On 25 May 2015, at 20:44, Frederik Goplen wrote:

Suppose I wanted to create a new universe in my lab. What would I need to get started?

The question may seem absurd. After all, the universe is enormous. It is billions of years old and, as far as we know, it contains all that ever existed and ever will exist.

Still it appears that all this—including space, time, energy and matter—came into being with the Big Bang. If so, everything we know was created out of nothing. Or was it really?

If it is possible to create a universe from nothing—except perhaps from some rules like in a computer program—what is to stop us from doing exactly that some time in the future?

You will make a local non quantum universe. but you can decide to run all programs. This will not create a universe, but will give the appearance of universe to the average creature. Of course, you, outside that program, will not see it, despite you are already in it, in the statistical way.

There is no universe, if we are machine. It is only a stable and persistent illusion (assuming mechanism).

Bruno






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