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I am recording this intro after I recorded the rest of the AMA on Saturday, May 2nd of 2026. And I I mentioned that because tonight is game seven in the first round series of the NBA playoffs between my beloved Philadelphia 76ers and the hated Boston Celtics. And I mention this because there's really nothing else on my mind right now, I'm actually working on my book while I'm not doing this, the ama, but really in the back of my mind, it's basketball that is taking up most of my mental space. And this is the intro to the ama so I can talk about whatever I want. I know that a lot of people are not especially fascinated by this topic, so you can skip ahead to the AMA itself because I might as well explain where my mental space is at. And I've talked about before how I admit that that sports fandom is largely irrational, or at least irrational. It's not irrational in the sense that you're making a mistake to root for one team over another, but it's non rational in the sense that there's no real moral calculus or ethical considerations that go into choosing which team to root for. It depends on where you were born. Right. I think this is very harmless and in fact fine. Right. I'd much rather have people self identify as fans of a certain team and put a lot of their emotional energy into rooting for that team than other much more harmful ways to make irrational choices about how to live your lives. So I'm all in favor of this. And I grew up outside Philadelphia. All of my sports fandom is still Philadelphia based and basketball was always my sport of choice going back to 1976 when the Philadelphia 76ers purchased Julius Irving because the upstart American Basketball association was folding and some of their teams were being brought into the NBA, the more long lasting National Basketball Association. And some of those teams couldn't afford the fee to go in. So the New Jersey. No, they were at the time the New York Nets. Then they were the New Jersey Nets. Now they're the Brooklyn Nets. At the time, the New York Nets couldn't afford to keep their best player, Julius Irving. And the Philadelphia 76ers, my hometown team, purchased him and immediately became NBA championship contenders. Not long after, just a few years earlier, they set the record for the worst record in a season in the history of the NBA. So it was an impressive turnaround that year, 1976-77, they did not win. They came close. They made it to the NBA Finals. They played against Bill Walton and the Portland Trailblazers. And that set up several years of frustration because Julius Irving, Dr. J, my childhood hero, was good enough to drag them to the NBA Finals. Several times they went in that year. They went again in 1980. 80. I forget. I forget how many years, at least four or five times they went to the NBA Finals with Dr. J. But they didn't win until in 1983, actually 1982, they were able to acquire Moses Malone, the center from Houston, who was the league MVP at the time, and he led them to one of the best teams seasons in history in the 82, 83, Philadelphia 76ers, they easily cruised to the NBA championship. And that was, you know, it felt good after all those years of frustration. And so I. But I grew up with, you know, the Sixers being super duper competitive. And the Celtics. The Boston Celtics were their hated rival. And I use hate and things like that in a very casual sports like way. I don't hate the Boston Celtics. In fact, I have enormous respect for them as a franchise. I really, really didn't like Larry Bird personally when we were rooting against him. But now with the passage of time, I have again, enormous respect for his game and his achievements and the organization as a whole. But that year that the Sixers won the NBA title, they didn't actually meet the Celtics in the playoffs. They. They usually meet the Celtics. The Sixers versus the Celtics is the single most frequent NBA playoff matchup. The Sixers have played the Celtics more often than any other two teams have played each other in the history of the NBA. And it's a, it's a storied rivalry going back to Wilt Chamberlain and Bill Russell and the whole thing. And to be super honest, the Celtics usually come out on top of Dr. J's. Sixers beat the Celtics a couple times. The Celtics beat them a couple times. The last time that the Philadelphia 76ers beat the Boston Celtics in the NBA playoffs was 1982, when I was still in junior high school. I guess for the beginning of high school. Yeah, high school, I suppose. So that's a long time. Since then, the Sixers have made it back to the playoffs and either done well or met the Celtics and done badly. The Celtics have just beaten them over and over again. Again in the playoffs and especially the last few years. You know, since I'm gonna, I'm gonna take pity on you all because I know you don't care about this. I could literally talk about this for hours and you don't want to hear it. But there's extra drama because several years ago, the Sixers fired their general manager and coach and hired Sam Hinkey, who was a analytics based way of thinking about basketball that he brought. And he basically got rid of all their good players. And you think, oh, that's not very good to get rid of your good players. But he did it intentionally so that they could be bad and get good draft picks. And they did. It worked. This was later dubbed the process, as in trust the process by. I think it was a player on the team, Tony Roton, who first said, trust the process. But it was taken up by Sixers fans, including the rights to Ricky Sanchez podcasters and spread very widely. And the crown jewel of their drafting success was Joel Embiid, their center, who took as his nickname the Process. So trusting the Process became also putting trust in Joel Embiid. And I swear that I've never seen a basketball player have worse luck with injuries than Joel Embiid. I've seen players just get so injured they couldn't play anymore. That happens. Various players just never panned out because they had too many injury problems. But with Embiid, he keeps coming back and playing and then getting injured in weird ways. He's had teammates fracture his cheekbone in his face. He's had Bell's palsy this year just to rub it in. He had an emergency appendectomy during the last week of the regular season. He had his appendix out again. You can't blame him for things like this, but it has absolutely prevented them from going far in the playoffs because he, he's their best player. But this year, they are meeting the Celtics in the first round and Embiid had an appendectomy and he came back 17 days after having surgery to get his appendix removed, far ahead of schedule. He played pretty mediocrely in the first game that he returned, and by then, once they lost that game, they were down 3:1 in a best of seven series. And the odds are not good for you in the NBA when you're down 3:1 and are trying to win a a four game, try to get to four games, four wins before the other team. But the last two games, Embiid has been playing great, and the Sixers have pretty easily handled the Celtics. And now it's 3:3 and this is game seven. And Titanic repercussions for the happiness or sadness of all of Philadelphia's sports fandom that's going to happen tonight. So I say this again because it's what is on my mind again. I could talk for hours. There's a lot of human interest stories going on here. But the point is that it's fun, that it's quite enjoyable, that I'm glad that sports are out there. I tease people on Blue Sky. The other day I said I should do a solo podcast episode on why basketball is the best sport. And of course, people are like, no, it's not. You know, let me, let me tell you why. It's really cricket or whatever, and it's all in good fun. I don't actually think that there's any objective sense in which basketball is the best sport. I do think I could come up with arguments that it is or that it isn't. Blah, blah, blah. Let's all just have fun and enjoy the games. And also, we need to crush the Celtics tonight. I hope that happens. If it didn't happen by the time you're listening to this, don't talk to me about it. I will not be in any mood. But meanwhile, we're gonna do the ama. Thanks, as always, to the Patreon supporters of Mindscape for making this possible. You could become a Patreon supporter of Mindscape. Just go to patreon.com SeanMcArroll Let me actually check. I never remember if my middle initial is there in the Patreon listing. Where is it? Yeah, I don't know whether my. Whether it's there. Yes. Patreon.com SeanMcArrell the middle initial is there and you can sign up right now. It's a dollar per podcast episode. We're gonna change it to $5 a month at some point. We haven't quite done that yet, but still for typically, what, six hours per month at least of podcast goodness, five do per six hours is not so bad, I think. And if you don't want to, you don't want to, that's fine. But if you do sign up for the Patreon, then you get to ask the AMA questions. You get to ask a priority question once in your life that I will definitely try to answer because I can't answer all the questions that are asked. There are too many of them. And you get reflection episodes for me, talking for five minutes after every regular podcast where I talk about how I thought the podcast went, what we learned, things like that, as well as the joy of being a member of something, being part of something, much like being the fan of a favorite sports franchise, even if it always breaks your heart. So with that, let's go. Alex says, if there were an isolated region in space that consisted only of antimatter, would we be able to detect the fact that it is antimatter? So there's a. I'm going to answer the question. No, we would not be able to, but there's a. Like, it's really close to a slightly more subtle question that is very interesting and I think I know the answer to it, but I'm going to have to be a little bit less confident in that. Just so everyone knows there are no isolated regions in space that might be antimatter. Space is pretty empty, but it's not completely empty even in between the galaxies There is an intergalactic and inter cluster medium. There's a tiny density of particles which would keep bumping into any macroscopically large amount of antimatter and annihilate and give off gamma rays and X rays and we would know about it very clearly. So not to mention the fact that 14 billion years ago, near the Big Bang, everything was touching everything else, so there was no way for anything to keep isolated. So this is not a realistic question, but it's a good thought experiment question. If, like you say, if Alex says there were an isolated region of space and we could just look at it, so we're seeing photons come from it. Realistically, no, we could not tell whether it's matter or antimatter. It's just a relabeling. Roughly speaking, if you just, you know, they would, the people who were living in the galaxies that were made of antimatter would call what we call antimatter. They would call antimatter and vice versa. And the reason why. And furthermore, if there were only. If there was a universe that was only made of antimatter and it had. What can I say? Yeah. So if it was completely made of antimatter, even if they knew all the laws of physics, they wouldn't be able to say like, they're made of antimatter rather than matter. So the tiny little footnote here which makes it a little bit interesting is there is in the standard model of particle physics something called CP violation. CP are two symmetries, or at least two transformations you can do on the underlying particles and fields of the standard model. C says switch all particles with antiparticles and P says change the parity, that is the orientation of the axes. So you change right handed things with left handed things. So instead of a right hand rule, if you did a parity transformation, you'd be talking about a left hand rule. And that's important because parity is violated in various weak interaction processes. And indeed CP together is sort of the closest you could come to really trying to replace all matter with antimatter, because I know that that's just C, but C is not a very good symmetry, but CP is. So it's sort of better to relabel, if you like, CP as the honest exchange of matter with antimatter. So but CP is also violated just a little bit. And so there's a loophole which I think is true. I've never really thought this through. That's why I'm answering it first, because it's an intriguing question. If There were a semi isolated region of space, isolated in the sense that there was no matter being exchanged back and forth. And we were able to not only look at it, but like send them a signal and ask them questions, which we could do with photons because photons are the same for matter or antimatter. So photons don't annihilate or anything like that just because there's no antiphotons other than photons themselves, let's put it that way. So if we were able to talk with them by sending signals back and forth, could we decide without touching each other or sending matter back and forth that we were made of the opposite of whatever? Like we would call it matter and they would call it matter. But maybe what we call matter is what they call antimatter. I think there the answer is yes, because of CP violation. So basically what we could say is there are particle physics processes that happen at a certain rate that is different than the rate at which their CP conjugate processes happen. So for example, there is a kind of meson called the neutral kaon, which you can make in a certain way. And so we would not be able to use with our potentially antimatter friends words like protons and neutrons, right? Because we don't know whether they're what we call antiprotons and antineutrons. But what we could say is, you know, your atoms have nuclei that are made of charged particles and uncharged particles. So we call the charged particles protons, et cetera. And we could say, look, when we make a certain kind of kaon with a certain kind of collision of protons and neutrons, it makes certain kinds of other particles, okay? And the CP violation says that there is a long lived version of the neutral kaon and a short lived version. And in the long lived version, it can decay, it's neutral. So it needs to decay into total number of particles with zero charge. And the kaon decays into a pion, an electron and a neutrino with appropriate antinous where it needs to be. So in particular for the K long, it can decay into a negatively charged pion, a positively charged electron, which is what we call the positron, and then an electron neutrino, or it can decay into a positively charged pion, the negatively charged electron, the real electron, and an antineutrino. Because of CP violation, those seem very, very similar. Those seem almost symmetric. PI minus E plus nu or PI plus E minus nu bar in particle physics lingo. But because CP violation, the decays into the positron version happens slightly more often than decays into the electron version. So what we could tell our friends in the other galaxy far away is that in our universe, the low mass charged particles that make chemistry happen and so forth that we call electrons are the ones that appear in the less frequent decay of the long lived version of the neutral Kaon. And that is sort of an experimentally believable thing. You don't need to touch anything. You don't need to say, like, here's my electron. Does it annihilate with yours or not? You can just send that information and then you can say, is the same thing true with your version of the electron? And they would be able to tell whether they are made of what we call antimatter or not. Like I said, I think all that's true. I'm only like a hack particle physicist. I'm not an expert particle physicist. So if anyone wants to check me on that, that would be perfectly allowed. David Kudaverdian says, if I'm not mistaken, you take the fact that we are not Boltzmann brains as a good anthropic reason to think that our universe doesn't allow many Boltzmann brains. Even in the future, could you please give an example of bad anthropic reasoning and highlight the key differences compared to good anthropic reason, using the example above as an instance of good anthropic reasoning. So that's not exactly what I would say, just to be super duper careful, because the beginning of your statement is the fact that we are not Boltzmann brains. We could be Boltzmann brains, that is to say, whatever you want to say you are absolutely sure of and convinced about us. Like maybe you think you exist and the room you're in exists and so forth, and all of your memories are what your memories appear to be in an eternal universe with random fluctuations, things like that, configurations like you. Even if it's not just a brain, like your whole body is there, the