God is a dick.
from fossilesque@mander.xyz to science_memes@mander.xyz on 16 Apr 05:23
https://mander.xyz/post/28241665

#science_memes

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Telorand@reddthat.com on 16 Apr 05:25 next collapse

Don’t forget the part where it’s constantly expanding. So it’s 96B ly so far.

Kolanaki@pawb.social on 16 Apr 05:26 next collapse

Also the Universe: continues expanding

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 12:23 collapse

I see you around a lot and appreciate your contributions. When I don’t have a good response, I’m just going to comment, “Kolanaki!”

superkret@feddit.org on 16 Apr 05:26 next collapse

A faster light speed wouldn’t make a difference, since she made the universe 96 billion light years wide.

remotelove@lemmy.ca on 16 Apr 05:30 next collapse

Something tells me this isn’t a bad thing. If there is an edge of the universe, it’s probably going to be a very strange place.

positiveWHAT@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 05:44 next collapse

And Earth is already stranger than some would like.

remotelove@lemmy.ca on 16 Apr 05:49 collapse

And that is scary. If the is one takeaway from observing the universe it’s that there are always bigger and stranger things out there somewhere.

alvvayson@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Apr 05:49 next collapse

Indeed, but the way the math for expansion works is that there is something called a Hubble horizon and that makes it impossible to ever reach the edge, since it is moving away from us faster than light. (The limit doesn’t apply to the expansion of space-time).

Quite a nifty solution by the Supreme Programmer to avoid us hitting the limits of the simulation. I couldn’t have designed it better.

positiveWHAT@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 06:10 next collapse

So… is Rick the top God or are there infinite simulations?

meyotch@slrpnk.net on 16 Apr 10:41 collapse

Just along the Central Finite Curve.

Lembot_0001@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 06:10 next collapse

I couldn’t have designed it better.

Delta Force game programmers: Ghm, that was a trivial solution to the problem.

smeenz@lemmy.nz on 16 Apr 10:11 next collapse

Well it was a more convincing solution than just having level crossing arms come down and an infinitely long train cross every time you get near the edge.

MonkeMischief@lemmy.today on 16 Apr 12:40 collapse

“Space. It seems to go on and on forever… But then you get to the end and then a giant gorilla starts throwing barrels at you.”

–Fry, “Futurama”

BudgetBandit@sh.itjust.works on 16 Apr 06:24 next collapse

Imagine there being just no stars behind you. Just nothing. On one side you see the universe, like a wall of stars and lights, and next to that just pure nothingness. The void.

scathliath@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Apr 07:46 next collapse

Or the quantum foam, or both, it’d be wild to be able to stare out into that sorta of black, in a metal way.

bravesirthomas@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 09:37 next collapse

A bit off-topic but the voids in the universe (such as Bootes void) are scary af.

smeenz@lemmy.nz on 16 Apr 10:13 collapse

You could never get to the void because space-time has already accelerated the edge of all matter away from you faster than the speed of light.

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 11:41 collapse

Not “the void,” no, but “a void,” yes. As the universe continues to expand faster than the speed of light, the stars outside of our galaxy will slowly disappear from view. There will come a time when the night sky is just the milky way and darkness elsewhere. I don’t know if anything will still be around to observe it, though.

Natanox@discuss.tchncs.de on 16 Apr 06:55 next collapse

Good thing there isn’t one since we probably live in a donut.

scathliath@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Apr 07:45 next collapse

I thought it was technically a three-dimensional donut shape progressing along a sort of 4D torus that we only exist on the “surface” of?

Midnitte@beehaw.org on 16 Apr 08:30 next collapse

It’s actually turtles all the way down.

scathliath@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Apr 09:26 collapse

Ah shit 🤯

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 11:35 next collapse

That’s a common misconception. We actually live on the surface of a 3D bear claw progressing along a 4D cruller.

Taalnazi@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 12:20 collapse

Torus*

Vespair@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 12:35 collapse

It does sort of feel like we’re in the butthole of universes, doesn’t it?

alcibiades@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 19:45 collapse

Hey I hear there’s a nice restaurant out there

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 06:26 next collapse

Tell me all your thoughts on God 'cause I would really like to meet her

Disclaimer: To any higher power listening, I am not done living and do not want to meet God/a god immediately. There’s still plenty of candy left in this piñata.

Pregnenolone@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 09:49 collapse

blows raspberry

~Willem~

^Defoeeee^

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 11:30 collapse

You can’t do this to me. I started this company. You know how much I sacrificed?!

joyjoy@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 12:30 collapse

Stupid relative distance measurements ruining all our fun

themoken@startrek.website on 16 Apr 05:36 next collapse

Light speed is a “you must be this clever to participate” barrier to becoming an interstellar species, that’s all. Even if it’s not breakable, it just means you gotta be able to plan hundreds or thousands of years into the future.

