Monday, December 07, 2015

8 Great Philosophical Questions That We'll Never Solve

8 Great Philosophical Questions That We'll Never Solve

 Philosophy goes where hard science can't, or won't.
Philosophers have a license to speculate about everything from
metaphysics to morality, and this means they can shed light on some of
the basic questions of existence. The bad news? These are questions that
may always lay just beyond the limits of our comprehension.


Here are eight mysteries of philosophy that we'll probably never resolve.

1. Why is there something rather than nothing?

 2. Is our universe real?

 3. Do we have free will?

 4. Does God exist?

 5. Is there life after death?

6. Can you really experience anything objectively?

 7. What is the best moral system?

 8. What are numbers?

 

 

 

 

Thursday, October 08, 2015

Our Favorite Pictures From the Apollo Mission Photo Dump

Our Favorite Pictures From the Apollo Mission Photo Dump



With one small link and one giant leap in photo quality, a space
enthusiast  has rocketed to Internet renown, creating a Flickr account
full of high-definition, unprocessed photos from the Apollo moon
missions.


The more than 10,000 photos in the collection have been in the public
domain for decades, but NASA has never made high-definition scans of
the images accessible in one place online. That’s where Kipp Teague
comes in. Teague is a private citizen and lifelong follower of NASA who
runs the Project Apollo Archive, a website devoted to all things moon mission.

Monday, September 28, 2015

Salty water seen flowing on Mars, not far from Curiosity rover | New Scientist

Salty water seen flowing on Mars, not far from Curiosity rover | New Scientist



Salty water seen flowing on Mars, not far from Curiosity rover







Salty water seen flowing on Mars, not far from Curiosity rover

The dark streaks in this picture may be signs of salty water (Image: JPL/NASA)


NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter has captured the strongest
evidence yet that salty liquid water flows on the planet’s surface
during warm seasons.


Whether or not these salty flows could sustain life depends on how salty they are, says Lujendra Ojha
of the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, who has reported the
findings, along with his colleagues. “If the water is completely
saturated with perchlorates [hydrated salts], then life as we know it on
Earth wouldn’t be able to survive in that sort of concentrated water,”
he says. “But if the water only has a tiny percentage of perchlorates in
it, then I think we should be fine.


Recurring slope lineae – dark streaks that appear, get longer, and fade in each Martian year – have long been thought to represent signs of flowing water. Now that idea has been backed up by data from the Orbiter’s onboard spectrometer, named CRISM, which analyses reflected sunlight to detect patterns that indicate what minerals are present on the surface.


Salts can absorb water from the atmosphere and lower the freezing
point of water, making it possible for liquid water to exist even in the
cold Martian climate. Spectral data from four locations with recurrent
slope lineae reveal the presence of hydrated salts, which are most
likely to be magnesium perchlorate, magnesium chlorate and sodium
perchlorate.

Saturday, September 26, 2015

NASA to Announce Mars Mystery Solved | NASA

NASA to Announce Mars Mystery Solved | NASA

 NASA will detail a major science finding from the agency’s ongoing
exploration of Mars during a news briefing at 11:30 a.m. EDT on Monday,
Sept. 28 at the James Webb Auditorium at NASA Headquarters in
Washington. The event will be broadcast live on NASA Television and the
agency's website.

Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Abraham Loeb: From cosmic origins to our galaxy’s fate | Astronomy.com

Abraham Loeb: From cosmic origins to our galaxy’s fate | Astronomy.com

 This theoretical physicist and philosophical thinker discusses
diversity, the first stars, the future of cosmology, the way physics
makes progress, and more.

Friday, July 24, 2015

Earth-like alien world looms into view through Kepler telescope - New Scientist

Earth-like alien world looms into view through Kepler telescope - New Scientist



Meet Kepler 452b, Earth’s new alien cousin. This rocky planet is the first alien world we’ve seen that circles a sun-like star at a distance that should allow liquid water to exist on its surface.


