home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Organization: Sophomore, Electrical and Computer Engineering, Carnegie Mellon, Pittsburgh, PA
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!sdd.hp.com!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!cis.ohio-state.edu!news.sei.cmu.edu!fs7.ece.cmu.edu!crabapple.srv.cs.cmu.edu!andrew.cmu.edu!jl8f+
- Newsgroups: alt.cyberpunk
- Message-ID: <Af2jX8200awOEL=kVn@andrew.cmu.edu>
- Date: Wed, 18 Nov 1992 21:15:36 -0500
- From: Joseph S Ligon <jl8f+@andrew.cmu.edu>
- Subject: Re: Life extension debate coming up in my flat?
- Lines: 29
-
-
-
-
- >>Also don't you think that if ultimately this was possible and birth rates
- >> decreased you'd be limiting change and society would become stagnant
- >> without input from the next generations <-- which would add to
- >> experience and all the inbetweens would be lost!
-
- >Glad you brought that up - I've agonized over it many a time.
- >That's what SPACE is for. This whole "limit the population" thing is
- >only valid while we are stuck on earth. Once we move into outer space -
- >no such limits need exist.
-
- This is a good point, IF the universe is infinite. I realize it seems
- strange to say that the universe might be finite, clearly there isn't a
- wall somewhere that marks "the end of the universe". But some
- physicists (I think Einstein first proposed this) think the universe is
- finite in the sense that after a certain amount of space is traversed,
- it repeats itself. In this scenario, time would also be required to
- repeat itself because in a finite universe there are a finite number of
- possible arrangements of the particles in the universe (assuming there
- is a smallest unit of space that cannot be divided into smaller units).
- Once a particular arrangement repeats itself, the universe will have
- reached the same state twice, and hence the same moment in time. Not
- that this scenario is necessarily correct, but it is a possibility. The
- amount of time and space required for repetition is, in any case, large
- enough to not impose any serious limits on the population.
-
- -Scott Ligon
-