Enkers@sh.itjust.works on 16 Apr 05:39 next collapse

We can hardly plan 5 years into the future, let alone hundreds of thousands… It’d be pretty sad if the answer to the Fermi paradox is that everyone is too stupid to participate.

qprimed@lemmy.ml on 16 Apr 06:04 collapse

everyone is too stupid to participate

if they are anything like us, its probably for the best.

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 06:20 collapse

I don’t know, man, I kinda want to hear some of this Vogon poetry I’ve been hearing so much about.

qprimed@lemmy.ml on 16 Apr 06:36 collapse

meh. its only the third-worst in the Universe. you gotta go for the good stuff!

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 06:48 collapse

That was awful. Thank you.

Midnitte@beehaw.org on 16 Apr 08:31 next collapse

I guess us Americans are out…

smeenz@lemmy.nz on 16 Apr 10:15 next collapse

It’s not “just” the speed of light though, light is limited by the speed of information, also known as the speed of causality. If you were to somehow exceed that, then your future light cone becomes very messed up, and effect starts to be possible before cause.

SkyeStarfall@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 16 Apr 17:19 collapse

In other words, literal time travel

jaybone@lemmy.zip on 16 Apr 11:14 collapse

Just put a bunch of dna on an asteroid. Nature will figure the rest of it out.

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 12:18 collapse

Because the history of evolution is that life escapes all barriers. Life breaks free. Life expands to new territories. Painfully, perhaps even dangerously. But life finds a way.

cm0002@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 05:37 next collapse

I mean, have you seen the human back, fuckin psychopath LMAO

kitnaht@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 05:48 next collapse

The universe is actually expanding at a rate faster than the speed of light. There’s only a finite distance we’d technically be able to travel if we were to leave right now.

Melatonin@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Apr 12:52 collapse

It can’t. Checkmate scientists.

peregrin5@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 05:49 next collapse

When the game is open world but no fast travel or mounts.

Maiq@lemy.lol on 16 Apr 06:02 next collapse

Just remember that you’re standing on a planet that’s evolving and revolving at nine hundred miles an hour, that’s orbiting at nineteen miles a second, so it’s reckoned a sun that is the source of all our power. The sun and you and me and all the stars that we can see are moving at a million miles a day. In an outer spiral arm, at forty thousand miles an hour, of the galaxy we call the Milky Way.

Our galaxy itself contains a hundred billion stars. It’s a hundred thousand light years side to side. It bulges in the middle sixteen thousand light years thick but out by us it’s just three thousand light years wide. We’re thirty thousand light years from galactic central point, we go around every two hundred million years and our galaxy is only one of millions of billions in this amazing and expanding universe.

The universe itself keeps on expanding and expanding, in all of the directions it can whiz. As fast as it can go, at the speed of light, you know, twelve million miles a minute and that’s the fastest speed thereis. So remember when you’re feeling very small and insecure, how amazingly unlikely is your birth and pray that there’s intelligent life somewhere up in space because there’s bugger all down here on earth.

ummthatguy@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 06:59 next collapse

Gotta appreciate the classics.

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/d3fdd4d5-27bd-4582-a454-85e3fab0d798.webp">

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/514553bb-9e47-4ebe-b137-8698e5b5a4bc.webp">

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Apr 10:37 collapse

Might as well watch it

youtu.be/buqtdpuZxvk

voodooattack@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 10:52 collapse

You lost me at miles

Edit: /s for brevity

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 12:16 collapse

Same. Miles per second? What the hell kinda unit is that? Over here, we use Texases per lamb’s tail shakes.

voodooattack@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 12:54 collapse

Score of furlongs per Mississippi

Edit: duck autocorrect

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 13:03 collapse

I don’t want to criticize internet absurdity for many reasons, including but not limited to the fact that I depend on it to survive. Having said that, what’s the application of a length to area ratio?

voodooattack@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 14:50 collapse

I am referencing the Mississippi, a time unit. One Mississippi is equal to roughly one second.

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 17:01 collapse

Wow, that’s a lot better than my comment. Sorry I whiffed it.

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 06:31 next collapse

This is assuming that the universe is for us. It’s probably not for anything, but to the extent that it is for a kind of life, it might not be us.

Enzy@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 07:22 next collapse

“God” doesn’t exist in science.

ramenshaman@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 09:14 next collapse

It’s just a meme, bro

TimewornTraveler@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 11:30 next collapse

“God” in this meme just refers to “the reason lightspeed is c and not something else”. Quit inserting agendas and just enjoy the meme

Enzy@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 11:43 next collapse

No, I don’t think I will.

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 12:25 collapse

Quit inserting memes and enjoy the agenda. -conservatives (probably)

Melatonin@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Apr 12:51 collapse

The life of the party has arrived.

WanderingThoughts@europe.pub on 16 Apr 07:29 next collapse

And sending a space ship at a good fraction of light speed to a nearby star uses more energy than our total civilization uses at the moment. We’ve got some work to do climbing up the Kardashev scale before we’re anywhere close to that kind of travel.

Melatonin@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Apr 12:49 collapse

Read this and thought it had something to do with the Kardashians.

doingthestuff@lemy.lol on 16 Apr 07:58 next collapse

There is teleportation in the Bible. Humanity just needs to up their game.

