by Denyse O'Leary
ARN correspondent
At Slashdot "News for Nerds.Stuff that Matters" we learn:
Well, when we find a good many of Stephen Hawking’s other universes, we can see whether any are negatively constanted, and if so, whether they have more life.eldavojohn writes
"A common argument one might encounter in intelligent design or the arduous process of resolving science with religion is that the physical constants of our world are fine tuned for life by some creator or designer. A University of Alberta theoretical physicist claims quite the opposite when it comes to the cosmological constant. His paper says that our ever expanding universe has a positive cosmological constant and he explains that the optimum cosmological constant for maximizing the chances of life in the universe would be slightly negative: 'any positive value of the constant would tend to decrease the fraction of matter that forms into galaxies, reducing the amount available for life. Therefore the measured value of the cosmological constant, which is positive, is evidence against the idea that the constants have been fine-tuned for life.'"[Links at site.]
Also, just up at Colliding Universes, my blog on competing theories of our universe:
• Word on the street: The clock did SO start at the Big Bang
• Why cosmologists should avoid being armchair philosophers
• Origin of life: “If pigs could fly†chemistry slammed
• Coffee!! Early modern scientists had fun!
• Antimatter in the air on a stormy day?
• Origin of life: Simple cells inevitable?
• Jathink? Guy says materialism “not the most viable philosophy
• Origin of life: How will we know we arrived if we …
• Exoplanets: Aren’t we at risk of running out of hype?
• Influential atheist cosmologists, and why they might be
• Sugars for life: About face! Left turn!
• Past life forms on a moon of Saturn?
• Before the Big Bang: Loop quantum gravity?
• Cosmology’s little wars: what’s a universe or two,…
Denyse O'Leary is co-author of The Spiritual Brain.
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