Mindscape 240 | Andrew Pontzen on Simulations and the Universe

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  • Опубликовано: 27 дек 2024

Комментарии • 52

  • @sashakindel3600
    @sashakindel3600 Год назад +2

    I'm pleased that this episode didn't turn out to be *about* the "are we living in a simulation?" thing. I guess the fact that title made me wary that it might be speaks to why bringing it up at the end couldn't be helped, but the actual subject of the episode is something that, in contrast, hasn't already been talked to death, and I think is way more important to boot.

  • @delatroy
    @delatroy Год назад +4

    Thanks Sean. Been watching you for maybe 15 years. Great physics lecture series

  • @BigZebraCom
    @BigZebraCom Год назад +18

    I was going to simulate a universe--but then things got really busy at work.

    • @BigZebraCom
      @BigZebraCom Год назад +2

      @@robertnewhart3547 Maybe i could run a smiluation of our universe where things weren't so busy at work?

    • @luizarthurbrito
      @luizarthurbrito Год назад +3

      And I got an arrow to the knee

    • @BigZebraCom
      @BigZebraCom Год назад +3

      @@luizarthurbrito Arrows have ruined many a good universe simulation!

    • @luizarthurbrito
      @luizarthurbrito Год назад

      @@BigZebraCom 😂

    • @DeclanMBrennan
      @DeclanMBrennan Год назад

      Lucky God was not too busy to simulate our one. 🙂

  • @steliosp1770
    @steliosp1770 Год назад +8

    thank you for the episode Sean. love the content! i have a feeling Mindscape would blow up if it had video as well but we love it regardless!

    • @seionne85
      @seionne85 Год назад +1

      I agree! Im here for the conversations, but I feel like this would reach a larger audience if he did something similar to Lex Fridman

    • @averagehummus
      @averagehummus Год назад

      although I totally agree, I think it is just easier to produce, and I assume a lot of people are listening to the podcast while commuting or doing something like sports

    • @thesilentmajority2765
      @thesilentmajority2765 8 месяцев назад

      Who sits down to watch a science podcast?

  • @amateurrandomdude5870
    @amateurrandomdude5870 Год назад +3

    This is top notch 🥇

  • @ili626
    @ili626 Год назад +1

    12:53 Ok.. I’m very confused. Didn’t the JWT recently show that the universe might not be expanding anymore?

  • @luizarthurbrito
    @luizarthurbrito Год назад

    Very interesting talk. Very much enjoyed it.

  • @tallbudha
    @tallbudha 15 дней назад

    Isn't that it? At around 37:00mins. The extra energy from billions of years of super nova driving the expansion of the universe?

    • @tallbudha
      @tallbudha 15 дней назад

      Does carbonated soda take up more space than un carbonated? The volume of soda is much larger once you open the can.

  • @paxdriver
    @paxdriver Год назад +1

    In my opinion every thought experiment is equivalent to any scientific simulation, so simulation can be both theoretical and experimental. I don't believe anyone would dispute logical deduction / inference can be useful to test ideas just like any experiment does. Not all experiments prove a hypothesis on their own, many of them require multiple experiments to test a single theory and simulations can be used the same way imho.

  • @jasonvarney8119
    @jasonvarney8119 Год назад

    I'd like to know if we hypothetically had the TOE would it in principle be possible to run a universe simulation ab initio, albeit slowly, and would "that" be a kind of experiment.

    • @dmitryshusterman9494
      @dmitryshusterman9494 Год назад +1

      No. The problem is computing power, not the precision of our fundamental knowledge.

  • @ashikpanigrahi
    @ashikpanigrahi Год назад +2

    Oh Sean please get David Deutsch already!!

  • @physicsprof.9639
    @physicsprof.9639 Год назад +3

    I'm not a huge MOND fan but your guest is very wrong to say it hasn't had successful predictions. Arguably it's done a lot better than cdm in this way.
    Both were inferred in large part from spiral galaxy rotation curves. Then we predict the data in many other astrophysical situations.
    We can try it in dwarf galaxies, galaxy clusters etc. We can predict pressure in grav bound hot x-ray emitting x-rays . There's grav lending.
    Mond people and perhaps random people like me have a strong impression that Mond does better with fewer parameters explaining dynamics of galaxies very different from the type from which it was derived. In particular mond predicts that it's key acceleration where things change would come out the same in all situations. It does very well at that whereas cdm has to invoke all kinds of ad hoc differences from galaxy to galaxy.

  • @vanikaghajanyan7760
    @vanikaghajanyan7760 Год назад +2

    "The hardest thing is to get rid of the feeling that you are always right. No, getting rid is too high a requirement. Get rid of him even for a minute…
    Oh, how stupid, blind, limited everyone is around, and they all do not act the way (from my point of view) they should, but quite the opposite… That's why most of the time I get annoyed.
    There is an annoying assumption that they are as right as I am. After all, I don't see what they see, they don't see what I see…
    But why, in fact, should I get rid of the feeling that I am the only center of any situation?* Why fight it, since I have it innate?
    Firstly, to protect against boredom…
    Secondly, for your own safety... to limit yourself to one emotional reaction to your neighbor - negative or positive, anyway - means to cut off your path to the truth, which, alas, I suspect, does not converge on me alone..
    By nature, we tend to become tyrants, but we have important reasons to refrain from doing so. Are these reasons also natural?
    Even if they are artificial, then a little artificiality will not hurt."
    (Mrozek, Short Letters, fragment).
    --------------------
    *) - Simulation?