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 12:27 collapse

I want to hear more about biblical teleportation. I definitely missed that in Sunday school.

yeather@lemmy.ca on 16 Apr 18:17 collapse

“Miraculous Transportation” is a more technically correct term, and it is not clear if it happens instantaneously or not. The boat in John 6:16 is immediately on the shore where they were headed, though this could mean very quickly. Same with Acts 8:26 when Philip is taken from the wilderness between Jerusalem and Gaza to another city.

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 19:13 collapse

Ugh. Now I’m going to have to break out the concordance and lexicons to sort through this issue. Thanks for your thoughtful and informed opinion.

doingthestuff@lemy.lol on 16 Apr 21:40 collapse

Jesus did it after his resurrection too. Appeared in a locked room full of people. Appeared and disappeared more than once. I think there’s at least one additional instance that wasn’t mentioned in the other comment but I don’t keep this top of mind. It’s not like it’s common in the Bible, but apparently it is in the realm of possibility.

Personally - and this goes to crazy theory BS, I wonder if the tower of Babel wasn’t trying to reach the stars not by building tall enough to exit the atmosphere, but rather by teleporting there? There are some crazy theories about the age and purpose of the pyramids (it’s super unlikely they were tombs). Could that have been it? I also wonder if levitation was in the mix. What if ancient man was ridiculously smarter than we are? We dismiss people living to 900+ years old, but if you lived that long and also knew Adam who walked with God, who knows what the fuck you could do? I know it’s crazy as anything but I don’t mind letting my brain go to crazy "what if"s.

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 18 Apr 15:27 collapse

You have given me quite the rabbit hole to go down.i may never be the same.

doingthestuff@lemy.lol on 19 Apr 04:30 collapse

Haha have fun!

jaschen@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 09:31 next collapse

Hear me out. It doesn’t even matter that it’s 96 billion light-years away if you’re traveling at light speed. Because if you can travel at light speed, time would be frozen for you relative to earth time.

So if you’re in a spaceship traveling at light speed to your destination, it would feel like you gotten there in an instant.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Apr 10:35 next collapse

In an instant from the point of view of the people on Earth, but from your point of view time still moves forward.

Edit: guess I was mistaken!

Gutek8134@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 10:56 next collapse

Not the other way? You’d feel like you got there in an instant, while people on Earth needed to wait years?

Ibaudia@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 10:59 next collapse

Other way around. Instant from your POV but not from Earth’s.

deranger@sh.itjust.works on 16 Apr 11:14 next collapse

Time is frozen at light speed. You arrive at your destination instantaneously, not even experiencing a tick of Planck time. To an outside observer it takes you time. From the perspective of a photon from the sun, there is no time or distance passing between its genesis in the sun and it landing on your face. From an observer on earth it took 8 minutes and millions of miles.

hemko@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Apr 11:37 next collapse

You’ll need to accelerate to the light speed though, which will take time.

So for the astronaut it’d take approximately a year to reach light speed if accelerating at 1G, and another year to slow down

deranger@sh.itjust.works on 16 Apr 12:08 collapse

I mean if we’re already violating physics by having objects with mass going the speed of light, I don’t see what’s wrong with also assuming the thing we have for going light speed can’t also instantaneously accelerate.

VoterFrog@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 17:37 collapse

I would think you’d have to instantaneously accelerate because incremental acceleration doesn’t work the way we typically think it does at high speeds.

If you’re moving at 99.999% the speed of light relative to Earth, anything close to your speed is going to be moving quite slowly relative to you. When you accelerate some more, the change in speed relative to those close things is much larger than the change in speed you experience relative to Earth (it gets smaller and smaller as you approach light speed). But as far as I understand, there’s no such thing as moving at light speed relative to Earth but not relative to other sub-light speed things. You’d have to instantaneously move at light speed relative to everything (every sub-light speed thing).

jerkface@lemmy.ca on 16 Apr 11:42 collapse

Well, you arrive at A destination instantaneously. Important distinction. Though you might not all arrive at the same destination. And since no time passes for you and your computer… how exactly do you decelerate again? If you are going the speed of light, then you ARE light. You have ceased to exist as a Lemmitor. There is no coming back.

moonlight@fedia.io on 16 Apr 12:37 collapse

Think about it this way - everything moves through spacetime at the same "speed", so the faster you go through space, the slower you move through time, which is why photons experience no time.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 16 Apr 12:59 collapse

😵‍💫

deranger@sh.itjust.works on 16 Apr 11:05 collapse

Also, due to length contraction, at light speed the universe isn’t 96 billion light years wide, it’s 0 anything wide.

At light speed there is no time and no distance, the origin is the destination. You won’t even experience a single tick of Planck time to get there. Instantaneous.