whole room you're in, you know, whatever you're looking at right now, say that that's all real. Maybe the whole solar system is real, maybe the whole Milky Way galaxy is real. It doesn't matter. In an eternally randomly fluctuating universe, it is overwhelmingly likely that that configuration randomly fluctuated into existence. And the impression that you have that there was a big bang 14 billion years ago randomly fluctuated into existence in your brain. So you can't say on the basis of data that you're not a Boltzmann. Brain unless you do bad anthropic reasoning. So the reason why I the way that I get out of the Boltzmann brain problem is I say if Boltzmann brains do dominate, or Boltzmann fluctuations, more broadly, even bigger fluctuations than just brains, if those dominate the set of conditions in the universe that are given by any macroscopic specification, then we are cognitively unstable. Then we have no reason to trust any conclusions we have about the universe. It's not that that scenario is therefore false, but it's that we should put almost zero credence on it, because the options, we put a high credence on it, and we are not allowed to do anything, to say anything about the universe, to trust anything we believe. There's just no way to go through life. Or we can say, no, I'm going to reason as if I am not a Boltzmann fluctuation, but I am the thermodynamically sensible observer that I think that I am, and how can I justify that by having large credence on cosmological models in which that would be true. Right? In other words, it's a long winded and philosophically careful way of getting to the conclusion that we should build cosmologies which are not dominated by Boltzmann brains. Okay, that's the way that I would say it. So it's not quite an anthropic thing. It's, you need cognitive stability kind of thing, which is not quite the same thing. Now, most astronomers, you want to, you want to know what's an example of bad anthropic reasoning? Here's an example of bad anthropic reasoning. In a Boltzmann fluctuation dominated universe, most observers would be brains or would be minimal observers, whatever that is. People take the brain thing too seriously. Who cares about the brain thing? If you want to say, well, I need more than just a brain, I need this or that, fine, I give you whatever you need. The point is, you would be minimal. And the world that we see around us is in no sense minimal, where minimal means a minimum deviation from thermal equilibrium. Okay, so in that universe, this is an example of bad anthropic reasoning, remember? So most observers would be minimal fluctuated observers. Therefore, if I lived in that universe, I would probably be a minimally fluctuated observer. I look around and see that I am not. Therefore, I have ruled out that scenario by taking data. Okay? The reason why that's bad anthropic reasoning is it does not follow that just because most observers in that universe would be this kind of fluctuation that you would be this kind of fluctuation because you know things about yourself. In order to get to that conclusion, you have to forget everything you know and pretend you're a typical observer in the universe and then draw conclusions on that basis. I don't think that's allowed. I think that that's almost always what cosmologists do, and philosophers, for that matter. They imagine that the way to do anthropic reasoning is to pretend that they are typical observers by closing their eyes and forgetting that they're not typical observers, and then opening their eyes and acting surprised when they see the reality of the world around them. I just think that's a mistake. So Isaac Wilkins and I are, as I've mentioned, writing a paper, and it's going to be called Anthropics with Open Eyes, where you can actually take into account everything that you know, following ideas that Radford Neal came up with with a long time ago. And the point is that the original argument I gave you does not rely. I never used in any way the sense that you're a typical observer in the universe, okay? You're typical within the set of observers that have exactly everything you know about the universe. So that's why I said, you tell me what you take as real. And within the set of observers have people like that you're typical because you have no experimental evidence that you're not. And so that's good anthropic reasoning. If you treat yourself as typical within the set of observers just like you, that's fine. And there's plenty of other examples. The doomsday argument that says that humanity won't last much longer because it would be very, very unlikely for us to be in the early stages of humanity if we were typical human beings. We're not typical human beings. We're who we are. That's just bad anthropic reasoning. If you use a razor to shave, your razor has been secretly teaching you a bad habit to press too hard while you're shaving. Most modern razors use springs and flexible blade mounts. These give the illusions of flexibility, which sounds good, but what you're actually doing is giving up precision. Since you can't precisely control what your blade is doing, you end up using more pressure than you really should. 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But when it does, 1-800-FLowers makes it easy to send mom something beautiful, thoughtful, and worthy of everything she does. Right now with double blooms from 1-800-Flowers. Order one dozen roses and get another dozen for free. It's a bigger gesture with fresh, beautiful flowers arranged to make Mother's Day feel as special as she is. Make Mother's Day feel bigger with double blooms at 1-800-Flowers.com podcast that's 1-800-Flowers.Com podcast. Nicholas Sharowski says I've noticed for quite some time that certain ideological groups, particularly some anti feminist or reactionary communities, tend to weaponize rationality to give the appearance of logical rigor to what is essentially motivated reasoning. In doing so, they treat being rational as synonymous with being cold and unemotional, and dismiss opposing views and justified public outcry as mere feelings. This is often captured by the now infamous line, are you offended? Yet? These same groups frequently commit basic is ought fallacies, for example jumping from statistical averages to rigid prescriptions about social roles. Personally, I think the word rationality has taken on a somewhat negative connotation for me because of this kind of misuse. As someone committed to genuine scientific thinking, what is your view on this current trend of invoking supposed rationality, and do you believe that the scientific community has a responsibility to push back against it? So I want to, you know, I wouldn't phrase things at all in quite this way. I think that, you know, it's tempting to in heated debates over political or cultural or theological for that matter issues, to attribute all of the good features to our side and all the bad features to the other side. Now, sometimes the other side really does have more bad features than our side does, but you have to be aware of the temptation to say that all of their facets are the bad ones and all of ours are the good ones. That's just really comforting to think that. But it's usually not as true as we take it to be. So I would be much, much more careful about complaining that they're completely irrational and have used all these words because they're just motivated, whereas we are perfectly reasonable. But having said that, I think that you do point to a very real thing that is happening. I mean, let's just forget about this or that ideological group. I think that an increase. Increasingly common tactic these days is to take something that most people think is a virtue, like being rational or having free speech or something like that, and weaponizing it. Weaponizing it by taking the. The act and, you know, perverting it in some way by not buying into some of the preconditions for that act to actually be the virtue that it is supposed to be. There's no better example of this than the infamous Harper's Letter. I don't know if you saw the Harper's Letter. If you remember this from a few years ago. This was an open letter published in Harper's Magazine with a various set of distinguished signatories complaining about the leftist suppression of open inquiry, especially in universities and places like that. And there are absolutely, really examples of suppression of open inquiry by leftists on campus and elsewhere. There are also absolutely examples of suppression of open inquiry by conservatives on campus and elsewhere. And by any. I would argue that by any reasonable, fair accounting, the conservatives are much more dramatic at it. And we're seeing that right now. Now we're seeing it now. The conservatives are in power. There are universities that are undoing tenure protections, that are forbidding faculty members from discussing certain topics in their courses, that are firing faculty members for political speech, and a whole bunch of really, really dramatic things, much worse than anything that was being complained about in places like the Harper letter. And so there's this ability to sort of weaponize the claim, like, well, you don't believe in free speech or something like that. When the other side really isn't interested in free speech, they're just using your sympathy for it against you. So I do think that something like rationality could be very much used in that way. But the response is just to be rational. The response is to be really rational, truly rational, not to give up on it, not to reject the terminology. You know, I remember one saying years and years ago, in response to something online or something like that, I said, you know, what matters is not equality of outcome. I think it was about men and women in science. And what I said was, what matters is not the equality of outcome, but the equality of opportunity. Right? I don't care whether there is 5050 representation of men and women in physics departments. What I care is that a young person who has certain talents in doing science and doing phys Physics has the same opportunities to become a physicist as depending on whether they're a boy or a girl or whatever. Okay? And. But what I was, I was given crap for saying this. Because that phrase, you know, equality of opportunity, not equality of outcome, is weaponized by people who actually don't even want equality of outcome. Right? They, they claim that when you're trying to argue that sexism is bad and is all over the place in academia, that secretly or explicitly you want equality of outcome and that's not what you should want. Fine, that's not what I want. But the point is we don't have equality of opportunity. I really just think that when the bad guys try to weaponize good ideas, we stick by the good ideas. We talk to each other as reasonably and honestly as possible, and we exemplify doing things in the right way. We don't give up on doing things the right way or start doing things the wrong way or even give up on good ideas or vocabulary words just because they are being misused. We need to be open to the fact that some people might use good ideas or good concepts or whatever for bad reasons. That's fine. And we shouldn't allow people to take advantage of us. We shouldn't let them run over us by lying and cheating and stealing and whatever. But we shouldn't give up on the good ideas. We should absolutely always be in favor of rationality, of fairness, of free speech, of open inquiry of all of those good things that a good modern post enlightenment liberal should care about. Alexandra koziomtis Sorry Alexandra, I butchered your last name. Kojum says, has grappling with the complexities of the universe and its laws made you more anxious or more peaceful as a human being? How has a deep understanding of physics changed your daily contentment? I personally struggle with the idea of being on deterministic rails and just a small blip of the universe experiencing itself. Well, I have. It's a perfectly legitimate question and it's a tricky one and people will answer it differently. The facts of determinism. Again, again, I truly don't care about determinism. Determinism is just not what matters. If the laws of physics were had a truly stochastic element like they do in objective collapse models of quantum mechanics, so what that doesn't make me feel any better. That just means that, you know, the most compact description of physics involves some random numbers as well as some deterministic things like that has zero effects effect on how I think about the world. I think that when people worry about determinism, really what they're worried about is the laws of physics, whether or not those laws are deterministic or stochastic. They're worried about the fact that there is a level of description on which we are impersonal, mechanistic pieces of the universe obeying some laws. Okay? And that doesn't bother me even a little bit. Like, I know that, that that's true whether it's deterministic or not, but I don't know the microstate of the universe. I'm not Laplace's demon, as you might recall. So it just doesn't affect my life at all. We have a really good podcast episode coming up soon where I talk with someone who is really good at explaining the difference here. The real big issue is, of course, life after death or mortality. Right. As I've argued before, a straightforward reading of what we understand about the laws of physics makes it very, very unlikely that there is anything like life after death. Death. Death is truly the end of our conscious experience. And I think that's super profound. And I think that, you know, if anything, scientists and philosophers undersell the importance of that. We sort of let it seep into the public discourse, but we don't make a big deal out of it. And I kind of think we should make a big deal out of it. It's. It's a big deal, and I struggle with it a little bit. Like, I don't like the idea that at some point it won't exist anymore. Right? Like, I'm not in favor of that. I mean, maybe there's a point at which I would choose to finish my existence that's perfectly okay, but I'm nowhere near there now, and I doubt I'll be near there when the time actually comes. So that is something to truly struggle with. In my experience, the people who think that there is life after death or heaven or reincarnation or whatever struggle just as much. I don't see any systematic openness to the ending of our physical life here on Earth because people think that there's a continuation afterward. So I think that, you know, I control what I can control, and the laws of physics and the existence of the soul after death are not things that I can control. So I'm going to deal with what's happening in the here and now? Zach McKinney says. What is your view on the appropriate contribution of contemplative practices and psychonautic explorations, including but not limited to the psychedelic variety, to understanding the nature and metaphysics of consciousness? I agree that rigorous contemporary science is needed to elucidate the neurophysiological and informatic basis of consciousness. Nonetheless, given that any complete theory of consciousness must account for a wide variety of non normative experience, to what extent do you believe ancient practices that reliably produce and interrogate altered states of consciousness can contribute to our understanding of the nature and origins of consciousness, respectively? So tiny correction. I don't think that non normative is the word you're looking for there. Non normative means means not judgmental. Right. Normative talk is rather than. Is prescriptive talk rather than descriptive talk. Norms are do we judge things to be right or wrong? I don't think that's quite what you mean in this particular context. But anyway, I think that there is some mild usefulness of psychedelics or various other practices that would lead to altered states of consciousness. In the very straightforward sense that you could see what people do when they're in these states and you could collect data about how conscious they are, how their consciousness changes, etc. That's fine. I'm not quite sure how useful it is, but it's worth doing. I think there's huge potential applications of psychedelics and other practices to therapy. You know, not just psychological therapy, but physical, you know, medicinal therapy, like fixing diseases and things like that. So I'm all in for that. That I'm all for that. I'm not sure that it helps us a lot with understanding the nature of consciousness. Probably what you mean is something more like, do I imagine that if I could access one of these states through drugs or other means that I would have some insight into the nature of consciousness because of that? And that I think, no, absolutely not at all. I know what's going on. I mean, I have certain things going on in my brain. I am changing