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Mother of Sciences
The realness of reality is an inquiry appropriate to
philosophy. The realm of science is reality as we perceive
it. All constraints in perception are, therefore, mirrored
in science. How can we identify and remove perceptual
constraints from science, or at least, understand their
manifestations? Before attempting to answer this question
the next ten chapters, let’s first look at how we
organize our knowledge under different domains.
1.1 SCIENCE, PHILOSOPHY AND SPIRITUALITY
Science stems from the basic curiosity innate in all of us.
Why is something the way it is? How does something work?
Implicit in such questions is an assumed ability to answer
them. Science represents that ability, that body of
knowledge from which logical answers can be elicited at
will. At the other end of the spectrum of knowledge is
spirituality, representing our collective ignorance,
addressing questions to which we do not have logically
satisfying answers. What is right and wrong? What is the
meaning of life? Philosophy sits in between these two,
dealing with problems such as the nature of knowledge and
reality. These vast domains of knowledge may appear to be
distinct subjects dealing with totally different problems
at the outset of a life of scientific investigation or
philosophical inquiry. It takes the wisdom that comes with
maturity to realize and appreciate the extent of the
overlap among the three.
Philosophy is considered the mother of sciences. To a
student of science whose faith is entirely with physical
sciences, this claim may sound like the wishful thinking of
a frustrated philosopher, but philosophy is a unique field.
It addresses questions in every aspect of human life, and
its techniques apply to problems in any field of study or
endeavor. No brief definition expresses the richness and
variety of philosophy; it is nothing less than the attempt
to understand the universe as a whole. Its sphere of
interest is boundless. It is a reasoned pursuit of
fundamental truths, a quest for understanding, a study of
principles of conduct. Philosophy seeks to establish
standards of evidence, to provide rational methods of
resolving conflicts, and to create techniques for
evaluating ideas and arguments. These techniques, of
course, provide the basis for modern sciences.
Despite this basic connection, philosophy seems irrelevant
to physics mainly because of the apparent ease with which
physics seems to answer the “why” and
“how” questions up until the undergraduate
years. Once one passes the undergraduate level, the
arbitrariness of some of the assumptions and
hypotheses in physics begins to shake the logical
faith we have developed thus far. We may suspend our
disbelief mainly because the theories, despite their
arbitrary nature and extreme complexities, seem to
work. But by that time, we realize that the role of physics
is no longer to explain why things are the way
they are, but to describe how they behave in a
mathematical fashion. This role, of course, is a lot less
satisfying. But it is when we begin to question the
hypotheses themselves that we find ourselves on a slippery
slope toward philosophy.
1.2 ASSUMPTIONS AND KNOWLEDGE
Nature’s laws are tricky to figure out, but once we
do figure them out, they are surprisingly simple. This
simplicity is what Albert Einstein hinted at when he said,
“Subtle is the Lord, but malicious he is not.”
Simplicity also implies the absence of arbitrariness.
For this reason, arbitrary assumptions and axioms to explain
physical phenomena and complicated computations describing them
should always be viewed with skepticism.
Some of the arbitrary assumptions in physics are easy to
spot—e.g., the speed of light is a cosmic speed limit;
nothing can travel faster than light. This is one assumption
we will go into in great detail. Another palpable assumption
introduced in modern cosmology is the one about dark matter.
Dark matter was postulated to account for the speed
anomalies in galaxies. The speed at which stars and
galaxies should be moving was calculated based on the
visible matter in galaxies. The calculated speeds did not
agree with the observations. The celestial objects were
moving faster than predicted, as though the galaxies
contained more matter than the scientists could see. They
postulated dark matter as the matter that could not be
seen.
A similar ad hoc assumption of dark energy was introduced
to account for another anomaly; the universe is expanding
faster that it should be. Dark energy is the invisible
force pushing things away from each other. Such ad hoc
assumptions in physics are easy to spot.
The assumptions dealing with the nature of reality itself
are far trickier to spot. Examples of such assumptions are:
there is a three-dimensional space, there is a continuously
flowing time, and so on. These fundamental assumptions are
as philosophical as the statement that there is a God. In
this book, we will ponder over these philosophical
assumptions as well. We may not be able to explain away all
these assumptions and arbitrarinesses. However, we may be
able to see what they are based on, where they come from.