Fluke@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 12:33 next collapse

Doesn’t it also require infinite energy to do so if “the thing” has mass at all?

ie. Our description of physics breaks down at such extremes, so in truth, we have no fuckin’ idea, just a best guess? (Thus far)

deranger@sh.itjust.works on 16 Apr 12:46 collapse

Yes, it requires infinite energy for any mass to get to light speed.

I don’t think our understanding of physics breaks down at such extremes though. I believe it’s decently understood, as in general and special relativity. I’m not a physicist though.

Fluke@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 14:18 collapse

It’s my understanding that whenever infinity is encountered, it means that our model doesn’t quite work.

It may be the way it is with this particular model/equations/bit of physics, and it may simply indicate “Nope”. I suspect not though.

docoptix@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 06:50 collapse

AFAIK the observable universe is limited by the parts of space which expand faster than the speed of light.

Some billions of years later and we might have not seen other galaxies at all, maybe we are lucky.

borax7385@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 09:57 next collapse

We don’t know how big is the universe beyond the observable universe.

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 12:07 next collapse

Yeah, but we can estimate. I’m confident it’s at least 11 in size.

frezik@midwest.social on 16 Apr 13:07 collapse

What is observable is constrained by cause and effect. To see something, information must come from there to us. That cause and effect relationship cannot happen faster than lightspeed.

We therefore have no evidence for anything other than the observable universe. Claims about anything else run into Russell’s teapot issues. We can speculate, but it’s ultimately nothing more than a story.

HeurtisticAlgorithm9@feddit.uk on 16 Apr 13:51 next collapse

Bro doesn’t believe in dark matter because he can’t see it

frezik@midwest.social on 16 Apr 14:21 collapse

We can measure its gravitation.

VoterFrog@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 21:37 collapse

The observable universe is constantly expanding as the passage of time allows light to reach us from more and more distant parts of the universe. So it’s less “we don’t know what’s outside” and more like (to a certain extent) “we have to wait and see.” And there’s nothing we’ve seen to indicate that these external regions that are being revealed are anything but more of the same kinds of things in our inner region of the observable universe.

Sam_Bass@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 10:10 next collapse

He that pretendeth to be holy doth condemn not others but self to eternal emptiness

PieMePlenty@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 11:13 next collapse

Nah, we can bend space. Sam Neill checkmates God.

Lushed_Lungfish@lemmy.ca on 16 Apr 11:21 collapse

Take a shortcut through hell, eh?

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 12:08 next collapse

For those of us who work retail, yeah…

Rolive@discuss.tchncs.de on 16 Apr 12:51 collapse

That movie is about the first time humanity tried to enter the Warp without a Gellar field.

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 03:58 collapse

Best part of Warhammer lore imho.

daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Apr 11:35 next collapse

There is idea in the three body problem novels:

Tap for spoiler

That the speed of light was infinity at the birth of the universe but sentient species reduced the speed of light several times as a offence/defense mechanism to protect themselves from others.

The mere though of that is dreadful to me.

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 12:05 next collapse

I wouldn’t worry too much about it. Anything capable of altering fundamental physical parameters like that will be unknowable to us. We’d be like bacteria are to a human.

LostXOR@fedia.io on 16 Apr 12:14 next collapse

Or maybe they were just bored, and wanted to make a cool new celestial object called a black hole.

frezik@midwest.social on 16 Apr 12:58 next collapse

Dark Forest Theory is probably wrong. In-universe, the series unknowingly undermines it with communication tech that can transmit instantaneously. That would take away the assumption that civilizations can’t effectively communicate over interstellar distances and build trust.

In reality, it’s something of an extension of the “every individual for themselves” mindset of evolution–something White Supremacists have loved. Kin Selection Theory does away with that. There is a basis for building trust and working together within evolution. The precursor ideas were even done in Peter Kropotkin’s “Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution” over a century ago. Kin Selection Theory put a mathematical foundation on it.

I like the book series as literature, and the Netflix series has been OK so far (not great, but OK). Liu Cixin himself, however, has some really shitty opinions that come through the text.

1SimpleTailor@startrek.website on 16 Apr 19:25 collapse

Humanity stands on the brink of self-destruction because we have yet to overcome the primitive, selfish aspects of our nature. I have to believe that any civilization advanced enough for interstellar travel—without having destroyed itself along the way—must have achieved a certain level of cooperative enlightenment.

CrookedSerpent@hexbear.net on 16 Apr 16:17 collapse

Yeah the whole concept of the “paraplegic universe” in Deaths End is so fucking good. And by good I mean bone chillingly terrifying.

jerkface@lemmy.ca on 16 Apr 11:40 next collapse

There is no evidence that the Universe is bounded at all. For all we know, it is infinite in spacial dimension.

deaf_fish@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 11:52 next collapse

John Green: Yikes!

Gladaed@feddit.org on 16 Apr 12:44 next collapse

It may as well as it is unreachable. It hasn’t existed forever hence only a limited amount of space is closer to us than the age of the universe.

