Ann wrote: ↑Mon Jan 01, 2024 8:18 am
Chris Peterson wrote: ↑Sun Dec 31, 2023 6:45 pm
shaileshs wrote: ↑Sun Dec 31, 2023 6:38 pm
Hi Chris, I acknowledge and appreciate your knowledge and thoughts, only thing I have difference of opinion is about "possibility of radically different understanding of universe" that humanity will have in next 100 years if not just 25-50 years. Just imagine how understanding changed/evolved in last 100-200 years. Completely changed. I feel there will be significant new discoveries in coming decades which will change all calculations and understandings about everything we feel we "know/understand" so far (it's like people till 17th century thought they "knew" all and it all changed radically) - way redshift based distance/time calculations, beginning/ending/cycles of universe or even space and time, how old universe is, how it'd evolve/dissolve, what came first, what will happen at end, what is end, what's is really dark (matter and energy), how emptiness/nothingness/darkness is ONLY constant and all physical world and light is a manifestation (temporary).. so many things. Unlimited possibilities. Quest and understanding will keep changing radically. Just my personal thoughts.
My view is that we know most of the laws that govern nature, and that changes in things that are incompletely understood (e.g. cosmology, the Standard Model) will be adjustments, not replacements. Nature appears simple and easy to understand. There aren't very many rules, and the techniques we've developed over the last century or so to learn them has proven extremely effective. It has been a long time since any fundamental natural theory has been replaced by something else.
Most science in the future (indeed, even now) will be about the study of the emergent properties of these simple, increasingly well understood laws.
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My point? Maybe we aren't out of shocking discoveries about the Universe just yet. But that is only my amateur opinion.
Ann
True that Ann! I completely agree.
I think I've seen most scientists who have best/most knowledge seem to agree with my assessment (that we really don't know much at all, forget 95% "dark" stuff, even not much about 5% light/physical matter).
People before Einstein or even as recent as before 1998 thought they knew a lot and then everything changed (space-time, relativity, expansion...).
I'm sure 50-100 years down the road, people living that time will have different understanding of universe (including some basic laws of physics that'd need to be redefined, some basic assumptions and calculations about redshift and distances and even gravity will be completely changed), even the age of universe will get recalculated to 100s of trillions (not just 13.8 billions), the size will be infinite, some new discoveries based on reverberations/string theory/quantum physics etc will prove things radically different than what we know today and they'd wonder how people living in 20## believed in something total false..
It's better to be cautious and accept and assume we don't know much than thinking reverse (as even @sadhguru says, we have to seek (if we feel we know most then that's mostly end of seeking).
Again, just my personal (lay person's) opinion and last word on this from my side.
Happy New Year everyone!