those things going on in my brain either through drugs or stimulation or even some internal practice, whatever. But I'm changing the physical things going on in my brain and as a result of that, I change what I think I'm perceiving or something like that. I don't see why that gives me any insight into the nature of consciousness at all. I'm not quite sure what I would expect to discover by doing that. I don't think that we have in particular discovered anything super duper important about the nature of consciousness by people doing that. Again, that's not to say it might not help you live your life, but at a scientific level, I don't think it's telling us anything data wise about what consciousness is. Schleyer says. Does all the complexity and awareness on Earth mean that the universe is a complex and self aware system? Or does one living planet among septillions of dead ones in empty space amount to a statistically insignificant blip with universal complexity rounded down to zero? Unsurprisingly, the answer is that depends on how you choose to quantify complexity. If I have a big system that is mostly simple, but there's a little tiny part of it that is super duper complex, do I judge complexity by the average amount of complexity or by the maximum amount of complexity of any subsystem? I think it's entirely, okay, entirely legitimate to judge the complexity overall of a system by the maximum amount of complexity of any subsystem in it. Right. So, but you can choose to do it whatever way you want. I mean, I think that the purpose for which you probably would be quantifying complexity is to talk about the appearance of new abilities or modalities or whatever you want to say, strategies for this physical system to exist in the universe. Universe. And I think that the relevant fact there is the peak complexity of any subsystem, not the average amount overall. Mark Wall says having a consequentialist utilitarian hedonist stance like Peter Singer seems to require an immense amount of information to make the best ethical decisions. Within that framework. Do you think that it is a reasonable conclusion to say from that position that that makes science the most ethical pursuit as it is a framework of gaining more information about the world? For example, we found through scientific studies that cephalopods are sentient. So now we can make the world better by trying to not have them suffer? I wouldn't put it that way, no. I mean, I think that science is an important part of ethical pursuit more generally. But you know me, I am a pluralist. I think that there is no one thing that is the most ethical thing to do. Because if you, you pick any one thing you think is super ethical and everyone did that thing and didn't do anything else, I think that would be a super unethical result. Right. I think the most ethical thing is that a lot of different people are pursuing lots of different things. We need not only science, we need education, we need government, we need health care. We need maintenance, as Stuart Brand would say, of the world around us in all sorts of ways. We need distraction and entertainment and sports and things like that. So these are all ethical in different ways. And I don't think that there's a need or a sensibility to saying that one of them is the most ethical. But certainly, you know, again, the spirit of saying that doing science is important for a good ethical understanding of the world. In that sense, yes, that much I would totally agree with. Ken Wolf says, Since you are a fan of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice, are you familiar with the secret sequel Death Comes to Pemberley, written by P.D. james? If so, what did you think, or how do you feel in general about what is essentially fanfiction based on one of your favorite books? Well, I will tell you, I actually did read Death Comes to Pemberley, and I remember essentially nothing of it. That should tell you what I thought about it. Like, it's fine. I'm very much in favor of fanfiction. Okay. In fact, I would love it if fanfiction were much more popular. Popular. As a general rule, I think that we have professionalized artistic and creative pursuits too much. Right. There is such a thing as spare time and leisure time and the part of your life that does not just go into your occupation. And a lot of that time in the modern world, we spend relaxing or spectating in some sense, watching sports and things like that. We don't spend enough of it creating, writing, painting, making music, writing fiction, whatever it is. So I wish everyone would write fan fiction if that's what got them very excited. I don't think that that particular example, I think, you know, I don't know, P.D. james's other work, it might be very, very good. Mystery writer. Death Comes to Pemberley is sort of a mystery novel take on a sequel to Pride and Prejudice. I do remember that Elizabeth Bennet, who was the star, of course, of Pride and Prejudice, didn't have a very big role. Role in Death Comes to Pemberley was much more about Mr. Darcy, her now husband and his friends. But, you know, something about the sensibility is just different, you know, I mean, this is not an exact analogy, but let me suggest an analogy. When there is a song and you want to imagine a cover version of the song, the COVID version is not quite like a fan fiction sequel, but it's similar in some ways, right? What kind of song lends itself to a good cover version? You know, the classic cover version. Success. Is Jimi Hendrix doing all along the watchtower which was written by Bob Dylan. And so what's going on there? You have a wonderful song by an amazingly brilliant songwriter, Bob Dylan, who to many people's ears is not the best performer, not the best guitarist or singer or arranger or whatever. That's not where his strong suit is. He's good at it. But, you know, it's the songwriting and the wordsmithing that is really good at it. Whereas Jimi Hendrix can perform as well as anybody, right, Playing the guitar. And he's also a super good singer and definitely a wonderful sort of blues inflected arranger of music. And so he takes this underperformed song by Bob Dylan and turns it into a classic. All along the Watchtower. You wouldn't want to. I mean, there's no, no world class cover version of, I don't know, Bohemian Rhapsody. Like they already did it perfectly. Queen did the perfect version. I almost was going to say Stairway to Heaven. Stairway to Heaven was also done perfectly the first time by Led Zeppelin. But if any of you saw Hart do a cover version of Stairway to Heaven at the National. The United States gave some award to Led Zeppelin, right? The National Medal of Arts or something like that. I forget exactly what it was. But Anna, Nancy Wilson from Hart did a cover version of Stairway to Heaven that honestly was better than Led Zeppelin's version. And, and I, I say that because Led Zeppelin was in the audience and they were crying because it was so good, this version. So it's not, like I said, it's not a perfect example, but Jane Austen, you know, the, the equivalent here is there are people who are good at plots, right? Like coming up with some complicated set of events happening in the book. And there are people who. Best thing is the details of individual characters and their reactions and their thoughts and the words into which those things are put. Okay? And Jane Austen is good at the latter, not the former. No one reads Jane Austen for the plots. You know, it's going to end up with a happy ending, right? And if you're the kind of reader who is only interested in the plot, you're not going to like Jane Austen. It's how you get there. It's the journey. It's the delicious sentences and one character commenting on the other and the characters just thinking to themselves, you know, what are we going to do? And it's just so wonderfully insightful about how real people think. Like real people struggle with themselves and go back and forth and say all sorts of crazy things to themselves. And that's what's enjoyable about Jane Austen. Not the list of characters or their physical situation or whatever. And you know, PD James from my very very meager evidence of having just read that one book. Book is no Jane Austen when it comes to what Jane Austen is good at. It'll be like Bob Dylan covering a Jimi Hendrix song, right? Like who wants that? So you know, it's not that either artist is not living up to what they're good at, but it's not that either artist is not really good at something. It's that we want to maximize what it is they're good at. And I'm not sure if this particular kind of sequel really does does that. I'm Hannah. I've lost 75 pounds in 20 months with GLP1s diet and exercise on roe. I've gone from struggling to run a mile to running farther every day. You can access FDA approved GLP1s online. Get the support you need to reach your weight loss goals. Go to Ro Co Weight to see if you qualify. I'm a paid row partner. 20% average weight loss in one year in non diabetics with obesity or overweight with a weight related medical medical condition versus 3.1% in placebo arm Rx only to stay informed about serious side effects. Go to RO Co Safety. When people turn to telehealth for weight loss, they're looking for real support. That's why more people are choosing orderlymeds.com orderly meds connects you with real doctors and access to proven GLP1 medications like semaglutide and Tirzeptatide. No guessing, just a more supportive experience. And all shipped directly to your door in discreet packaging. Do your research, ask questions, then visit orderlymeds.com podcast for an exclusive offer. That's orderlymeds.com podcast. Individual results may vary, not medical advice. Eligibility required. See site for details. TK says hypothetically, if an alien civilization were able to harness massive amounts of negative energy and open a wormhole nearby, would that cause a gravitational ripple that could be detected by ligo? Well, you know the, this is far. This is vastly unspecified under specified question, you know, how far away are they? How big is the wormhole? Things like, like that. There's two things that sort of push in opposite directions here. One is, I think maybe this is your intuition to make a wormhole like a macroscopic wormhole. Okay, we can't do it, by the way. That's, that's the simple thing to guess is that making wormholes is not possible. But we don't know that for sure. So it's not. But we don't have a recipe for doing it, I guess, is the point. And maybe you can make a microscopic wormhole that is very, very tiny and that would definitely not cause a gravitational ripple that could be detected by ligo, but a macroscopic wormhole, the kind that a human being could safely pass through. I think your intuition that that would require an astronomically large amount of gravitational energies being pushed around. Yes, that is true. However. So, anyway, I'm getting to the two things that push in different directions. One, that's the thing that pushes you in the direction that says, you know, maybe, maybe it would require so much energy and so much manipulation of the gravitational field to make this astrophysically big wormhole that it would require an astrophysically large amount of gravitational waves to be created. Of course, that doesn't tell you whether they're detectable or not, because if it's far enough away, it's too faint. Right. I'm presuming that we're imagining a relatively nearby alien civilization doing this. But the other consideration is that giving off a lot of gravitational waves is a waste of energy. Right? Those gravitational waves are not useful to the alien civilization that is making the wormhole. So if they're clever, and presumably they are, because they're an alien civilization making a wormhole, they would try to minimize the loss of energy into gravitational waves. And actually, that's not. That is something we know how to do. Anything that you do that is perfectly spherically symmetrical gives off zero gravitational waves. If a star collapses in a perfectly spherically symmetric configuration, zero gravitational waves are given off. This is a theorem. This is an implication of Berkhoff's theorem of general relativity. Changing matter distribution. But keeping it spherically symmetric does not give off gravitational waves. The technical term is it's only the quadruple moment that gives off gravitational waves. So if your alien civilization wants to save energy or wants to go under the radar and not be detected, as it were, they could probably arrange their wormhole creation in such a way that it would not cause a lot of gravitational radiation. By the way, footnote there in the original idea for Interstellar. Remember the movie Interstellar? Came from an idea from Kip Thorne and Linda obst. Kip being former Mindscape guest and famous physicist, and Linda being a Hollywood producer. Producer. And Kip was a big name. He was one of the people who made LIGO happen. He won the Nobel Prize for that. And in the original story, he wanted the detection of the wormhole to be from Ligo So it wasn't the creation of the wormhole, but he had this idea that gravitational waves would pass through the wormhole and be detected by ligo, and that would alert scientists here on Earth that something was going on that didn't survive into the final movie. Sadly, Bill McDonald says, here comes my single short, timely once in a lifetime, at least in this branch. Priority question. Remember, every Patreon supporter gets to ask one priority question in their lifetimes. And you're on the honor system here, by the way. They're like, very, very rarely, but sometimes someone who is not a Patreon supporter tries to, like, join Patreon, just ask a priority question and then quit before they've paid any money. I'm like, really trying hard to enforce that, but we hope that people don't do that. And mostly they don't. I'm not, certainly not accusing Bill of, of doing that. I'm just. It came to mind because someone tried to do it anyway. So Bill's question is on Jeffrey Epstein. When does the failure to shun a wrongdoer become blameworthy? Well, unsurprisingly, I'm going to say that there are gradations here, right? Like, failure to shun a wrong wrongdoer means different things in different contexts. Like if someone is a wrongdoer and you're not shunning them, but trying to help them sincerely improve their lives and become better, then that's praiseworthy. That's not blameworthy at all. I presume that's not what is going on in the Epstein question. When Jeffrey Epstein was convicted for the first time circa 2008, it wasn't a big deal. People forget this because, you know, you, you remember things in retrospect differently than they happen. At the time, it, there were some news stories about it because he was a rich guy who went to jail, but it didn't really penetrate the public consciousness. If you go onto Google and do the N Gram search, which tells you how often different terms appear in the corpus of words being written, Jeffrey Epstein doesn't take off until around 2018. Really. He got like a bump in around 2016 when Donald Trump ran for president, but then a big bump because Miami Herald did a big story on him in 2018, and that's when he super Duper became infamous. And then he committed suicide not long after that. But in 2008, the first thing was, you know, if you were into following the shenanigans of rich financiers, you knew about it. But I think the person on the street didn't know his name at that time. So there certainly were people both before and after 2008 who accepted money. Many of scientists, scientific, many good scientists, many friends of mine took money from Jeffrey Epstein. The Santa Fe Institute took money from Jeffrey Epstein, Most of it again before 2008. So before he was known to be a sex offender or whatever. And they did sort of like almost by mistake, take a small donation after that, and they gave it back right away. Is that blameworthy? I don't think so. I mean, I think you try to do your due diligence, due diligence. Sometimes you slip a little bit and, you know, you give the money back and okay, that's what. What it is. I think that after 2008, once he had done that, if people knew that he was that kind of wrongdoer and just said to themselves, you know, he's a wrongdoer, but I'd rather his tainted money go to good causes than bad causes and therefore convince themselves it was okay to take the money. I think that's a little blame work. I think that that's. That was a little self dealing, self serving in your rationality there. But it's not like the world's biggest problem. And if you just said, yeah, that was a mistake, I made a mistake, sorry, and you were legitimate about it, I would completely forgive a person who did something like that. Now, it's clear from the files that there were people who not only knew that he was a bad person, but kind of thought it