KombatWombat@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 12:55 next collapse

True, but there is thought to be a finite amount of matter + energy, which cannot be created or destroyed. And since it is spreading out from an original dense point, it stands to reason that there would be a vacuum area that it has not reached yet.

roscoe@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Apr 15:31 next collapse

Our current understanding of the big bang is not that it spread out from one place, it happened everywhere all at once. If the universe is infinite, it started from zero volume and infinite density then immediately became infinite in volume and finite in density. The density of matter/energy is what is finite, not the amount of matter/energy, that is infinite (if the universe is infinite). Then there was a period of rapid inflation, then is settled down to the inflation we see today.

Infinite or finite, the universe is not spreading out into anything, the distances between points are simply increasing.

flambonkscious@sh.itjust.works on 16 Apr 20:02 next collapse

It’s so obvious, to me, to think of the universe as occurring 'in a box’and that expansion happening like someone is inflating a balloon inside it - so we’re running out of room as such.

Take away the box and my brain just melts. I’m not very familiar with this stuff, however

VoterFrog@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 21:18 collapse

The important thing in the balloon analogy isn’t what the balloon is expanding into, it’s just that every point on the balloon is drifting away from every other point.

One thing to consider, though, is that space may not even be a real physical thing. Maybe location is just a property of things, like mass or electrical charge. It could just be an inherent value that adjusts and influences other things according to the laws of physics. Maybe it’s less that “space is expanding” and just that “the location property of everything is constantly diverging.” There’s no need to worry about what anything is expanding into because our conception of space may just be a mental construct.

flambonkscious@sh.itjust.works on 17 Apr 01:25 collapse

…absolutely wild

edit on a 2nd read it strikes me that determining whether space is expanding vs the location property of everything is diverging is a relatively impossible exercise (key word, there).

A lot like the non-trivial thought experiments, ‘prove you’re in/not in a simulation’

jerkface@lemmy.ca on 17 Apr 11:46 collapse

it started from zero volume

This is not true. It started with apparently infinite volume. This is the confusing nature of infinities.

mmddmm@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 18:48 next collapse

Hum, no. It’s widely believed that the amount of matter + energy in the universe changes all the time.

jerkface@lemmy.ca on 17 Apr 11:46 collapse

That’s not at all how it works. In particular, it didn’t start from an original, dense point. It started everywhere, with nearly uniform density apparently infinitely in all directions. If the Universe is boundless, there is no reason to suspect the material it contains is not equally boundless.

pornpornporn@lemmynsfw.com on 16 Apr 14:54 collapse

Not really. As far as we know information can’t travel faster than light speed, and the oldest/farthest stuff we can see is 14 billion years old / 14b light years away. That gives us the radius and age of the observable universe.

By our current understanding of how the universe works we can’t see anything further or older than that (and will never be able to), so any assumption about things outside/before the observable universe is completely baseless

Vespair@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 12:34 next collapse

Do you believe that the wide expanses of our planet Earth were crafted for the common ant to explore?

CMonster@discuss.online on 16 Apr 17:42 collapse

There is no evidence to suggest our planet or any animals on it are crafted.

Vespair@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 19:04 collapse

Of course, but I’m trying to work within the established framework of the meme here

Dasus@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 19:54 collapse

I think it wouldn’t be too unreasonable to suggest hyperintelligent ants could build a vessel the size of a human or larger and travel the Earth with enough speed.

Some of those ant colonies are larger than people so, seems reasonable enough.

That’s closer to us exploring our solar system I think, in scale, than it would be for us to explore even the galaxy let alone the whole observable universe let alone the whole universe.

[deleted] on 16 Apr 20:00 next collapse

.

Vespair@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 20:00 collapse

Except that a large point of my comment is pointing out the hubris of man, so it’s important to note that ants are not hyperintelligent. They organize and build, but there is a finite limitation to their capability, at least in this and any known previous state of their evolution. Like that we are the most intelligent thing on our little planet doesn’t imply to me that we are not effectively to scale with ants on the cosmic level.

Dasus@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 20:22 collapse

The intelligence doesn’t matter. The point is what is physically possible.

Even if we were hyperintelligent in the same scale as making current ants intelligent enough to build ships to ride the world around in, we’d still have to face the issue of the speed of light being a limiting factor.

Unless we actually manage to find some of those theorised strange particles which would fit with the math of the warp engine theory.

Vespair@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 20:25 collapse

Alright, valid, you’re right, the presented limiting factor in the meme is in fact the SoL and not actually man’s ability to reach it. I concede, cheers.

Dasus@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 20:35 collapse
vane@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 12:34 next collapse

To be clear it’s lightspeed in space time, we “just” need to get rid of time to conquer the space.

Melatonin@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Apr 12:47 next collapse

Here for the comments to see if there’s a workaround.

JPSound@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 13:20 next collapse

And to add the cherry on top, should you ever reach his arbitrary speed limit, it distorts time itself. Even if you flew through space at c for a little weekend getaway, you’d return to a now foreign world only to find time had skipped forward +2,000 years, your entire family and social circles long dead from old age with societal and technical advancements beyond what you could have ever thought possible, completely isolating you. You’re now doomed to live in an unfamiliar world where not a single human speaks your language nor can they relate to you in any meaning way.

