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by kijin
4281 days ago
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No, the article only claims that a singularity cannot arise from a collapsing blob of matter. We have no evidence that the singularity that existed at the moment of the Big Bang was the result of a collapsing blob of matter. Therefore, we have no reason to think that it could not have occurred. In fact, it might not even make sense to think of that initial singularity as the result of anything at all, since causality requires time and there was no time before the Big Bang. Time is asymmetric, and this is especially important when we're talking about t = 0. You cannot simply imitate it from the other direction. |
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If true, it calls into question the existence of the initial singularity thought to precede the Big Bang. The alternative -- that the working of physical theories depends on circumstances -- isn't a very good one.
People sometimes hypothesize that this universe arose as a fluctuation in some other universe. For this kind of speculation to have any credibility, we have to assume that any singularity can be explained by physical theory, not just present-day singularities.
My point is that a theory whose workings depend on the circumstances isn't a very powerful one.
> We have no evidence that the singularity that existed at the moment of the Big Bang was the result of a collapsing blob of matter.
Look at this logically. If there was a singularity at the moment of the Big Bang, then it arose from the same physical theory that creates them in the present, but on a bigger scale. The alternative is to argue that physical theory is inconsistent, depending on circumstances. That sort of condition undermines physical theory, makes it more like a soap opera than science.
> In fact, it might not even make sense to think of that initial singularity as the result of anything at all, since causality requires time and there was no time before the Big Bang.
Yes, true, but once time exists, then we can start describing phenomena as having causes and effects. So physical theory only applies after time zero, not before. But if, at time zero, there was a singularity, we can try to apply physical theory to it. I'm not saying we will be successful, but it would be a mistake not to try.