was cool the way that he was a bad person. People like Larry Summers, who we talked about, or Henry Rosovsky, who many of you don't know, but he was the provost of Harvard University when I was there, or Alan Dershowitz or whatever, Lawrence Krauss, people who were in on it. And I don't mean in on it in the sense of literally abusing children or whatever, but know. Lawrence Krauss asked Jeffrey Epstein for advice on how to fight against the charges against him of sexual harassment. And we know why he would do that. Larry Summers asked him for advice on trying to seduce a younger colleague, you know, who was a junior faculty member. You know, it's just like all this terrible, terrible stuff. And, and that's, you know, to me, past a certain level where. And none of these people have, by the way, said. Said they're sorry. That's the thing. Like, the worst offenders are the ones who try to make excuses for it. The ones who, like, took money and really shouldn't have, but, like it was just sort of some, you know, they did some psychology on themselves that convinced themselves it wasn't that bad and then realized later like, oh no, actually that was pretty horrible. And have sincerely apologized. Those. I, I let them apologize and I think that, yeah, let's move on. I'm not going to to treat those people as pariahs in any sense, but it's the people who, like, thought that what was happening was actually what was happening in the general sense of the misogyny and the sexism and all that stuff, not necessarily the literal raping of children, but the whole skeeziness of the enterprise was there. And some people thought that that was a feature rather than a bug. And those people, I am, I'm very happy to blame them, to find them blaming worthy. Sandro Stuckey says everyone seems to agree that generative AI is having a big impact on education, at least on the way students can and should be assessed, possibly how they learn. As someone who teaches university classes, is this something you notice yourself? If so, have you changed your teaching in any way? Well, I've 100% changed my evaluating. My teaching has changed in no way whatsoever. I don't know what the impact is on learning of AI. So in other words, it could be good or it could be bad. It's absolutely possible to take the work of struggling with difficult ideas and kind of farming that out to the AI to struggle with the difficult ideas for you rather than doing the thinking yourself. And I would absolutely expect that kind of thing to have a harmful impact on people's ability to. To learn. It's also absolutely possible that a good student could, in all good faith, just be struggling with some ideas, use an AI to help them understand the difficult ideas in a better way, and that helps them learn things. I'm 100% on board with that also. And I, as the teacher, as the professor, I don't know which it is that they're doing right, and I sort of can't. It's up to them. I'm very much of the opinion that once you're in a university or a college, the student is mostly responsible for how they choose to approach the experience of being in college. They're responsible adults by that point. I think that the job of the professors is to give them all the advice and all the opportunities and all the insight and facts and knowledge that they can. But at the end of the day, it's only going to be as good as the student wanting to learn things. Right? So anyway, I can't help it if the students want to farm out their learning to AI, I haven't noticed it that they do. I'm just saying that I don't really keep track of that. But it's very different when it comes to grading because many college students care very deeply about grades. You might have noticed, I don't know, as a professor, that always breaks your heart. You're like, please care about learning learning, not about grades. But they're not very sympathetic to that point of view. And so I've switched from mostly take home assessments to mostly in class assessments. You know, we do our exams in quantum mechanics in class now, whereas earlier they would have been take home assignments in the philosophy classes. You still have to write papers in the seminar. It's mostly the paper that's going to give you your grade. But in a small seminar, I'm talking with the student and I know what they're doing. And there's no possible way they could be handing over to AI most of the work to write the paper. And I've seen zero evidence that any of them try to do that in a large lecture class. Then I'm also going to give in class exams short answers where they talk about the concepts. And that's going to play a big role in addition to the paper. So that's all new. That's, you know, I've never given in class exams before. I came to Johns Hopkins, not because Hopkins, but because of AI, Precisely because of, because of that. And you know, it's not the biggest deal in the world. It's slightly annoying, but that's the world in which we live. You have to adapt in different ways. Scott says can the matter antimatter asymmetry be explained by simply postulating that the initial conditions of the universe were such that matter was dominant? Why assume a symmetric initial condition and work so hard to find a dynamical mechanism? Well, in a sense, yes, you can assume there absolutely will be be an initial condition that gives rise to our current condition without any shenanigans in between. You know, that's true because you can just start with our current condition, use the laws of physics and wind it backwards right to something. It's going to start somewhere. Now, there's a couple reasons why that's a little bit less popular than you might think. One is that in the standard model of particle physics. So forget about weird, weird things having to do with, I don't know, grand unification or nuke leptogenesis, which is a thing that can happen because neutrons heavy, heavy neutrons not the ones we know. But heavy neutrons can decay in ways that violate baryon and lepton number. There's different schemes that could cause a baryon asymmetry. And the question is, is that more work than just positive? So the two things, number one, even in the standard model. So we have two things, baryon number, which is the number of baryons. Baryons are protons, neutrons, things like that. And we have lepton number, so neutrinos and electrons and things like that. Okay. They're both separately conserved, both baryon number and lepton number at low energies, zero temperature in the standard position model. But we've known since the 70s that at high temperatures there's an increasing probability for B +L to be violated. That is to say, Baryon number lepton number is violated, although B minus L is conserved. So the difference between the baryon and lepton number of the universe stays the same in the standard model, even at high temperatures. But the total number of both baryons and leptons can change. So there are processes that make you one new baryon and also one new lepton on average. Okay, so if you started with an excess that was equal in both baryons and leptons, the standard model would get rid of that excess, and therefore you would not be left with an asymmetry. Today, it's easy enough to say, well, okay, I just want to start with an asymmetry in baryon number, not in lepton number. And then that would preserve some asymmetry at the end of the day. But the real reason this isn't popular is because it doesn't help you. Like, for a lot of these puzzles, like the cosmological constant problem or the horizon problem of inflationary cosmology or whatever, you're totally allowed to just say, well, it just was like that. There's no explanation at all. I'm just going to say it's like that, okay? The hierarchy problem, it just is. And you might be right. I can't promise you that you're not right. The reason why we spend time thinking about mechanisms is that you might be wrong. Wrong. And we know that we're not done when it comes to understanding the laws of physics or the origin of the universe. We know that we need to go beyond where we are now. And maybe these features, like the matter antimatter asymmetry are clues to how to go beyond what we know. Now. If you found a theory of grand unification that helped inflation happen and helped explain the baryon asymmetry and all those good things, things that might be evidence that that theory is correct. You know you can't still need to go check it, because you can't just explain things we already know to be true. You have to explain some new things as well. But that's the kind of guidepost that we use when developing better theories. You never know for sure whether that guidepost will be useful, but we have to take what we can get. A text says, you're on my mind. A bouquet from 1-800-FLowers says, you're my everything. Heartfelt moments belong in the real world, not just your phone. For 50 years, 1-800-Flowers has helped millions of people make memories that'll last a lifetime with gifts they'll cherish forever, their expertly curated arrangements and gift baskets shipped nationwide with a 100% satisfaction guarantee. Don't wait for the next big moment. Make it when you visit 1-800-FLowers.com podcast, that's 1-800-FLowers.COM podcast. When people turn to telehealth for weight loss, they're looking for real support. That's why more people are choosing orderlymeds.com orderly meds connects you with real doctors and access to proven GLP1 medications like semaglutide and Tirzeptotide. No guessing, just a more supportive experience. And all shipped directly to your door in discreet packaging. Do your research, ask questions, then visit orderlymeds.com podcast for an exclusive offer. That's orderlymeds.com podcast. Individual results may vary. Not medical advice eligibility required. See site for details. Michael Bennison says Thank you for the interesting discussion with Peter Singer. I learned a lot from your exchange, especially the parts on the foundations of utilitarianism. For example, the idea that utilitarianism does not seem to require an ontological commitment to something called utility, and Singer's meta ethical distinction between moral realism and moral objectivism. Okay, I'm gonna group a couple questions together. They have to do with the interview I did with Peter Singer recently. Mikkel Bennitson says Thank you for the interesting discussion with Peter Singer. I learned a lot from your exchange parts on the foundations of utilitarianism. For example, the idea that utilitarianism does not seem to require an ontological commitment to something called utility, and Peter Singer's meta ethical distinction between moral realism and moral objectivism. You've often been critical of utilitarianism. Did your conversation with Singer change your mind on any aspect of it? And then Terrence says, regarding the most recent episode with Peter Singer, whenever utilitarian comes up, you raise the rebuttal. If I compare it, paraphrase it as don't. Doesn't utilitarianism apply? We should sacrifice the happiness of one person if we can increase the happiness of five other people to a greater degree. In episode 207, Will MacAskill gave what I thought was a pretty convincing rebuttal to this, which I'm again paraphrasing as society at large or net utility, would be worse off if we lived in a world where we could make those kinds of sacrifices. I recall from that episode that you sounded pretty swayed by Will's argument, too. Have you since changed your mind about it, or what did you think of Will's argument now in light of intervening discussions of utility utilitarianism? So let me give you the overall answer to both questions at once, which is basically like, why haven't you become convinced by utilitarianism? The. The conversations with McCaskill and Singer, I thought, were both very useful and interesting and informative. And there were parts that did impress me in one way or another, but they did not impress me in the sense of moving me closer to utilitarianism. They impressed me in the sense of realizing that utilitarians are pretty willing to give up on some of the obvious conclusions of utilitarianism. I think that Both Singer and MacAskill, you know, look, if utilitarianism means anything, it means that if you have a choice between two options and one raises utility of the world and the other one raises it by less, you do the one that raises the utility more. More. Right? I think that's what utilitarianism needs to mean. You have different notions of utility, for sure, and you have different notions of how to measure it and how to add it together. That's where all the interesting philosophical discussion comes from. But the whole point of utilitarianism is that we need to be able to sacrifice some bad things in order for even better good things to happen. If you don't buy some version of that, then you're not really a utilitarian. And both McCaskill and Singer, I thought, were actually more reasonable as real human beings than they would be if they were honest utilitarians. That's what I was impressed by. They both seemed, and I'm trying to be fair, I think this is a possibility, positive feature of them as people, although not necessarily of utilitarianism as a philosophy. I think that they were both very realistic about, you know, how real people wouldn't be able to do this. You know, and wouldn't be able to act like good utilitarians. And how society shouldn't necessarily do the thing that utilitarianism might predict that it would do because it would actually secretly make things worse. And what you end up in either version of that is with a stance that isn't all that utilitarian. To me, it's closer to like, you know, there are things we just shouldn't do. Right. And when you say there are things we just shouldn't do, that's not utilitarianism anymore. That's something closer to deontology or something. So I think that, you know, it's not that any of this made me think, oh, there is a number out there called utility that I can just add up. That's all my objection. And if MacAskill says society at large, net utility would be worst off if we lived in a world where we could make those kinds of sacrifices, then he's just saying that utilitarianism doesn't work. I think that's what it means to me, that there is not a number that we can just add up and then try to maximize that number, that we have to take into account all sorts of things that are not necessarily quantifiable and trying to actually nudge people towards doing better things. I mean, maybe utilitarianism is a good kind of model to have in mind when we're individually wondering how to be good people. Because, you know, it's nice to be honest about whether or not a certain action would actually make the world better off in some version of that quantification, but not think that that's an absolute moral commitment. And to be more nuanced and rich in the ways that we set down the guidelines for good actions and bad, bad actions. Again, I do try to emphasize I don't have a fully fleshed out defensible moral theory. I think in certain cases I know what it means to be doing good things and bad things by my own lights. But I'm not done. I'm not finished. I don't have an alternative to offer that I could 100% stand by. So I'm just sniping from the sidelines, which is easy for me to do. The hard work of moral philosophy is being left to other others here. Nicola. Nicola Ivanov says in your discussion with Daniel Harlow, the one dimensional Hilbert space seems to come from treating the universe as a truly closed gravitational system. If that assumption is right, would your own view that reality is fundamentally a quantum state in Hilbert space have to be revised too? Or do you think your framework can still survive in a closed universe? So, you know, I, I, I think I said it in, in the interview. I'm not sure if it came through completely. I don't believe Daniel's. It's not that I think I can find a flaw in the argument. So for those of you who didn't listen to the episode, Quantum mechanics tells a story about states of quantum systems being vectors in this space called Hilbert space. Usually I say this really big space called Hilbert space. But the whole point of what Daniel and others are saying is that there's certain reasonable calculations in quantum gravity that lead us to the conclusion that in a closed universe, the effect of Hilbert space space or the, the fundamental Hilbert space is one dimensional. There's really nothing that goes on. A one dimensional vector space doesn't have anything happening at all. And so what Daniel wants to do is take that seriously. He believes the arguments that gets him there and he wants to say, okay, how can we live with that? And he has to invent an effective Hilbert space that is not the fundamental one and then talk about the relationship between them and a whole bunch of other things that then, you know, so good for him. For this is what you're supposed