AKA, gods speeding ticket.

Techranger@infosec.pub on 16 Apr 22:31 next collapse
IDKWhatUsernametoPutHereLolol@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 17 Apr 04:20 next collapse

Unless Artificial General Intelligence is developed, then perhaps some pattern could be found and the future humans can decode some of what you’re saying.

Maybe even some brain-neuron scanner type of thing to measure your exact thoughts.

kevin2107@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 05:50 collapse

I have a solution for this: When you travel somewhere, travel with everyone’s mind at light speed. You see we think about lightspeed wrong. It’s meant for whole species to migrate. Not 1 individual.

Another alternative is just take a snapshop of everyone’s minds at that point, then let them continue living even with your snapshot. When you return you pick back off where you left off. Living in your own dimension. The other dimension is long gone but you miss nothing.

mathemachristian@hexbear.net on 16 Apr 14:32 next collapse

Common trick map builders do, if you need to teleport the player for a scene e.g. they’re in a dream, but you dont want to load a whole new map you put the scene in the main map but someplace it cant be seen and is unreachable.

fossilesque@mander.xyz on 16 Apr 14:56 collapse

I love map breaking. It’s also fun to see what developers didn’t use.

loomy@lemy.lol on 16 Apr 15:10 next collapse

god didn’t invent km’s ; satan did

Geodad@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 17:09 next collapse

Where’s the proof that a god even exists? Except for the Planck time, physicists have all but explained how everything got here.

Kuori@hexbear.net on 16 Apr 17:32 next collapse

<img alt="cringe" src="https://hexbear.net/api/v3/image_proxy?url=https%3A%2F%2Fchapo.chat%2Fpictrs%2Fimage%2F55c9f173-948c-4140-be5b-6aad2ac9cbf3.png"> reddit atheist detected. please remove your fedora and step this way for processing.

underwire212@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 17:50 next collapse

It’s a joke bruh. Relax.

And I’ll just say too that science has explained many things, sure. But to say it’s explained “how everything got here” is so far from the truth I’m not even going to try and argue here.

ArsonButCute@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Apr 18:06 next collapse

If the universe is infinite in size it is a statistical requirement for a god, or a being that has ability we would consider to be godlike, must exist somewhere.

Geodad@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 18:30 collapse

Where did you come up with that nonsense?

ThatGuy46475@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 18:09 next collapse

Here I am

samus12345@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 18:56 collapse

I can’t disprove you’re god, so you must be!

spicehoarder@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 18:20 collapse

Is Planck time even proof of anything let alone god? I mean, even if some glowing entity descended from the clouds and declared, “Behold, I am God,” would that actually convince anyone? We’d just have another person claiming to be god – which, let’s be honest, is not exactly a rare event on this planet.

What even counts as sufficient proof of God? A signed affidavit? A peer-reviewed miracle?A TED Talk with miracles? The whole “any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic” thing kind of ruins the whole premise. Realistically, we’ll never have proof. At best, we can conclude that proof of God is permanently out of reach.

Thanks for coming to my TED Talk. I am God.

Geodad@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 18:34 collapse

At best, we can conclude that proof of God is permanently out of reach

Exactly. Unprovable sounds like a definition for something that doesn’t exist.

daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Apr 17:36 next collapse

Wait, now that I think about it, the observable universe have precisely that length because the speed of light, doesn’t it?

CheeseNoodle@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 17:40 collapse

Its a combination of the speed of light and how inflation has varied the size of the universe. Light’s only been able to travel about 14 billion light years since the universe began but those further regions used to be closer so light from them was already part of the way here when they vanished over the cosmic horizon.

samus12345@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 18:58 next collapse

99% of the universe is nothing. Wouldn’t that really be the dick move?

DoubleSpace@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 19:32 next collapse

The universe is basically 100% empty. An atom is more than 99.9999999 empty space.

samus12345@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 19:33 next collapse

Yeah, I rounded down.

PoisonedPrisonPanda@discuss.tchncs.de on 16 Apr 19:43 next collapse

wow. never thought of this in that way.

ladicius@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 20:26 next collapse

Say that again when a brick made of 99,9999999% empty space hits you!

(Mustn’t be a hard hit, maybe more like a soft touch. For science, you know.)

excral@feddit.org on 16 Apr 22:43 collapse

Ladies and gentlemen of this supposed jury, is it really fair to say my client hit him, when the brick is essentially 100% empty space? And isn’t he also essentially 100% empty space so can he even be hit?

But, ladies and gentlemen of this supposed jury, I have one final thing I want you to consider. Ladies and gentlemen, this is Chewbacca. Chewbacca is a wookie from the planet Kashyyyk. But Chewbacca lives on the planet Endor. Now think about that; that does not make sense! Why would a wookie, an 8 foot tall wookie, want to live on Endor, with a bunch of two foot tall ewoks? That does not make sense!