The planet came to light after a first pass through the full data set
collected during the NASA Kepler telescope’s four-year run. The
analysis also yielded about a dozen other candidate worlds close to the
size of Earth in the habitable zone around their stars.


Kepler’s original mission has ended,
so the new discoveries come not from new data but from
ever-more-thorough analyses of the existing data. Small Earth-like
planets have proved the hardest to tease out. “We’re treading through
the weeds looking for these tiny stones,” says Natalie Batalha from the NASA Ames Research Center in California.


The new search adds more than 500 planets to the roughly 4000 planet candidates the Kepler team has already announced, of which about a quarter of have already been confirmed through follow-up studies.


But the newest confirmed planet, 452b, is in an Earth-like class by
itself. “Today the Earth is a little less lonely, because there’s a new
kid on the block,” says Jon Jenkins,
also at NASA Ames. The new planet was confirmed when team members
calculated that there was a less than 1 per cent chance that a pair of
eclipsing binaries or a background transiting planet could be polluting
the signal.

Monday, June 01, 2015

Origins of Life On Earth & Beyond --"From Matter to Living Biology" (Weekend Feature)

Origins of Life On Earth & Beyond --"From Matter to Living Biology" (Weekend Feature)

 Such primitive cells, or protocells (iamge below), would have been much
simpler than any of today's modern cells, which have an organization
based upon the "central dogma" of biology: DNA, containing a cell's
genetic blueprint in a string of the nucleotide bases A, T, G, and C, is
transcribed into RNA, and then factories called ribosomes translate the
RNA into the sequences of twenty amino acids that make up proteins.
These proteins run almost all of the operations of cells, from bacteria
to humans: moving, metabolizing food, disposing of waste, speeding up
and slowing down the chemical reactions that copy our genes...............



Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Seeing Eye to Microscopic Eye | PROOF

Seeing Eye to Microscopic Eye | PROOF

 The eye is an organ of extreme perfection. I have a strong interest in
evolution, and eyes have developed stunning adaptations over time. This
mayfly (above) is a male with what are called turban eyes—greatly
enlarged eyes at the top of the head in the shape of a turban. The male
uses his eyes to scout for the silhouette of a female in the dim light
of dusk. He doesn’t even have a working mouth. If you live for only one
day, as adult males usually do, you don’t need to eat. But you do need
tremendous eyes to find a female before you die.

Friday, May 15, 2015

Science's Path from Myth to Multiverse - Scientific American

Science's Path from Myth to Multiverse - Scientific American



It’s
sometimes said that supersymmetry would be a kind of thumbs-up for
string theory, which has been impossible to test in any direct way. If
the LHC finds no evidence for supersymmetry, what happens to string
theory?


Damned if I know! Unfortunately, string theory doesn’t make very
specific predictions about physics at the energies that are accessible
to us. The kind of energies of the structures that string theory deals
with are so high, we’ll probably never be able to reproduce them in the
lab. But those energies were common in the very early universe. So by
making cosmological observations, we may get a handle on the physics of
those incredibly high energies. For example, if the matter-energy
density at the time of inflation was
of the order of magnitude that is characteristic of string theory, then
a great deal of gravitational radiation would have been produced at
that time, and it would have left an imprint on the cosmic microwave
background. Last year, scientists working with the BICEP2 telescope announced that they had found these gravitational waves; now it seems they were actually measuring interstellar dust. Further observations with the Planck satellite
may be able to settle this question. I think that’s one of the most
exciting things going on in all of physical science right now.


For theorists, is the ultimate goal a set of equations we could put on a T-shirt?

That’s the aim. The Standard Model is so complex that it would be hard
to put it on a T-shirt—though not impossible; you’d just have to write
kind of small. Now, it wouldn’t take gravity into account, so it
wouldn’t be a “theory of everything.” But it would be a theory of all
the other things we study in our physics laboratories. The Standard
Model is sufficiently complicated, and has so many arbitrary features,
that we know it’s not the final answer. The goal would be to have a much
simpler theory with fewer arbitrary features—maybe even none at
all—that would fit on a T-shirt. We’re not there yet.