to try to do. You're supposed to try to take your ideas seriously. Sometimes they will lead you to good places that you just declare victory. Other times they lead you to apparent puzzles and you see whether or not you can deal with them. And he's trying to deal with it. For me, I think it's what if I came to the conclusion that I had some arguments that led to a one dimensional Hilbert space? I would just say, well, those arguments must be wrong. We don't live in a one dimensional Hilbert space. That's not, that's not good enough for the way that I think quantum mechanics works. So I'm going to try to find a flaw in the argument, not try to build extra structure on top of that one dimensional Hilbert space. So no, I don't think that my framework can survive in a one dimensional Hilbert space. But my way of reconciling that is to say I suspect there's a mistake in the argument that says that quantum gravity in a closed universe is in a one dimensional Hilbert space. Murray Cantor says, I believe I heard you mention Voyagek Zurich proposed solution to the measurement problem. What is your opinion of the approach? So I'm not sure that I would put it in those words. I mean Zurich has, he's a wonderful physicist who has been an absolute leader in understanding decoherence and the emergence of classicality from quantum mechanics. And his work there is absolutely central. I think he deserves the Nobel Prize. It's something that I cite and use all the time. Now. I don't think it's a quote unquote solution to the measurement problem. After all, what would count as a solution to the measurement problem? I think that there's two things that you need to solve the measurement problem. The measurement problem in quantum mechanics is this slightly vaguely defined thing, but it's basically in the textbook version of quantum mechanics, there appears the word measurement or observation or something like that. You hear things like when you perform a measurement, the wave function collapses and the probability is given by the Born rule and things like that. So the measurement problem is just what do you mean by all that and how does it happen? And the two things you need to solve the measurement problem are first you need a theory. That is to say, you need a well defined physical theory of what is happening in quantum mechanics when a measurement occurs. This is exactly what the Copenhagen interpretation doesn't give you. And therefore Copenhagen is not a theory that should be judged against other theories. It's a half theory that should be improved to a real theory. But once you have that theory, like many worlds, but also like pilot wave theories, objective collapse models, whatever, then you need to say, okay, in this theory, this is what happens when you and I think something like a quantum measurement is occurring. This is what that means in the context of that theory. Okay, so Zurich isn't proposing a theory, he just working in conventional quantum mechanics. And I think this is one of the places where the. And I don't mean this about Zurich himself, because he's thought more deeply about quantum mechanics than most people around. But there's a lot of physicists who just don't take seriously thinking about the foundations of quantum mechanics or even thinking about thinking carefully and rigorously and philosophically carefully about what, what happens in quantum mechanics. So there is a thing that you will hear which is absolutely wrong. Let me tell you what it is. It's the claim that decoherence solves the measurement problem. So I don't think that Zurich has ever quite said that. Maybe he says it somewhere, maybe he believes it. I know that he's not really a many worlds person, but I think that he's like many worlds person in disguise. To be perfectly honest, he doesn't want to talk about many worlds or things like that, but he is. His stuff is completely compatible with many worlds. So the point Is that if I have something like Schrodinger's cat, so I have a quantum system that is in a superposition. The cat is awake in part of the wave function. The cat is asleep in the other part. And then decoherence happens. And this is what Zurich describes very, very carefully and rigorously. There is an environment, so there's a whole bunch of photons and so forth. They interact with the cat and they interact with, with a cat differently depending on whether the cat is awake or asleep. And this branches the wave function of the universe because you get the cat is entangled differently with the photons in the environment depending on whether it's awake or asleep. And so the environment part of the wave function becomes perpendicular, orthogonal in the branch of the wave function where the cat's awake and the branch of the wave function where the cat's asleep. So they become non interacting, those two functions parts. For those of you who know a little quantum mechanics, this is a fancy way of saying there are pointer states. Cat being awake is a pointer state. Cat being asleep is a pointer state. And the density matrix of the cat subsystem diagonalizes in the pointer basis. And so the density. When I say the jargon words density matrix of the cat subsystem, what I mean is there are ways to talk about the state of the cat, even admitting that we're not keeping track of the state of the environment even though they are intact. So the full state of the universe needs complete information about both the cat and the environment. But maybe you don't have that, maybe you don't have all the photons and all their states. So you say what can I say? Just about the cat. And this idea of a density matrix is what you can say just about the cat. And what happens in decoherence, and this is brilliant and important and suggestive is that the density matrix, which is a little matrix. When I say little little for the cat thought experiment, it's a two by two matrix, right? And the rows and the columns represent cat being awake or cat being asleep. So that density matrix becomes diagonal. So there's only two entries. There's the awake awake entry and the asleep asleep entry. And is a feature of density matrices that the diagonal elements are non negative number numbers that add up to 1. Non negative real numbers that add up to 1. Okay, so that should set off bells in your head because when you hear the phrase a set of non negative real numbers that add up to one, you should think probability. That is a probability distribution, right? It adds up to one because something happens, they are non negative because the probability of anything happening is not a negative number. And if it's exclusive so everything that possibly can happen is included in your set, then you're going to add add up to one because the probability of something happening is one. So therefore. So the unimpeachably true statement is the dynamics of quantum mechanics and decoherence make it the case that the diagonal elements of the density matrix act like a probability distribution. They have the mathematical properties of a probability distribution. All that's true. Now, the crazy false thing comes when people then say, say that solves the measurement problem. You're done. These numbers in the density matrix are just the probabilities of the cat being awake or the cat being asleep. That's just the fact. Where did that come from? Just because these numbers have the mathematical properties of a probability doesn't mean that you can sort of magically say, therefore one of them happens and the other one doesn't. You could say that as an extra assumption. You could put that in. You could invent a new theory that says that that's true. But that theory isn't just ordinary unitary quantum mechanics. You're doing something different to it. And if you tried to invent such a theory, when the density matrix diagonalizes, the rest of the, of the. One of those probabilities becomes real and the other one doesn't. What happened to the other one? When did it disappear? How diagonal does it have to be? It's never exactly diagonal. It's only really, really, really close. Right? You haven't solved the measurement problem at all. Because you don'. Theory. You've just made it clear why in a theory like say, the Many Worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics, it is okay to interpret those numbers as probabilities. Once you have a theory, you can do that. If you don't have a theory, you can't do that. Russell Wolf says recently you liked a post I made on Bluesky. It was a cross between Mary Had a Little Lamb and the Monochrome Mary Thought Experiment, which had been reposted by Zoom. Zach Wienersmith Former Mindscape Guest this got me wondering a bit about your experience on social media. As a public figure, do you notice when a post you come across online is from someone who follows you? Does that impact how you interact with it? So on the one hand, I'm not like a super public figure, right? Like I don't need to worry about things that people sometimes worry about, you know, about their privacy being violated or whatever. Just because. Because I'm online. I don't have any stalkers that I know of. I have people who email me all the time who are slightly crack body, but I just delete those. It's not a social media problem. Right? So I don't need to worry about those issues that much. I'm not going to be doxed or whatever or someone appearing at my front door. Do I notice when a post I come across online it's from someone who follows me? Not really. Look, I'll be honest. My social media strategy is not very well thought out. It's, you know, I don't. I don't put a lot of effort into being on social media these days. You know, there was a time when I was blogging every day that I put a lot of meat of effort into that. But since I started doing the podcast and, you know, some combination of social media, of Twitter or Blue sky and the podcast constitutes my entire social media strategy. The podcast I'm very thoughtful about, but the Twitter or Blue sky stuff, I just am not. I'm just doing what I want. I'm just having fun. Okay, so I'm glad that I liked your post, but I'm sure I didn't notice that you were a follower. I'm pretty sure I didn't know. I forget what Blue sky tells you about those things. I'm just not very cognizant or trying too hard about social media a strategy. I will say that occasionally. I just said that I'm not a public figure, which is true, but like, rarely. But it does sometimes happen when. Usually when I comment on a Philadelphia 76ers social media post on Blue Sky. So, you know, I follow. Actually, I don't follow. I have a list on Blue sky of accounts that are devoted to talking about the Sixers, and I can sort of check in on the list if I want to see what's going on in the Sixers. And sometimes I will leave a comment or like, something or whatever, and very, very occasionally someone will say, wait, are you that Sean Carroll talking about the Sixers here? And so that is the closest I come to being recognized out of context on social media. And that's fine. It's fun. I say, yes, I'm that Sean Carroll. We all care. There's many of us, and we all care about things other than what I it is we do. For a day job, Edward Crump asks a priority question. Alex Vilenkin uses a universe from nothing analogy with a Coke machine where the can spontaneously appears outside, bypassing the vendor chute. It would seem that while the possibility of the event is non zero, it is still very unlikely. I'm asking you to tunnel a number into existence. What is an order of magnitude number of likely likelihood when comparing both events? And yes, please describe the numerator and denominator. So I'm going to do something here that I don't think I've ever done before with a priority question. I'm going to give you back your priority question opportunity to. Edward, you can ask another priority question. Not because this is not a good one, because I don't understand what you're asking. You say what is an order of magnitude number of likelihood when comparing both events. But I don't know what the two events are. You described one event which when a Coke can appears outside a vending machine, what am I supposed to compare that to? What's the other event? Is it the universe from nothing? I don't know. So the universe from nothing. That's a phrase I never use. I don't think it makes sense. Maybe what you are referring to is baby universe creation from a pre existing universe which is not from nothing, it's from a pre existing universe universe. And I can't give you the numbers in either case there that would be a calculation that I would have to do. Wouldn't be very, very enlightening. I think that the answer would be that making a universe is much more likely than making a Coke can. Simply because the wonder of inflation is that I can make a very, very, very tiny universe to start and it can expand arbitrarily, arbitrarily large sizes. So a Coke can is already macroscopic and therefore quantum tunneling into it is actually harder than just making a little tiny bit of Planck scale sized universe that could then grow into ours. Josh Charles says I've had trouble finding a way to word this question. I'm trying to understand a tension between the determinism of the Schrodinger equation and the possibility space that it constrains. I'm imagining a quantum system composed of several parts with a well defined starting state. If it was possible to run that system forward in time and then reset it back to the starting state and run it forward again, would you make the same observations? That is overall the same deterministic outcome would be observed across all branches. But within your observational space could you see something radically different like a particle decaying at a different point in time? If I understand the question correctly, yes. The last latter thing is correct at least. The many worlds story is that the, the Evolution of the overall quantum state of the universe is 100 deterministic. So if I knew exactly, which I don't, but if I knew exactly the quantum state of the universe now, I could run it backwards using the Schrodinger equation to any earlier point. And that answer would is deterministic. It is not going to change from doing it once to doing it another, another time. But if I can basically do a mini version of this, I can take a spin, for example, and I can put it in a plus x state so it's pointed along the x axis, and I can measure its spin along the z axis, and it's a 50, 50 chance. And in many worlds, that means that there's a branch in which it went up and a branch in which it went down. And I'm on one or the other, I can do that again, I can arrange that spin, I can do it again, again. And what I would find is no relationship between when I did it for the first time and the second time. There's a 50, 50 chance of spin up or spin down the first time and the second time and the third time or whatever. Of course, it's a different me, Right? Like the one who does the second experiment is clearly different than the one who does the first experiment, because the one who does the second experiment remembers the outcome of the first experiment and the other one doesn't. So the first one doesn't. So, you know, it's not really resetting the universe, but if that's what you're getting at. Many Worlds says that the overall state evolves deterministically. The experiences of any one observer in the universe do not evolve deterministically. Okay. Archilochus says, what do you think is the biggest or most common philosophical blind spot in physics to today? I don't think that there's one. I wouldn't. I don't. Yeah, I don't. I don't rank things like that very easily. I think there's a handful of ways in which physicists fall down on the job when it comes to philosophically interesting questions. I mean, the measurement problem of quantum mechanics is just an obvious example. I think the anthropic principle is another obvious example. I think the arrow of time is an another obvious example. There's plenty of physicists. I was just talking to a good friend the other day who's convinced that you can derive rigorously the fact that the second law of thermodynamics is true and entropy has to increase with time without making any time asymmetric assumptions. And that's just not true because people haven't thought about it. These are physics mistakes just as much as they are philosophical mistakes. A more philosophical blind spot is a level of falsifiability as a solution to the demarcation problem between science and non science. I think that philosophers know why that doesn't work and physicists don't. Physicists don't have clear understanding of what to do about things that their theories predict that are not directly observable. Right. And they could clean that up relatively easily if they thought about the philosophical version of it. But I don't think it's like one big philosophical blind spot. I think it's