I had the opportunity this weekend to watch an interview on C-Span with the physicist Brian Greene, conducted at the Museum of Science in Boston, Massachusetts. The topic was the multi-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanic and the all-white audience was mostly students and retired folk. I know that tribe intimately, having grown up and attended University in the Boston area. I’ll touch on the science of the theory, but what is more interesting is the sociology of the audience.
Theory
The theory itself is quite simple: whenever there is quantum indeterminancy, then both possibilities occur, one in “our” universe, and the other in an alternate universe that is identical except that the other possibility is observed. I can understand why Mr. Greene is excited about this theory. Had he given a lecture on his specialized field of string theory, perhaps a dozen people would have been able to understand it and it would not have been televised. But when it comes to the multiverse, suddenly everyone is an expert on quantum mechanics. When scientists start approaching metaphysical topics, I don’t know if they are simply over their heads, or if they just get some satisfaction in deluding the audience.
The theory itself depends on a mathematical trick, viz., if an equation has multiple solutions, then they all must refer to physical reality. Yet, that is not the case in other branches of physics. For example, in systems that involve the solution to a quadratic equation, the negative solution is rejected as not conforming to physical reality, while the positive solution is accepted. The multiverse theory asserts that the unobserved (and unobservable) solution also physically exists. That remains to be seen, since physicists qua physicists must also experimentally demonstrate their theories, not just theoretically.
Mr. Greene curiously stated an obvious error in physics. The question arose about the fundamental constants in physics whose values are really inexplicable to current physics. Mr. Greene then postulated that there are alternate universes with different fundamental constants. However, the multiverse theory depends on quantum effects and no one has demonstrated, or even theorized, that the fundamental constants are in any way related to quantum effects. Hence, there is no reason to accept that possibility, even as conjecture.
He then made an allusion to the Anthropic Principle, with the unsupported claim that these other universes would not have been such that life could have evolved, and “we” happen to be in the universe with the right constants. Of course, an unobservable universe is no longer physics; it is metaphysics, and not even good metaphysics. Mind and matter are correlative; as Jung put it in Answer to Job, “Existence is only real when it is conscious to someone.”
Sociology
Even if a physicists can create alternative universes at will by sending electrons through a slit, that is not necessarily of great significance. So suddenly the theory morphs into the idea that whenever a choice is made, then another universe is created where the opposite choice was made. For this to be the case, we would have to assume that the human organism as a whole is a quantum effect, and that “making a choice” is akin to the seemingly random motion of an electron beam through a narrow slit. Did Mr. Green propose any serious scientific reason to believe that? But as Chesterton said, “if a man does not believe in God, he will believe an anything.” Certainly the audience seemed to believe in anything.
Just as believers in reincarnation assume they were great leaders or princesses in their past live, believers in the multiverse presume “they” will have made great achievements in an alternative universe. One questioner seemed to think that in some other universe, he is a great physicist rather than an engineer on Route 128. The question of his real identity did not seem to cross his mind. Of course, in that audience, Mr. Greene made the obvious joke, to great laughter, about Sarah Palin being president in some other universe. Not that I have any particular affection or respect for Mrs. Palin, the aim of the joke was to establish a tribal identity, not to encourage independent thought.
Had the liberal members of the audience taken a pause to think things through, they should have come to the conclusion that in alternative universes, they may just as well be tea party activists, or even neo-Nazi racists. If every conceivable possibility is actual, then it eliminates the necessity for choice and makes a mockery of the heroic human life.
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