Lawrence M. Krauss

A Universe from Nothing

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  • Despandrihas quoted2 years ago
    the last supernova in our own galaxy witnessed on Earth was seen by Johannes Kepler in 1604!
  • Despandrihas quoted2 years ago
    One of the most poetic facts I know about the universe is that essentially every atom in your body was once inside a star that exploded. Moreover, the atoms in your left hand probably came from a different star than did those in your right. We are all, literally, star children, and our bodies made of stardust.
  • Despandrihas quoted2 years ago
    The universe is the way it is, whether we like it or not. The existence or nonexistence of a creator is independent of our desires. A world without God or purpose may seem harsh or pointless, but that alone doesn’t require God to actually exist.
  • Despandrihas quoted2 years ago
    Science has been effective at furthering our understanding of nature because the scientific ethos is based on three key principles: (1) follow the evidence wherever it leads; (2) if one has a theory, one needs to be willing to try to prove it wrong as much as one tries to prove that it is right; (3) the ultimate arbiter of truth is experiment, not the comfort one derives from one’s a priori beliefs, nor the beauty or elegance one ascribes to one’s theoretical models.
  • nonhas quoted3 years ago
    Nothing is not nothing. Nothing is something. That’s how a cosmos can be spawned from the void
  • Aldair Apodacahas quoted7 years ago
    A truly open mind means forcing our imaginations to conform to the evidence of reality, and not vice versa, whether or not we like the implications.
  • Aldair Apodacahas quoted7 years ago
    There are three main observational pillars that have led to the empirical validation of the Big Bang, so that, even if Einstein and Lemaître had never lived, the recognition that the universe began in a hot, dense state would have been forced upon us: the observed Hubble expansion; the observation of the cosmic microwave background; and the observed agreement between the abundance of light elements—hydrogen, helium, and lithium—we have measured in the universe with the amounts predicted to have been produced during the first few minutes in the history of the universe.
  • Aldair Apodacahas quoted8 years ago
    We now know the age of the universe to four significant figures. It is 13.72 billion years old!
  • Aldair Apodacahas quoted8 years ago
    This problem, appropriately called the Cosmological Constant Problem, has been around since well before I was a graduate student, first made explicit by the Russian cosmologist Yakov Zel’dovich around 1967. It remains unsolved and is perhaps the most profound unsolved fundamental problem in physics today.
  • Aldair Apodacahas quoted8 years ago
    the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle (which I remind you says that the uncertainty in the measured energy of a system is inversely proportional to the length of time over which you observe it)
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