just a general, general unease with the idea that we have to sit down and think carefully like philosophers like to do, rather than just shutting up and calculating, which is the mode in which physicists are most comfortable. Nanu says, if the universe is so old and so big, what's the simplest reason? No one has shown up yet. And are we overlooking it because it's too obvious? Presumably this is the no one showing up yet refers to something like the Fermi paradox and the absence of, of intelligent aliens. Simplest reason is that life doesn't appear that often. That's it. You know, we have a selection effect. We know that we exist in the aftermath of life appearing. That that's old evidence. So that tells us almost nothing except that it is possible for life to exist. It tells us nothing about the probability or the frequency with which life exists. So in either it's very, very, very, very, very, very rare that life starts at all, or one of the other steps along the way. Right. Maybe it's very rare that there's multicellular life or eukaryotic life or something like that. People don't want to admit that they don't like to take that conclusion seriously. But it's certainly by far in a way the simplest solution to why we haven't been visited or noticed civilizations. David Maxwell says Bill Bailey once called himself a relaxed empiricist. If someone he trusts more, knows more than him and says something is so, it's so. This has obvious dangers. Yet you are that person for me, not because you know everything, but because you are self reflective, rigorous and honest and you're clear about how much you know. In a world where we can't keep up with everything, it seems wise. But is it? Should people approach life this way and are you special? Or could any intellectually honest, learned person applying Bayesian principles serve this purpose? Well, I certainly don't think anyone should put too much trust or credence in my views in areas outside those that I'm an expert in. Right. I mean my view is that some people know things and have thought about things very, very carefully and some people have, haven't. And there's just far too many questions in the world for everyone to be an expert on everything. So we should attune our strength of belief or credences to what most experts think in those areas that we ourselves are not experts in. If you have things like the foundations of quantum mechanics where the experts don't agree, then by all means pick your favorite expert and or develop your best opinions for yourselves. If you have areas like climate change where all the experts do agree, then you shouldn't let your personal opinions get in the way. And you should probably say if you're not an expert that they're probably right. Never 100% right. It's never just blind trust. But you should recognize when you are not an expert and you should listen to the experts when they are there. Now there's a trickier question. When you have something where there's not a lot of consensus and there's not even a lot of expertise like you know, there are questions of judgment or how you should behave in the world where no one is really an expert more than others in the sense of knowing a lot more because there's just a lot less established knowledge. And there I think it's okay to look to people who you trust in some ways, but they're exactly because everything is fuzzier. I think that the expertise matters less and you can use your just judgment more. Certainly I'm not special. I think any intellectually honest person should be someone who you should listen to about these questions. But it's exactly those questions which are not strict reproducible knowledge based where you're more encouraged to use your judgments to think things through. It's the more factual based questions where experts expertise really should have a very big impact on your credences. Mark Kumari says, in the context of the holographic principle, is it correct to think of the dual descriptions like bulk versus boundary as fully equivalent in physical reality? Or is one side more fundamental and perhaps the other is a convenient mathematical trick? In short, when two theories are dual, like ADS cft, are they equally real or is one a truer description of reality? Reality? Well, there's a subtlety here. A true duality is one where both sides of the duality are equally valid. In fact, one way of thinking about duality is, you know, that you can, or maybe you don't know. But there's a thing where we can start with a classical theory and we can quantize it to make a quantum theory. You can think of a duality as a place where two different classical theories upon quantization become the same quantity. Quantum theory. That sounds remarkable, and it is remarkable when it's true. But there are cases where we do understand that it definitely does happen, and that's a real duality. The subtlety is that ADSCFT is conjectured to be a duality, but the problem is that only one side of it is really well defined, perfectly well defined, and that's the conformal field theory side. The ADS CFT boundary duality posits a duality between between gravity in an anti de sitter space in D +1 dimensions and the conformal field theory without gravity in D dimensions. We know how to define conformal field theories. Those are the most well defined quantum field theories we have. Conformal just means there's no energy scale or length scale in the theory. The theories look the same at all scales, but the ADS gravity side is not well defined. We, we think it could be defined with string theory. The idea is supposed to be that strings propagating in that anti de sitter background should give you a well posed theory of quantum gravity. But the point is that that's understood in perturbation theory, which is start with a theory that we know or a solution that we know and look at small deviations around it. But it's not well understood non perturbatively when you go well beyond the solutions that we know. So on the one hand, you can't really say it's duality, right? We think maybe it's duality. There's evidence that it's a duality, but you can't say for sure. So sometimes people say, well, the real definition of the ADS side of the duality is just the conformal field theory side dualized. But that kind of defeats the purpose of it being duality. Perry Romanowski says, what do you think a science communicator gives up when they accept sponsorship money from a company to discuss that company's own research? Industry research isn't a neutral search for truth. It's an attempt to gather supporting evidence for something the company already wants to believe. Even with a disclosure, the selection bias is still there. They wouldn't be talking about that study if the results had gone the other way. It seems like this moves beyond science Communication to company salesperson or booster. I think probably this depends on details that I'm not aware of. I'm sympathetic to the general idea that, yeah, if you're doing something that purports to be science communication paid for by a company, then you're being a spokesperson for that company and that's fine. It's okay to be a spokesperson for that company. You know, spokespeople are okay, I have ads here on the podcast. The Patreon supporters don't know that because they get ad free versions, but the rest of you know that. And I think that's okay if you believe in, or, yeah, if you believe in the. In the thing that you are pushing. I mean, I. Nobody knows this because you don't have to go through this, but I turn down an enormous number of requests for ads on Mindscape, either because I think that the company is legitimately bad, or more often it might be very good. But it makes sort of scientific claims, especially health claims that I have no way of adjudicating. So I don't want as a scientist to be saying things that I can't check for myself that have some sort of health or medicine or scientific aspect to them. And that's a huge fraction of the total number of ads that people want to place on podcasts. So, you know, when it comes to other things like clothing companies that I've been having recently, you know, I will only say good things about them if I believe them, but it's easier to believe them. You know, I'll try on the clothes and like, okay, yeah, I like those. So that's easy to say again, but there's nothing wrong with it. If you're, if you're being paid by a company that you do believe in, in, then by all means be that scientific salesperson. But it's not ordinary science communication. I think that if you're a journalist or you're a news outlet, then it is crucially important to separate, as they call it, the editorial side from the marketing side. And responsible journalists or responsible outlets will absolutely do that. Kyle Stevens says new research by Anthropic shows that state of the art LLMs have internal representations. According to Anthropic, these representations correspond to specific patterns of artificial neurons which activate in situations and promote behaviors that the model has learned to associate with the concept of a particular emotion, like happy or afraid. The patterns themselves are organized in a fashion that echoes human psychology, with more similar emotions corresponding to more similar representations. Is this a challenge for the computational functionalist regime to reconcile with the belief that LLMs do not. Not have subjective experiences. No, it is not a challenge to that. In fact, it's. It's an intriguing result, but it is completely expected. I mean, I wouldn't imagine it any other way. Remember, LLMs are. The whole point of them is to say things that sound human. Okay? So, of course, if you, you know, prompt them or train them or nudge them or whatever to say things with a certain emotional validity that will be associated with things that we associate with that emotional valence, because we are the ones who trained it in all sorts of different ways. So this idea that there are sort of vectors that you can look at inside the state of the LLM that correspond to happiness or sadness or whatever, completely unsurprising. It's just. It just means that the current state of the LLM has been prompted or programmed or trained or whatever you want to. To call it, to give answers that we associate with happiness or what have you. So it's a predictive true fact. It's not that it's false, but it's a different thing than what is going on in human subjective experience. And the easiest way to check that is just to note that if your LLM is acting happy, you just got to prompt it and say, okay, now start acting sad, and it will start acting sad. Right? Real human beings. Beings don't actually behave that way. That life would be much easier if it. If they would. Michael Charost says There's a question I've always wondered about. I've read that many cosmologists think the universe is spatially infinite. But how can a spatially infinite cosmos come from an event that occurred a finite amount of time ago, for example, 13.8 billion years. I've learned a few partial answers, but unsatisfying ones. If the cosmos is flat, that implies it must be infinite. And if the universe flat at the Big bang, then it was always infinite, even at that moment. I find that an unsatisfying answer because I keep reading that during the inflation era, the universe expanded from a subatomic size to the size of a grapefruit, following 10 to the 26 expansion. Sure, but size of a grapefruit is still pretty finite. Okay, so there's a lot of things going on here. One thing that is going on that is very important is at the level of scientific communication, people are sometimes sloppy when communicating, and the audience is sometimes sloppy when listening. Okay, so when people say the universe expanded to the size from subatomic size to the size of a Grapefruit. Sometimes people will really say that. Sometimes what they say is the observable universe, meaning the part of the universe we can observe today expanded from subatomic size to the same size of a grapefruit. So it's the latter that is accurate. Right? That is actually what it's supposed to be like. The universe could be infinite, but we're talking about a little subset of the universe that we can observe today. What we call a co moving volume, where we trace a certain region of space as it expands or contracts toward the past. And sometimes the careful communicator will say that word, and the audience will just sort of skip over it because it doesn't seem very important. Observable universe rather than just universe. Other times the communicator will be sloppy and not even use that word, and that's kind of a mistake. Other times, the communicator will, in their minds, be thinking, well, if the universe were closed and finite in size, then it would be the size of a grapefruit. And they don't tell you all those extra words they're thinking about. So all of these are possible. Like, you have to, at some point, if you care about these details, you have to learn more so that you can figure out which is going on in any one particular particular case. The other set of things to worry about is, you know, what satisfies you is not the criterion for scientific success. So it is simply a fact that in classical general relativity, the beginning of the universe could be represented as infinitely big in space. Whether or not that makes you satisfied is kind of irrelevant. That's what is allowed to happen according to the rules of classical justice, general relativity. I think, and I said this before, a lot of the problem is that the arrow of time nudges people to think of things happening from the past toward the future. And the beginning of the universe is a place where that intuition breaks down. Okay, this is why I said just a little while ago, I never say universe from nothing. That makes it sound like there was nothing and then there was the universe. And this is some process unfolding in time. But there's. It's not true that there ever was nothing. What you mean by that is that the universe had a first moment of time. Okay? And if you say it that way, the universe had a first moment of time, and at that moment, it was infinitely big. It doesn't sound so bad. It's actually, you know, completely plausible. The third thing is that classical general relativity isn't right. Right. And quantum mechanics is right. And we don't know what there is to to say about the early universe in quantum gravity, because we haven't figured that out yet. So all of these statements always have to be footnoted with. We're talking about classical relativity and we might not know what exactly we should be talking about. Jennifer Stoneman says, I saw that earthquake waves are used to measure the Earth's interior. That is true. Does this wave use the same math as the quantum wave of the universe? Universe? I'm taking precalculus and will take calculus. Not sure after that. What math class covers waves? Some of the math is the same. Sure. So to be careful, the quantum wave of the universe. I'm not exactly sure what you're talking about. You might be talking about the wave function of the universe or the quantum state of the universe expressed as a wave function. And it's a little bit trickier because a wave that goes through the the Earth or a light wave that travels through space, these are waves in three dimensional space. And sometimes when people talk about waves, they really mean waves in three dimensional space evolving over time. The wave function of the universe is not like that. It doesn't live in three dimensional space. It lives in this gigantic Hilbert space that is much, much bigger. However, that aside, if we put that aside for a little bit, the equations that are obeyed by simple to understand subsets of the universe, like the wave function of an electron, obey an equation that is very similar to the equations that govern the propagation of waves in the Earth's interior, or govern the propagation of waves through empty space, if they're electromagnetic waves and so forth. Basically it has to do with the derivative of the wave with respect to time being related to the derivatives with respect to space. That is, is to say how fast the wave oscillates up and down in time is related to how fast it oscillates in space, that is its wavelength. The specific way that these things are related will be different for quantum wave functions, earthquake waves, electromagnetic waves, and so forth. But that's part of the fun. There's slightly different equations in every case. Typically, the math class in which you will cover this has to do with differential equations. Differential equations are specifically equations about derivatives relating derivatives to each other. So a calculus class will be about taking the derivative of a function or taking the integral of a function. So taking the slope of a function, that's what the derivative is, or taking the area under a