But more importantly, you have to ask yourself, ‘what does that have to do with this case?’ Nothing. Ladies and Gentlemen, it has nothing to do with this case. It does not make sense! Look at me. I’m a lawyer defending a major record company, and I’m talkin’ about Chewbacca! Does that make sense? Ladies and gentlemen, I am not making any sense! None of this makes sense! And so you have to remember, when you’re in that jury room deliberatin’ and conjugatin’ the Emancipation Proclamation, does it make sense? No! Ladies and gentlemen of this supposed jury, it does not make sense! If Chewbacca lives on Endor, you must acquit! The defense rests.

explodicle@sh.itjust.works on 17 Apr 00:19 collapse

How much of a proton or electron is empty space?

racketlauncher831@lemmy.ml on 16 Apr 21:47 next collapse

99% of the universe is nothing.

Worst video game developer ever.

samus12345@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 21:52 next collapse

Clearly it was made by Bethesda.

madcaesar@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 21:11 collapse

It’s actually just our solar system, the rest is just rendering tricks making us think there’s distance

Randelung@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 21:19 collapse

Broad as an ocean, deep as a puddle. Oh great, more rock.

NoxAstrum@lemmy.ca on 16 Apr 19:32 next collapse

It really is a cruel joke.

Olgratin_Magmatoe@slrpnk.net on 16 Apr 19:44 next collapse

There’s a bit of skipped step here. Just how do you get to the speed of light when it requires an infinite amount of fuel, with diminishing returns on the quantity of fuel you have?

orbitz@lemmy.ca on 16 Apr 21:49 collapse

Well we can’t assume we know physics completely yet (or within bounds of the question) something down the road may open an idea or ability to generate more power than we know what to do with. If this was a game we may only been on the first or second step of a technology tree. Or we just aren’t able to travel that far realistically, we have to overcome our idea of our species being singular and send out generation ships that go for ages (in human time) to explore more as a species, even if the originators (Earth humans) may never know the outcome.

Of course if we discover that much power we’d likely annihilate ourselves anyways, least with our current society.

I do mostly agree but I try and think of other possibilities since the universe is so vast.

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 16 Apr 19:56 next collapse

alcubierre drives are (theoretically) a thing. wormholes are also a (theoretical) thing.

we could just bend space.

WrenFeathers@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 20:12 collapse

Okay… go ahead!

😀

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 16 Apr 20:13 collapse

sure! give me a couple hundred years.

WrenFeathers@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 20:14 collapse

You know, if you could use one of them wormhole thingies, you could already be there!

Checkmate!

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 16 Apr 20:28 collapse

look, give me a couple of centuries alright. its complicated.

just a couple of centuries bro, please bro i swear just a couple of centuries bro.

WrenFeathers@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 20:40 next collapse

You have 1¾ centuries to have a fully functioal wormyhole-thingamabab so that you can make your Abercrombie drive.

Do not disappoint me.

Redderthanmisty@lemmygrad.ml on 16 Apr 20:42 collapse

And a small loan of a trillion dollars!

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 17 Apr 01:21 collapse

that oughtta do it

NigelFrobisher@aussie.zone on 16 Apr 22:40 next collapse

When putting together an outfit always remove the last accessory you put on.

multifariace@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 23:35 collapse

Are you trying to get my pants off?

yourgodlucifer@sh.itjust.works on 17 Apr 00:09 next collapse

Its probably for the best.

If humans are able to get to another planet with life on it we would probably do horrific unspeakable things to the aliens.

DeadMartyr@lemmy.zip on 17 Apr 04:08 next collapse

I feel like I would treat my Togruta wife very well ;-;

Real talk tho, humans will eventually reach the stars, being negative/nihilist about it and saying it’s better if it doesn’t happen is dangerous because people like Elon/Donald will definitely do horrible things if people with remorse and morals aren’t involved/ already established there / the one’s initiating

Not saying you’re nihilist, but I go to Uni in SF and everyone is so anti-imperialism that they think any form of colonization (even on a dead planet like Mars) is bad and it’s pretty grating.

Elon should not be the one who decides how the land/living conditions are set up

StJohnMcCrae@slrpnk.net on 17 Apr 04:21 next collapse

The fact is that any manned vehicle capable of interplanetary travel is by the nature of the energies involved, also a weapon of mass destruction. A spaceship is a weapon in the same way a car can be a weapon.

So either you massively restrict access to this technology, or you create a system of surveillance and defense that is so pervasive and effective that it makes 1984 look benign, OR you just say fuck everyone else and use that weapon to remove yourself from range of everybody else’s weapons.

Proliferation is an existential problem for anyone in range.

SparroHawc@lemm.ee on 18 Apr 00:58 collapse

The usefulness of a fusion engine as a weapon is directly correlated to its efficiency.

StJohnMcCrae@slrpnk.net on 18 Apr 09:12 collapse

It doesn’t really matter what kind of engine it is if it’s going fast enough.

Anything with enough mass and acceleration to move a human being from planet to planet in a reasonable timeframe has the kinetic energy required to wipe out a city. Once you start reaching relativistic speeds, you can take out entire planets by simply not slowing down on approach.

