It looks like it was designed, but was it?
The universe looks like it was designed. Scientists have found that all the Physics, the laws and the values of physical constants, everything seems to fit together just right to produce life and allow us to live. How did this happen? Check out some of the details and some of the big questions.
Scientific findings
Cosmologists can calculate what they believe happened from the very earliest moments of the big bang, and can estimate the values of a range of cosmic constants and physical properties. There are scores of these numbers, but not all are independent. Physicist Paul Davies lists 13 constants and 12 derived quantities; cosmologist Martin Rees discusses six numbers, but as most of these are ratios of other numbers, his total comes to about a dozen.
It turns out that many of these numbers must lie within very narrow ranges, both now, and right back at the early stages of the big bang, for the universe to exist and form galaxies, stars and planets, and to provide the opportunity for complex life to appear.
A list of some of the most notable of these examples of “fine-tuning” (e.g. relating to the strength of the four fundamental forces, the mass of fundamental particles, etc) is at it looks like it was designed, so I will only describe two of the most amazing examples here.
The cosmological constant, or vacuum energy, is a major determining factor of whether the universe collapsed in on itself shortly after the big bang, or flew apart so fast that no matter coalesced into stars and planets, or is in a narrow range that allows a viable universe to form. Its value is obtained by subtracting two large cosmic forces, and theory suggested that it too would be large. But for the universe, stars & planets to exist, it must be very small. It turns out that the large forces cancel out accurately to 119 decimal places, yielding the required value. String theory “guru”, Leonard Susskind says: “To make the first 119 decimal places of the vacuum energy zero is most certainly no accident.”
Cosmologist and mathematician Roger Penrose once attempted to calculate the probability that chance allowed the initial state of the universe and its entropy to be exactly ‘right’ to allow it to still exist now. His answer was 1 chance in 10^10^123, a probability so small as to effectively be zero. To get a picture of this number, note that the number of baryons (protons & neutrons) in the universe is estimated to be about 10^80. We could write that number as 1 followed by 80 zeros. But to write Penrose’s number would require 1 followed by a zero on every baryon in the universe, and then more.
Possible explanations for fine-tuning
These apparent coincidences have led cosmologists to think hard about how this situation may have arisen. Eminent cosmologist Martin Rees lists four possible options – (a) coincidence, (b) providence, (c) an underlying theory of everything, or (d) an ensemble of universes (the multiverse). Let’s look at these a little more:
Coincidence
There are some who argue that it just happened that way, and who maintain that mathematical probabilities are inapplicable to such an event as the big bang. But most cosmologists have rejected this option – the probabilities have been estimated by many and they are simply too large for most scientists to ignore them. (It is true that Victor Stenger has produced an enormously simplified computer model suggesting that the universe isn’t all that improbable, but he doesn’t seem to have persuaded many of his colleagues.)
In addition to the Penrose estimate, Lee Smolin says: “…. just how probable is it that a universe created by randomly choosing the parameters will contain stars. Given what we have already said, it is simple to estimate this probability. ….. The answer, in round numbers, comes to about one chance in 10^229.” This is much much less than the probability of picking a given baryon out of the universe at random.
Providence
Science has been defined as dealing with things we can observe in the space-time universe, so the God option cannot be directly addressed by science. Many scientists dismiss the idea of God creating the universe, sometimes very strongly, while many others are theists. Although this may not represent his current view, Paul Davies wrote:
These rules look as if they are the product of intelligent design. I do not see how that can be denied. Whether you wish to believe they really have been so designed, and if so by what sort of being, must remain a matter of personal taste. ….. Although many metaphysical and theistic theories seem contrived or childish, they are not obviously more absurd than the belief that the universe exists, and exists in the form it does, reasonlessly.
An underlying theory
This would be the first and preferred choice of most scientists, because science tends to assume there are underlying reasons for things and searches for them. And it is certainly still the preferred option of many (e.g. I think Stephen Hawking holds this view). But there has been no success so far in finding an underlying reason, and it becomes almost a matter of faith rather than of science. Many cosmologists (e.g. Weinberg, Rees, Susskind, Davies) have concluded that the fine-tuned numbers are too disparate and unrelated to be based on an integrated theory, and gradually more of their colleagues are moving away from this view. Nevertheless, it remains possible, even if increasingly unlikely, that an underlying theory will be found.
The multiverse
This has probably become the most favoured option over the past decade. It overcomes the objection that the fine-tuning is too unlikely to have occurred by chance, by postulating that there is an extremely large number of universes or “domains ” of the one universe, perhaps even an infinite number, all with different values of constants, and perhaps even different constants as well. Ours is one rare case where the universe allows life to appear. The mathematics has been done, and the multiverse is claimed to be consistent with cosmological theory. Leonard Susskind says multiple universes are “inevitable consequences” of known science.
The theory has been controversial. Martin Rees says: “These universes would never be directly observable, even in principle.” Susskind: “The existence of other pocket universes remains a conjecture”. For this reason, many scientists say the multiverse is pseudo science, “more like metaphysics than physics”. But proponents believe if the theory behind the multiverse can be tested in other areas, it would give confidence that it may be correct where it cannot be tested.
But, as Davies has pointed out, if there are indeed multiple universes, then one still has to explain how a multi-universe “generator” came into existence, so finely tuned as to produce an array of universe with different characteristics.
Which explanation is right?
Scientific assessment
None of the four options listed by Rees can currently be demonstrated by science, and perhaps never can be. In a sense, believing any one at present requires something beyond science, call it faith, or judgement, or a sense of fitness, or whatever, and probably always will.
But it seems to be the most common view among scientists that the idea of a “lucky coincidence” can be dismissed, and the underlying theory has no answers at the moment except for the multiverse. Many scientists (such as Rees and Susskind) believe one day there may be enough evidence to say it is probable.
I find the multiverse hypothesis amazing. It requires us to believe that not just one universe came into existence for no reason, but that a universe generator capable of producing an enormous number of universes or domains appeared for no reason. It seems to magnify the problem of finding an explanation, not reduce it.
And yet, it may nevertheless be true. I find many aspects of quantum physics to be incredible, yet the scientists assure us they have been shown to be true. So perhaps we do inhabit one of zillions of universes or domains. But this hardly changes the difficulty of explaining the facts. Because, if we live in a multiverse, how can we explain that the process that generates all these separate universes manages to make each one with different sets of physical laws and constants (something required if the multiverse hypothesis is to explain the amazing fine-tuning)?
God is not an alternative to the other options
The God option is rejected by many scientists for non-scientific reasons. e.g. Susskind says: “In fact two stories are possible. The first is creationist …. Let’s forget that story. The whole point of science is to avoid such stories.”
But it would be a mistake to consider God as an alternative to the scientific options. Rather, it is best to consider which is the best scientific option and then ask: “Which is more likely, that this should occur by chance or by God’s design?”
Thus, if there’s a multiverse, how did it come to be the way it is? If there’s an underlying theory, how come it’s so finely designed? Those are questions beyond the scope of science, and each of us can choose what we consider seems most likely to be correct.
But whatever type of universe we live in, it seems that it has to be extraordinarily special, and that cannot easily be explained by science. It requires either design by a God or coincidence almost beyond belief.
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