painting the bulls eye where the arrow landed

    • @tedgrant2
      @tedgrant2 Před 2 lety

      @@patgabo9686
      I don't think the moon was fine tuned for life.
      If that is an example of God's amazing work, then I am not impressed.
      If I could work miracles and had billions of years to perfect my work, I think I would do better.
      What exactly is the purpose of toenails and why do they keep growing ?

    • @patgabo9686
      @patgabo9686 Před 2 lety

      @@tedgrant2 lol....never have I heard a better atheist argument!

    • @tedgrant2
      @tedgrant2 Před 2 lety

      @@patgabo9686
      I've got hair growing in places that I don't want hair growing.
      What was God thinking when he decided to give me a hairy arm pits ?
      And why did he give us canine teeth.
      We are not dogs !

  • @keithbell9348
    @keithbell9348 Před 8 lety +3

    Megaverse, multiverse, string theory, lets rearrange the # of possibilities to explain how we think the universe, the galaxies, our solar system just so happened to support life. Only one problem though, none of it can be tested by the scientific method. Until then, it all exists within the frame work of ones imagination. But we will do this, let's call them "theories" to legitimize it and publish these notions before them fundamentalists laugh us out of the labs.

    • @Hank254
      @Hank254 Před 8 lety

      +Keith Bell
      That's a great idea! We don't want to be laughed at after all.
      Here is another idea: Let's come up with a crazy convoluted story about a magic man who lives in the sky who created everything. The scientists will know we are full of crap but, since they can't _disprove_ our story, we can always fall back to that! If we defend it with logical fallacies we might actually confuse some people into thinking the story is true. We will insist that scientists limit their ideas to the bounds of the scientific method while we can just believe our story without a shred of evidence because, well, we just say _we know_ it's true!

    • @Hank254
      @Hank254 Před 7 lety

      *****
      How can it be tested?

    • @godofgodsseries
      @godofgodsseries Před 7 lety

      These theories come from physicist's extrapolating known laws of physics. None of these ideas were created to figure out anything to do with life (that is a biologist's job, not physicist). Eternal Inflation (which is the main theory that derives a "multiverse"), was created to deal with questions surrounding the big bang. String theory was created as an attempt to answer questions surrounding quantum gravity. None of those investigations are a direct attempt to understand why our universe supports life.

  • @RootsRageReggae
    @RootsRageReggae Před 3 lety

    Very good! Tx

  • @SUNofNY
    @SUNofNY Před 2 měsíci

    They always understate how many "universes" are required to solve the problem.
    If there were whole other universes for EACH atom in our universe, and you had another universe for every atom in EACH of those... you would get to the scale... maybe.