curve, that's what an integral is. Differential equations, which is after calculus, is not just taking the derivative of A pre existing function, but giving an equation that relates different derivatives in different directions and figuring out how to solve those equations for finding what the function is, that actually turns out to be very hard. It's great. It's what a lot of mathematicians pay attention to. And crucially important part of being a physicist for sure. Very often, in fact, physicists don't take a class in differential equations. There's so much differential equations solving in their physics classes, their E M classes, quantum mechanics classes, classical mechanics classes, etc. That they learn the differential equation solving techniques there rather than in a specific math class. Alexander Knuckle says. Does the fact that individual particles of the same type are indistinguishable in quantum mechanics have any philosophical consequences for you? In particular, if you were to step into a star. Star Trek style transporter, say that three times fast and be destroyed locally, but reassembled into the same quantum state using different electrons and nucleons elsewhere. I think that the existence of a collective anti symmetrized wave function for all the electrons should make me feel indifferent about this kind of process. But my stomach says otherwise. I'm not going to give a great answer to this because I already feel indifferent about that kind of process. I'm not bothered bothered by the idea of a perfect Star Trek style transporter machine. Of course, I'm very bothered by an imperfect one. That would be a different question. But in principle, being disassembled and reassembled I think leaves you the same person as you were before, just as it is like in Star Trek. Contrary to what Seth MacFarlane said he believed when we had him on the podcast before. That's why on the Orville they don't have transporter machines. He thinks that they kill you and then you get reassembled. And that's bad. But I don't think that. I think it's fine. It is an interesting point though that you're making in some very real down to Earth sense. I mean maybe down to Earth is not the right phrase in some super fundamental. Let's take everything literally sense if you are reassembled using exactly the same. I'm trying to say this correctly. Exactly the same relative locations of different atoms, electrons and protons and neutrons and everything in exactly the same relative locations that they were when you were originally transported. In some sense you're not even made of different particles. That's what the point you're making is. Every electron is part of one gigantic anti symmetrized electron wave function. Precisely because electrons are identical Particles. This is not something people usually talk about. So it's a good point to bring up. There's kind of no such thing as saying this electron or that electron, right? You can say the electron that is local, that is located here, but its wave function is very, very closely connected with the wave function of every other electron in the universe in a very real sense. So much so that you can't just say. It's very hard to say this. Our language isn't quite up to it. But if you have two electrons, if you know you have two electrons, they're in a certain state, it's very hard to say, you know, electron Alice versus electron Bob. Okay, because the wave function of them both is antisymmetrized, which means it's a combination of AB minus BA and the identity of which electron is which is kind of lost in. In that process, Grace Elliot asks a priority question. You have said that strong emergence is a cogent idea, even if you don't agree with it. However, it seems to me that any apparent strong emergent behavior would still be expressed in term, could still be expressed in terms of weak emergence from a non local fundamental theory. What am I missing? For example, say a particle in a brain behaves differently than ones in the air. Rather than saying the brain exerts top down influence on the particle, you could just say the collection of particles making up the brain exert non local forces on it. Sure you can. Absolutely. That's fine. I mean my way, you know, in the paper I wrote with the truth Parola, our way of making sense of strong emergence presumed that there was no magic involved. There's nothing ineffable, right? Everything is ultimately physics one way or the other. What we were trying to do is come up with a way where you could have something like strong emergence without magic. And the closest we could come was to say, well, maybe you think you have a really good theory of how particles or other small constituents behave. And the reason you think that is you've done experiments with small numbers of particles in small regions of space time and you have a theory that predicts everything particles perfectly as far as you know. And unbeknownst to you, there are new effects that kick in only when you don't have small numbers of particles, when you have large numbers of particles, or maybe even only when you have large numbers of particles arranged in a certain way so that particles arranged in the form of a brain affect their constituents in ways different than particles arranged in the form of a rock. Now, now of course you're welcome to say, well, there's just a non local theory. You just didn't know it. You've discovered it now. I have no problem with that whatsoever. All I'm trying to do is to make room for the very conceivable process. I don't think it happens, but there's a conceivable process by which you would think that something that we know of as strong emergence happens, starting from a theory that you thought you understood perfectly well. If you, if you have a. If you knew the theory that was non local from the start, then maybe you wouldn't have been tempted to call it strong emergence. Preston justice asks a priority question. I recently lost my brother to suicide. He was 34 years old. Very sorry to hear that. And it must be tough to write about. So let's think about what the question says here. Although I'm careful not to over intellectualize the grieving process, I've been able to achieve some resolve through careful thinking about the events that led to my brother's choice. My question that derives from those reflections is presented here for the purpose of rational speculation. If I acknowledge that there's a precise probability that an alternative past action could have resulted in a better outcome, is it rational to assign some accountability to myself? In my experience, therapists will frequently guide one to not take accountability, accountability for events that are beyond our absolute control. But if we think of control of outcomes as coming in degrees, can we not instead focus our efforts on how well we respond to accepting that partial accountability rather than denying it? I think I'm going to say two things that are sort of pointing in opposite directions here, and I congratulate you on doing your best to think rationally through these things, because that's not always easy to do and we should strive to try to do it. On the one hand, I'm completely on board with the idea that there are degrees of accountability. It's not that, you know, this is your fault or this is not your fault. It's that there's many, many causal influences that go into something happening. Whether it's as dramatic as somebody committing suicide or as you know, or something non dramatic, whatever your example might be. So it would be wrong to just pick out one thing in the universe. Say that's the reason why usually there's many reasons that go into things. So it's completely plausible that something happened that was part of the total cause of an event coming to place. That's completely conceivable. On the other hand, I think it would be wrong to Sort of assign blame or accountability to yourself simply on the basis of the judgment that there was something you did, that had you done it differently, things might have come out differently. I think you need. The criteria for accountability are stronger than that. It's not just that you did something I think that you needed. It would only be accountable if at the time when you did the thing, it was reasonable to think that doing that thing might have led to this effect. So it's not just you did something. If you do something by accident that leads to a bad effect, you shouldn't be held accountable for it. If you do something knowingly that leads to an increased probability of something happening, then you get some partial accountability for it. But I do think that in the actual case of someone committing suicide, there is a temptation for other people to blame themselves more than they should. Because we want to tell a story that gives us some handle over why these things happen. And especially we like to tell stories that we have some control over why things happen and why they don't. And sometimes, most often, as far as I can tell, in cases like this, very few of us, other people have that level of control over this happening. We can nudge things in one direction or another, but there's so many other things happening, so many things going on in the person's mind that we don't know about, that maybe even they don't know about out that we have no way of really taking that into account and saying that it, you know, this thing or that thing that we did do or didn't do would have made a difference. It's overwhelmingly tempting to do that. But I think you should resist that temptation. I think that mostly you should be thinking about, you know, just how to take that fact that it happened, that your brother committed suicide and, and acknowledge it and deal with it. You don't move past it. You make it part of yourself. It is part of who you are going forward, the fact that that happened, but that doesn't mean you blame yourself for it. You do your best to incorporate it into who you are going forward and accept it. You can't change it and learn lessons from it if it's possible. But don't use it as a reason to learn the wrong lessons or, you know, beat yourself up unnecessarily. I think that usually these things are just not in our causal control. David Sotolongo says in the Nature survey on physicists attitudes towards the foundations of quantum mechanics, which you discussed in the August 2025AMA, it looked like only about 8% of respondents said they were confident or fairly confident that many worlds was the correct explanation of quantum theory. I'm curious if you have any thoughts about what is it will take to get that percentage past the 50% mark? Yeah, I mean, I have thoughts. I don't know if my thoughts are very accurate. That's not something. I just want to get it right. Making sure other people agree with me is less of a priority. But I do think that there's two things that will have to go on. One is better explanation of what many worlds actually says. I mean, there's still a lot of people who just say, well, that's too many worlds. I think that's not very much parsimonious. Doesn't Occam's Razor say that's not right? You know, which is. Which is completely off base, but that's our fault for not explaining what many worlds actually says. And the other thing is we need to get results. You know, we need to show that thinking in this way leads to better answers to interesting questions that physicists think are good questions. I've said it many times. Physicists are a show me the money kind of field, right? Like, if they can ignore, ignore the foundations of quantum mechanics and get on fine with their lives, they will do so. Maybe they're missing the chance to make some progress on important questions because they do that. But if so, the way to prove that is to make important. Make progress on these important questions, not just the demand that maybe they're missing the chance we actually have to make it. I'm optimistic that we're going to make it and then people will go, huh? Yeah, I guess thinking about things in this way actually is useful. I will start start doing so. Dylan Samuel says. I'm currently a PhD student in Applied mathematics. I did my bachelor's in physics and now I work on problems in fluid dynamics. It's been a pretty cool gig so far, and I've also been surprised at how many concepts from fundamental physics carry over to this topic. However, it makes me a little sad that fluid dynamics is not really considered part of the core physics curriculum or really considered a research topic. In physics, usually fluid dynamicists are found in mechanical engineering or applied mathematics, mathematics departments. As an authority figure in physics, I'm really not an authority figure in physics, but it's sweet that you might think that. What do you think it would take to get fluid dynamics to be considered under the umbrella of fluid dynamics once more? Oh, yeah, that's right. When I read this question, I realized I Think there's probably a typo here. You wrote, what would it take to get fluid dynamics to be considered under the umbrella of fluid dynamics once more? I presume you mean under the umbrella of physics or the physics curriculum or physics departments, or physics, something like that. Or I guess more generally. How can the space of legitimate research topics in physics change? Well, I gotta say I'm not that worried about this particular question. I agree that fluid mechanics is super interesting and a lot of interesting stuff goes on. Some of it happens in physics departments. But I think you're right, it's not the majority. It's more likely to be in engineering or applied math. But the point is, is it is there in engineering and applied math? I think that's fine. If those people really are interested in the topic more than physicists are, I don't see any real harm in that. A lot of these decisions about what topics happen under what departments, I find are a little arbitrary. And I think that, I mean, especially at boundary interdisciplinary things like biophysics questions, it's completely okay as long as the research gets done somewhere. You know, research in quantum computing sometimes happens in computer science departments, sometimes in physics departments. Sometimes computer science departments are in the school of arts and sciences or next to the math department. Other times they're in the engineering school. Right. It kind of doesn't matter to me. I do realize that in different universities it might matter for cultural reasons. Right. Or reasons, you know, how much respect you get or whatever. But I don't think that that's the most important thing. So I. Unless, I don't know, you're asking how can the space of legitimate research topics in physics change? Probably that comes down to how research and fluid mechanics, fluid dynamics impacts other areas of physics. Like, I mean, there are, you know, there is plasma physics. It's again, not a big area. It's often engineering once again. But there's astrophysics, there's condensed matter physics. Does it matter for the people who are employed in physics departments, what's going on in fluid dynamics? I think that's the question. And when the answer turns out to be yes, then physicists are going to say, maybe we should start hiring people who do fluid dynamics. J. Henry Jacobs. Oh, yeah. J. Henry Jacobs says in regards to hedonistic utility, you recently had a conversation with Peter Singer where you raised concerns about utilitarianism. Assuming an objective function where addition makes sense, could we drop the addition assumption by using medians instead of means? I. E. Do it raises the median welfare with medians. You just need the objective function to take values in an ordered set. Moreover, medians are robust to utilitarian monsters. Is this a line of inquiry that sounds familiar? I don't think it sounds familiar, but I also don't think it's a very good workable idea. The idea of taking the mean utility over a group of people is equivalent to taking the total utility over all of them, right? Because you just multiply by the number of people and the mean equals the total. The median doesn't have that property. And so yes, the median utility might be insensitive to utility monsters. This is the ideal of some imaginary creature that is just so good at feeling pleasure and being happy that it is completely unimportant. Making other people happy. All that matters is to make the utility monster happy, right? And that is supposed to be an argument that utilitarianism isn't really on the right track. So yes, taking the median would get rid of that problem, but it gives you the other problem. It means that the worst off people can be tortured and made as unhappy as you want and the media median wouldn't care. Right? And I think this is again kind of why I'm not a utilitarian. I think that the, the difference between utilitarians and other approaches to ethics is this is this