Some physicists suggest that we may have to settle for an
array of different theories, perhaps representing different solutions
to string theory’s equations. Maybe each solution represents a different
universe—part of some larger “multiverse.”


I am not a proponent of the idea that our Big Bang universe is just part
of a larger multiverse. It has to be taken seriously as a possibility,
though. And it does lead to interesting consequences. For example, it
would explain why some constants of nature, particularly the dark energy,
have values that seem to be very favorable to the appearance of life.
Suppose you have a multiverse in which constants like dark energy vary
from one big bang to another. Then, if you ask why it takes the value it
does in our Big Bang, you have to take into account that there’s a
selection effect: It’s only in big bangs where the dark energy takes a
value favorable to the appearance of life that there’s anybody around to
ask the question.


This is very closely analogous to a question that astronomers have
discussed for thousands of years, concerning the Earth and the sun. Why
is the sun the distance that it is from us? If it were closer, the Earth
would be too hot to harbor life; if it were further away, the Earth
would be too cold. Why is it at just the right distance? Most people,
like Galen, the Roman physician, thought that it was due to the
benevolence of the gods, that it was all arranged for our benefit. A
much better answer—the answer we would give today—is that there are
billions of planets in our galaxy, and billions of galaxies in the
universe. And it’s not surprising that a few of them, out of all those
billions, are positioned in a way that’s favorable for life.


But at least we can see some of those other planets.
That’s not the case with the universes that are said to make up the
multiverse.


It’s not part of the requirement of a successful physical theory that
everything it describes be observable, or that all possible predictions
of the theory be verifiable. For example, we have a very successful
theory of the strong nuclear forces, called quantum chromodynamics
[QCD], which is based on the idea that quarks are bound together by
forces that increase with distance, so that we will never, even in
principle, be able to observe a quark in isolation. All we can observe
are other successful predictions of QCD. We can’t actually detect
quarks, but it doesn’t matter; we know QCD is correct, because it makes
predictions that we can verify.


Similarly, string theory, which predicts a multiverse, can’t be
verified by detecting the other parts of the multiverse. But it might
make other predictions that can be verified. For example, it may say
that in all of the big bangs within the multiverse, certain things will
always be true, and those things may be verifiable. It may say that
certain symmetries will always be observed, or that they’ll always be
broken according to a certain pattern that we can observe. If it made
enough predictions like that, then we would say that string theory is
correct. And if the theory predicted a multiverse, then we’d say that
that’s correct too. You don’t have to verify every prediction to know
that a theory is correct.


When we talk about the multiverse, it seems as though
physics is brushing up against philosophy. A number of physicists,
including Stephen Hawking and Lawrence Krauss, have angered philosophers
by describing philosophy as useless. In your new book, it sounds as if
you agree with them. Is that right?


I think academic philosophy is helpful only in a negative sense—that is,
sometimes physicists get impressed with philosophical ideas, so that it
can be helpful to hear from experts that those ideas have been
challenged within the philosophical community. One example is positivism,
which decrees that you should only talk about things that are directly
detectable or observable. I think philosophers themselves have
challenged that, and it’s good to know that.


On the other hand, a kind of philosophical discussion does go on
among physicists themselves. For example, the discussion we were having
earlier about the multiverse raised the issue of what we expect from a
scientific theory—when do we reject it as being outside of science; when
do we accept it as being confirmed. Those are meta-scientific
questions; they’re philosophical questions. The scientists never seem to
reach an agreement about those things—like in the case of the
multiverse—but then, neither do the professional philosophers.


And sometimes, as with the example of positivism, the work of
professional philosophers actually stands in the way of progress. That’s
also the case with the approach known as constructivism—the idea that
every society’s scientific theories are a social construct, like its
political institutions, and have to be understood as coming out of a
particular cultural milieu. I don’t know whether you’d call it a
philosophical theory or a historical theory, but at any rate, I think
that view is wrong, and I also think it could impede the work of
science, because it takes away one of science’s great motivations, which
is to discover something that, in an absolute sense, divorced from any
cultural milieu, is actually true.