  • @jayvincent1865
    @jayvincent1865 Год назад

    Doesn't the scale of known matter looking outward into the universe seem very similar to when we observe matter at all small scale. Just referring to the shape not the behavior of the matter.

  • @scottsherman5262
    @scottsherman5262 Год назад +1

    This is only the second time (Michio Kaku being the first) I've ever heard someone agree with me (& yes, it was my idea originally...I was going to file my paper on this but the damn dog ate it, so...) on universe simulation...that it would, of course, likely take around the same amount of effort/information to simulate it than it did to create it. Nature tends to do things quite efficiently, so to simulate the universe, you'd likely need the same or more information. This is a universe that has to pass every single test we throw at it...we don't live in some low-res/low-rent world here. This seems so obvious to me, yet nearly everyone disagrees with me/this stance. I feel vindicated, because Andrew's a smart kid.

  • @ili626
    @ili626 Год назад

    What if we’re in a simulation or part of one?.. Just started listening, so maybe this question arises, but i bet it’ll be interesting regardless

  • @andanssas
    @andanssas Год назад +1

    59:01 Sean, *Avi Loeb* pronunciation = ahh vee low ehb

    • @hahtos
      @hahtos Год назад +1

      Who cares, plus he was talking about Ivo Labbe....

    • @andanssas
      @andanssas Год назад

      @@hahtos those that want to know who Sean mentioned (I couldn't get it myself at first). Edit: thanks for letting me know!

  • @ddtt1398
    @ddtt1398 8 месяцев назад

    LCDM is ruled out by absence of dynamical friction. Simulating it is a waste

  • @ronpartridge4402
    @ronpartridge4402 Год назад

    Einstein also felt that his "calculations" established conclusions as firmly as observations would. The world's physicists felt differently. Einstein was vindicated, but only when someone went out to the real world to see if he was right. When asked how he would have responded if the observations had NOT confirmed the predictions of Relativity Theory. He is said to have replied, "Then I would have felt very sorry for the Lord God. The theory is correct." Of course, neither theory nor observation could quite convince Einstein that God did indeed "play dice with the Universe". In the end, he had to concede that, in his struggle against Quantum Theory, he may have been on the wrong side.

  • @kencreten7308
    @kencreten7308 Год назад +1

    Now you guys have done it.... I can usually listen to these podcasts and do other things... but I like this one too much and I have to have to hear everything. If you make your podcasts less interesting, then it's more efficient for me in getting things done.... heheheh

  • @spaceinyourface
    @spaceinyourface Год назад +1

    Ones a measure of nature & the others a measurement of your ability to mimick nature. It's the future,,,& it needs a beginning,,that's where you all are right now,,,,I'd settle for that .

  • @adama7752
    @adama7752 Год назад

    So not even light can escape a black hole, yet everything escaped the big bang?

    • @timjohnson3913
      @timjohnson3913 Год назад

      Everything is inside the Big Bang. It happened (banged, if you will) everywhere

    • @dmitryshusterman9494
      @dmitryshusterman9494 Год назад

      Cos big bang was not a black hole, at all

    • @adama7752
      @adama7752 Год назад

      @@dmitryshusterman9494 so all the matter gathered into 1 place doesn't behave like a black hole?

    • @timjohnson3913
      @timjohnson3913 Год назад

      @@adama7752 i think you need to read about inflation

    • @dmitryshusterman9494
      @dmitryshusterman9494 Год назад

      @@adama7752 not when that place is the entire space. It's two entirely different configurations. Also, there's inflationary potential pushing space to expand

  • @kurt9232
    @kurt9232 Год назад

    👍👍👍

  • @spaceinyourface
    @spaceinyourface Год назад

    I can't see how AI can predict any thing you haven't told it too,,,It's use must be to eliminate the obvious errors...So It seems a bit pointless just yet,,,it needs more time

  • @spaceinyourface
    @spaceinyourface Год назад

    I see how a programmed system can be used experimentally from an uneducated user as an experiment from the users point of view,,but not from the programmers,,.
    The programmers all ready told it the laws of thermodynamics for the particles to behave in an observational way..the programmers learnt nothing,,and the user only has the programmers word on it

  • @c.f.3503
    @c.f.3503 Год назад +1

    First

  • @jayvincent1865
    @jayvincent1865 Год назад

    I thought the universe expanded evenly

  • @Hecarim420
    @Hecarim420 3 месяца назад

    👀ツ

  • @hahtos
    @hahtos Год назад +1

    Not very convincing reasoning why they are concentrating primarily on CDM and not even bothering to look at MOND...