Some of these philosophical assumptions are embedded so
deeply in the way we look at the world that they form the
fundamental concepts on which our physical sciences are
built.
1.3 NATURE OF REALITY
One of the foundations of physics is the concept of time.
Time is so pervasive in our daily lives that we take its
existence to be self-evident. Despite this appearance, time
is in fact an abstract and arbitrary concept. It is a
mathematical construct much like numbers. How such
imaginary things as time and numbers could describe
“real” physical phenomena is indeed a surprise.
Later on, we will find a plausible explanation for the
existence of time, not in physics, but in evolutionary
biology. Evolution has played a large role in our
perception, and thereby in physics. The role of evolution
in our sense of reality (which includes space and time) is
an insight that provides surprising answers to a wide range
of questions.
While the realness of time may be logically debated, we
never find ourselves suspecting space, because we sense and
perceive it directly. Despite this direct perception, our
faith in space is easily shaken by a cursory exposure to
neuroscience and the study of consciousness. Losing faith
in the realness of space is not all bad, because in the
process, we gain insights into one of the most arbitrary
assumptions in modern physics, namely the sanctity of the
speed of light. The speed of light is considered a kind of
cosmic speed limit for matter. It is also a constant no
matter how we measure it (i.e., irrespective of our state
of motion). Once introduced to this assumption, the
immediate question that confronts any serious student of
physics is, what is so special about the speed of light?
Why the speed of light? Why not some other number, the
speed of something else? We will see later that the answer
lies not just in physics but in neuroscience, in how our
brain creates a reality for us.
The nature of reality used to be in the realm of philosophy
or even religion and spirituality, but sciences have
started staking a claim to it. In the last couple of
decades, cognitive neuroscience has begun to understand the
true nature of reality [1] as a representation of our
sensory inputs. Reality is a model created by our brain. It
is a representation that maximizes our chance of survival.
Once this scientific understanding of reality (as opposed
to a philosophical conjecture) percolates to other modern
sciences (especially physics), what is explored in this
book will become part of our basic knowledge. We will see
clearly the role of sensing and perception in the theories
of physics.
The unreal nature of space and time may be a little
unsettling at first. However, it is important to realize
that our perceived reality is the reality we have
to live by. It is this perceived reality that we have to
describe in our sciences, that we have to build theories
on. The physical causes behind the perception, the absolute
reality of which our perception is only a representation,
is largely irrelevant to us. This irrelevance is precisely
the reason why our senses did not evolve to sense the
physical reality as it is.
We will come back to the virtuality of time and space
(mainly in the form of the distinction between a
sensed reality and an absolute reality)
again and again in the book. We will use concepts from
evolutionary biology, neuroscience and, most of all,
from physics to understand the unrealness and its
implications. We will see interplay between modern sciences
(biology, physics, neuroscience, etc.) and the
philosophical schools of thought. We will see clearly what
it means to say that reality is a representation of our
sensory inputs.
If our reality is merely a representation created in our
head, what is it that is being sensed? Paradoxically, the
absolute, physical reality cannot be known. The sensed
reality, the representation is the Unreal Universe. The
distinction between the sensed reality and what is being
sensed is not a new insight. Such questions about the
nature of reality have been articulated and attempted in
metaphysics and in many lines of Eastern philosophy.
Similar inquiries into the basis of reality and knowledge
are found in epistemology.
What is novel in this book is the application of
these philosophical concepts to answer some real physical
questions. This book is an attempt to extrapolate from what
is known into what is not knowable. We hope that the
insight represented in this extrapolation will have some
impact on the way in which we understand the workings of
the universe, that it may take us a little closer to
“God’s own thoughts.”
Toward the end of the book, we will see how the workings of
physics, and indeed of all sciences, are inextricably
intertwined with our philosophical stances on the nature of
reality. Philosophy provides the ground rules and the arena
where the sciences play out their games. Perhaps this line
of thinking, rather than worries about its own irrelevance,
is behind the maternal claim that philosophy stakes on
sciences.
Read Chapter 2.
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