You’re 81. Many people would be thinking about retirement, but you’re very active. What are you working on now?

There’s something I’ve been working on for more than a year—maybe it’s
just an old man’s obsession, but I’m trying to find an approach to
quantum mechanics that makes more sense than existing approaches. I’ve
just finished editing the second edition of my book, Lectures on Quantum Mechanics,
in which I think I strengthen the argument that none of the existing
interpretations of quantum mechanics are entirely satisfactory.


I don’t intend to retire, because I enjoy doing what I’m doing. I
enjoy teaching; I enjoy following research; and I enjoy doing a little
research on my own. The year before last, before I got onto this quantum
mechanics kick, I was writing papers about down-to-earth problems in
elementary particle theory; I was also working on cosmology. I hope I go
back to that.


Comments

Wednesday, May 06, 2015

Sign in to read: The human universe: Could we become gods? - life - 05 May 2015 - New Scientist

The human universe: Could we become gods? - life - 05 May 2015 - New Scientist

 ما گونه یی کنجکاو بوده و این کنجکاوی ما را به ایده‌های جالبی‌ در مورد
جایگاهمان در جهان : خدا، تکامل، هوشیاری کوانتومی و چند جهانی‌
میرساند.این جهان واقعی‌ نیست و ما در درون یک شبیه سازی کامپیوتری که توسط
هوش برتر ایجاد شده زندگی‌ می‌کنیم.و اگر چنین باشد آیا ما خود خواهیم
توانست آفریننده یک جهان باشیم ؟ خلق هوش مصنوعی اولین پیش نیاز رسیدن به
چنین مقصدی است ......



The human universe: Could we become gods?

We are a curious species, and our curiosity has led to some interesting ideas about our place in the universe: gods, evolution, quantum consciousness and the multiverse.

But perhaps the most curious of all is the idea that the universe isn't real, and we live in a computer simulation
created by a superior intelligence. In fact, according to Nick Bostrom,
the philosopher who developed the idea, this is the most likely
explanation for our existence.

Whatever the plausibility of this
claim, it begs a tantalising question: could we ever create such a
simulation? Could we become the gods of an artificial universe inhabited
by creatures so smart they are able to question their own place in
their universe?

The first requirement would be to create
artificial intelligence that can carry out the same range of
intellectual tasks as a human. According to cognitive roboticist Murray
...

Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Journey to Mars Overview | NASA

Journey to Mars Overview | NASA



NASA is developing the capabilities needed to send humans to an
asteroid by 2025 and Mars in the 2030s – goals outlined in the
bipartisan NASA Authorization Act of 2010 and in the U.S. National Space
Policy, also issued in 2010.



Mars is a rich destination for scientific discovery and robotic and
human exploration as we expand our presence into the solar system. Its
formation and evolution are comparable to Earth, helping us learn more
about our own planet’s history and future. Mars had conditions suitable
for life in its past. Future exploration could uncover evidence of life,
answering one of the fundamental mysteries of the cosmos: Does life
exist beyond Earth?



While robotic explorers have studied Mars for more than 40 years,
NASA’s path for the human exploration of Mars begins in low-Earth orbit
aboard the International Space Station. Astronauts on the orbiting
laboratory are helping us prove many of the technologies and
communications systems needed for human missions to deep space,
including Mars. The space station also advances our understanding of how
the body changes in space and how to protect astronaut health.

Monday, April 13, 2015

The Milky Way's Globular Star Clusters --"Relics from the Early Universe"

The Milky Way's Globular Star Clusters --"Relics from the Early Universe"

 Observations of globular clusters' stars reveal that they originated
around the same time — more than 10 billion years ago — and from the
same cloud of gas. As this formative period was just a few billion years
after the Big Bang, nearly all of the gas on hand was the simplest,
lightest and most common in the cosmos: hydrogen, along with some helium
and much smaller amounts of heavier chemical elements such as oxygen
and nitrogen.

Sunday, January 25, 2015