SparroHawc@lemm.ee on 18 Apr 23:59 collapse

Although you are correct, this destroys the engine.

A good, efficient fusion engine just needs to point the exhaust end towards the enemy and the hyper-accelerated particles will punch a hole through the target for you. And then you point at the next target, etc. etc.

Also, it’s a butchered quote from Larry Niven’s Known Space books, referred to as the “Kzinti Lesson” - because the Kzinti thought humanity was unarmed and helpless until they discovered that humans are really good at improvising weapons.

StJohnMcCrae@slrpnk.net on 19 Apr 01:03 collapse

…fandom.com/…/Relativistic_kill_vehicle

SparroHawc@lemm.ee on 19 Apr 04:42 collapse

Yup! Totally plausible - just more expensive and less repeatable. And harder to use against moving targets.

yourgodlucifer@sh.itjust.works on 17 Apr 20:53 next collapse

I wouldn’t have any problem with a completely dead planet being colonized by humanity but I absolutely do not trust humanity as a whole when it comes to a planet with life on it we don’t even respect our own species much less other ones history has shown this over and over again.

even if it is an inevitability doesn’t mean that it is positive just because it was inevitable that nuclear weapons got invented doesn’t mean that It’s a good idea for us to have that technology I would rather nukes not exist.

01011@monero.town on 17 Apr 22:03 collapse

It’s not nihilist to recognize historical precedent combined with current human conditions and come to a logical prediction.

IDKWhatUsernametoPutHereLolol@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 17 Apr 04:13 collapse

You mean civilize and liberate the aliens from their barbarism? /s

turnip@lemm.ee on 17 Apr 04:16 next collapse

Dispensing freedom you mean.

tetris11@lemmy.ml on 17 Apr 12:15 collapse

*Aliens pulling out literal fireswords*
“Okay.”

GoodOleAmerika@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 04:23 collapse

Let’s say we reset everything today, wipe out everyone’s memory. God will be forgotten, science will still exist. People will figure out science sooner or later.

superniceperson@sh.itjust.works on 17 Apr 04:31 next collapse

God will always exist before science, it is necessary to rationalize existence to have any hope of living long enough to develop science.

If there’s no meaning to what you’re doing, there’s no point in dealing with suffering. Only through extreme alienation from suffering can you start to have a non divine world view.

Leg@sh.itjust.works on 17 Apr 04:32 next collapse

If I’m being honest, I think people will figure out god too. All it is is a question.

“Did someone do all this?”

It’s a reasonable question. Easy to ask, hard to answer. Attempt to identify this variable “someone”, and people will eventually land on some kind of god.

Famko@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 04:54 next collapse

Yes, but the point is that every time god is “rediscovered”, the form of that god changes as does the scripture surrounding that new religion.

Science, for the most part, wouldn’t diverge from our current understanding of it, because it is ultimately our understanding of the world and its fuctions.

zloubida@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 05:04 collapse

Different form, same essential content.

kevin2107@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 05:34 collapse

I mean you can answer that today lmao.

Leg@sh.itjust.works on 17 Apr 06:26 collapse

Exactly my point! I was a staunch atheist in childhood, mostly out of rebellion against Christianity. I’m something else now because I asked the question in sincerity. I’m still definitely not a Christian, mind you. But man, the void is cool to ponder about.

Gronk@aussie.zone on 17 Apr 06:46 collapse

In a similar boat, I guess I would be considered a pantheist by definition.

Staunch atheist growing up, asked myself a similar question. My religious views don’t necessarily change my view of how the world comes to be, or promises anything like eternal salvation; just an acknowledgement that all of this comes from something and by definition you could consider that something to be god.

Any extrapolations ontop of that would have to be considered faith or conjecture.

In fact I think most people would find it somewhat depressing to come to a similar conclusion initially, but the questions that come from this pondering have really helped me find a harmony with the universe and I’m appreciative of that

Leg@sh.itjust.works on 17 Apr 07:07 collapse

Hey, welcome to the club! Pantheism has helped me find some deceptively obvious truths in life. “As above, so below” being a big one. Meshes remarkably well with science, and if anything it rekindled my enjoyment of science and reality in general. It’s the healthiest relationship I’ve ever had with “religion”.

kamen@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 06:37 collapse

Science laws won’t cease to exist, but if you wipe out everyone’s memory, their knowledge of that science will cease to exist - so they’ll have to figure it out from zero - and there’s no guarantee that there won’t be another placeholder in a sense (i.e. what religions have been historically) for what’s yet to understand.

Edit: maybe it’s more accurate to say science laws would cease to exist, but won’t cease to work; they would cease to exist in a formulated way (in that hypothetical memory loss) since they were put together by humans.

humorlessrepost@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 21:33 collapse

I think the intent is more “Scientific discoveries could be rediscovered, your One True Religion wouldn’t be.”

kamen@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 21:42 collapse

Yeah, in this sense I agree. I’m overanalyzing again.