idea that rather than giving individuals some floor of dignity and happiness, it's the mean or the average or the median or whatever you want to do the that matters. And therefore there's always. For any legitimately utilitarian perspective, there will always be times when we make many some people unhappy and other people even happier. Of course, the world is full of times when we make some people unhappy and other people happier. But there's no bottom to it in utilitarianism, right? If you start saying, well, I have a bottom in my version of utilitarianism, then I think think you're just not being utilitarian anymore. And good for you. I don't think you really should be. So I think that there needs to be something that says we can't treat individuals arbitrarily badly just to raise some overall standard. And I think that that belief makes one not a utilitarian. Jonathan Sirocco. I'm sorry, Jonathan. In my notes here, there's no J in front of your name. So either I miscopied them or you're actually Onathan Scirocco. I'm not sure. Anyway, the question is, given your die hard fandom of the 76ers, how do you feel about other Philadelphia sports teams? The Flyers won championships in your youth. Do you follow them much or was basketball the only sport for you? Basketball was always my favorite. But of course as a kid I followed all of the Philadelphia teams. All of them won championships in my youth. Actually, the Eagles didn't. The Eagles were good. They got to the super bowl with Dick Vermeil coaching them, Ron Jaworski, Bill Berge, et cetera. William Montgomery. William Montgomery, was that his name? The running back? I'm getting old, what can I tell you? I don't think it was William Montgomery. I think that I'm misremembering the name. But anyway, it was a good team. They got to the Super Bowl. They were bit outclassed. They lost to the. At that time, la Oakland Raiders. I think John Madden was the coach at the time. Anyway, the Eagles were the only ones that did win the championship. Sixers won the championship. Phillies won the World Series. Flyers won Stanley cups in the 70s when I was younger and so I. I was spoiled. All of my teams did very well. I wasn't. I was also a fan of Penn State football. They were also winning championships in the early 80s. I started following Villanova basketball when I went to basketball, when I went to Villanova rather. They won the championship the first time I was there. So total spoiled overall. But I just enjoy basketball as a sport more. Baseball, I like going to the games, you know, it's fun experience to be outdoors, have the hot dog and whatever. But the game itself I find incredibly tedious. I recognize. And before the baseball fans come on me, there are moments of drama in baseball that are very, very hard to beat in a other sports. And precisely because of the very, very clever idea that there's not a clock, right? In basketball, football, hockey, there's a clock and you're going to run out of time at some point and it becomes impossible to make up some deficit in baseball, even though in practice you can be so far behind that it's futile in principle until there's the last out of the last inning. You could score an arbitrary number of runs in the future. I think that's a wonderful feature of baseball. But most of the time there's a lot of standing around. I mean, the number of someone calculated the number of seconds that the baseball is actually in play, the literal baseball, as opposed to just like standing around in a baseball game. It's very short, right? It's less than a minute or something. I forget exactly what the number is. Whereas constant activity in a basketball. Basketball game. Hockey is similar to basketball in Many ways. But of course, you're scoring a very, very small number of goals, just like in. In soccer. And that's fine. I think it's. It's fine. But it's, you know, people. Some. For some people, the fact that basketball, there's so much scoring, you're scoring at 50% of the time. Right. Is. Is a bug, not a feature, is a bad sign. For me, it's absolutely, absolutely a benefit because it means that there is. That what matters is the flow and the consistency, and it's much less down to, you know, random events. Unpredictability. Right. Of course, in hockey or soccer, the good teams usually win and the bad teams usually lose, but it's like one event in the whole course of the game that matters. Whereas in basketball, it's just constant. Right, Right. It's just like every play matters. There can be momentum shifts. Literally. Last night, as I am recording this, we had one of the historically weirdest basketball games of all time between the Detroit Pistons and the Orlando Magic. Detroit was the top seed in the Eastern Conference this year. Orlando was not very good. The Sixers demolished them in the playoff game just before the playoffs. But Orlando has a 3, 2 lead in the playoffs in a best of seven series. So this was very strange. And Orlando came out and was really crushing Detroit in the first half of the game. And so Detroit was ready to go home as far as many people were concerned. And people were making jokes about them not even trying, et cetera. And then in the second half of the game, it was a complete Turnaround. Orlando scored 60 points in the first. First half, 19 points in the second half, and they ended up losing by a huge amount. Detroit had the. It had to be one of the, you know, numerically largest comebacks ever in the history of basketball and. Or in the history of sports or whatever. And I kind of love that. I mean, this whole playoff year has been just full of amazing storylines and comebacks and upsets, and it's been a lot of fun. So football, I like for different reasons. Like, it's. It's because. Just because it's, like, slow and thoughtful, and there are plays that are very intricate. There's this intellectual aspect to it that is. That is pleasing, but, man, it is very violent. I don't. I don't care about the violence in terms of watching the sport, but it wreaks havoc on people's bodies, and that bothers me, so I get less pleasure out of that. But of course, when the Eagles win the Super Bowl, I'm going to root for them. DMI says AIs now seem to be getting good enough to actually be useful for some things. So I thought I'd see if it could answer One of the questions you may be tired of hearing from me. Here was its answer. Given energy conservation, any action, the Integral of T alpha V over time with alpha not equal to 1 has the same stationary paths, making the minus 1 and T minus v seem arbitrary. But in Feynman's path integral, different alphas give genuinely different quantum theory. So the choice is non arbitrary there. Classical mechanics inherited the right value without being able to explain it the way Maxwell's equations encoded Lorentz symmetry before relativity. My question now is, was it on the right track? Okay, so for people who don't know what's going on, this is a question about the principle of of least action. The idea being that instead of starting a system, think of a ball rolling down a hill. Okay? Usually the way that we calculate the trajectory of the ball rolling down the hill is you tell me the position and the velocity of the ball to start, and I use some version of the laws of physics, F equals ma, to predict how the ball will move subsequently. The principle of least action says, don't tell me the velocity, just tell me the initial position and time of the the ball and tell me the final position and time of the ball. Okay? And then I will search through all of the possible trajectories in between, starting from that position at that time and ending at this different position in different time. And I will calculate a quantity called the action. And it turns out that the actual trajectories that solve Newton's equations of physics have the property that they are the minimum minimal action over the actual path that the particle takes. So rather than positing F equals MA or Newton's laws, you can posit what is called the principle of least action, that this quantity, called the action, is minimized on the real paths that real objects take. So what is the action? It's the integral over time. So the total amount summed up over time of something called the Lagrangian. And the Lagrangian is the kinetic energy minus the potential energy. Kinetic energy 1/2 MV squared for a particle potential energy, whatever the shape of the hill that the ball is rolling around in. So kinetic minus potential is the Lagrangian, the integral of that is the action. Minimizing the action is what gives you the real path. And so the question is, can you change kinetic minus potential to kinetic plus potential or kinetic plus a Half potential or kinetic plus whatever, some different, different linear combination of kinetic energy and potential energy and get the same answers. And the question is DMI did not actually put the question here, only the answer. So I'm going to infer the question. But it says given energy conservation and any action t plus alpha v kinetic plus alpha times potential with any alpha not equal to 1 has the same stationary paths, making the minus 1 in the usual version seems arbitrary. So I don't think that's right. And I think that the problem is you're saying given energy conservation, any action has the same stationary paths. But that's not. You don't. You can't give energy conservation. That's not allowed in ordinary ways of doing it. In the ordinary principle of least action, you posit that the action is kinetic minus potential and you derive the fact that energy is conserved. If you have some other linear combination, then energy is not necessarily going to be conserved, right? You could have alpha equals zero, you could just have integral of kinetic energy and the potential energy wouldn't matter. There's no way that you're going to derive from that that energy is conserved. Indeed, in general, an action with Lagrangian kinetic plus alpha potential will give you some equations of motion, not the normal equations of motion, but some equations and energy will just not be conserved according to those equations of motion, at least not the energy under, as we usually define it, kinetic energy plus potential energy. So there's no solutions to the combined demands that you minimize this modified action plus you have energy conservation. And the LLM should have noticed that, and it didn't. So I don't think that the LLM was on the right track. Larry Latson Jr says. Question. I have a question about the many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics. I want to be believer, but if I understand the concept, the many worlds split when the system decoheres. My question is, is this then happening everywhere, all over the entire universe? Every time a couple photons or electrons decohere in the heart of a star that is 5 billion light years away, are we ending up with two more universes? Or does that system need to be observed by an observer? Does us looking up in the sky and seeing the starlight from 5 billion light years away count as an observation? So the simple part of this question is no, it does not need to be observed by an observer. One of the beauties of the many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics is observers or measurements or whatever have no special status whatsoever. It's just equations, it's just systems obeying the laws of physics. That's all that ever happens. As far as the system decohering and branching the wave function. Again, the simple answer, the most naive, straightforward answer is yeah, that happens all the time. The time, all the time, everywhere in the universe. You don't notice it. Why would you notice it? You don't care and it doesn't bother you. And there's no problem with that whatsoever. The slightly more sophisticated thing to say is, look, remember the many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics is not about worlds. That's not the point of the interpretation. The point is that there is a quantum state, and that quantum state always obeys the Schrodinger equation forever and ever. It never does as anything else. And that's it. That's the whole thing. Any talk of worlds and decoherence and blah blah, blah, is our human way of coarse graining and simplifying and get a handle on what is happening. Just like we coarse grain and simplify to talk about temperature and density and pressure in a fluid. Okay, so there is no one right way to divide the wave function of the universe up into worlds. There are better ways and worse ways depending on one's purposes in the moment, but different people can do it differently and it's okay. So if you personally wanted to say, I'm going to define the worlds that are relevant to my observations as only branching, when I notice something, you're allowed to do that. It's okay, no one stops you as long as you do it in such a way that you obey the rules, that you have a principled, objective way of defining what a branch is with respect to whatever the quantum state of the universe is doing, that's okay. So people argue, people say, like, does the branching happen simultaneously in some reference frame or does it happen locally only in the future light cone of the event? My answer is, who cares? It doesn't matter. It's just commentary on what is actually happening, which is the quantum state of the universe is obeying the Schrodinger equation. Roland Weber says, more an observation than a question. I just noticed that for the first time time that the podcasts are sorted into categories on your webpage, but the latest in the solo category is about the crisis in physics. I'm pretty sure he recorded more solo episodes since then. One about immortality, one about AI, another about emergence. Have you given up on categorizing the podcast or is there a technical glitch? Yeah, glad you're pointing out this, Roland. It's not a technical glitch. This is probable user error when the user is not you, but me, rather. So for those of you who don't know, at preposterousuniverse.com podcast you can find all the podcasts. It's actually the easiest way to listen to them in many cases. And there are categories, or rather there are tags put on each of the episodes. Physics, economics, whatever. And the fact is, one of the tags is solo for the solo podcasts, and I just forgot that there was such a tag. So for my last several solo podcasts, I have not tagged them under the solo category. I have now gone back and tagged them. So if you check now, they're all there. Thank you for letting me know that. I've been forgetting to do that. Mark W. Says, I often hear that we need a bigger particle collider to probe into deeper and smaller realms. Why is this? Don't we already whip particles around the circular colliders many times until it reaches the necessary speed? Why can't we keep going around and around the collider many more times until we get to even higher speeds, until the particles are fast enough to probe string theory or whatever in our current circular colliders? So I am not an expert on the experimental or instrumental engineering side of particle accelerators, but I can give you the basic answer here. It's interesting. You know, you might think that in that big ring that you have at the Large Hadron Collider or whatever, the particles are just constantly being accelerated to faster and faster speeds. That is not what is going on. There's a couple of points. I mean, some number, a handful, not just a couple, but there are specific points where the particles are accelerated. Most of the ring does not accelerate the particles. It just turns them around in the circle. You know, the real this is, this is the kind of interesting thing and why something like the Large Hadron Collider is an absolute technological marvel. It's just keeping a bunch of particles together and collimated into a very thin beam that is the real challenge here. Okay, if you think about it, at the LHC Large Hadron Collider, there are protons moving around the ring in two different directions. But that's, that's not a problem. Protons, if you have nothing but protons, you have a bunch of particles that are all positively charged. That is to say, they're. They're all trying to repel each other and spread apart. So we need these super high intensity magnetic fields to keep them together, but that's not really enough. We need to actively nudge them and collimate them into a very tight, thin beam, because you want to maximize the probability that when the two beams intersect at the detectors, they will actually collide and make an event. So you want a very, very dense collection of protein protons. So all the real challenge is keeping the protons together in a very, very thin beam. And they get bunched up because of the way the acceleration works. So that's fine. The bunching is, is fine. So you need, so there's a sort of maximum amount of energy that you can have in the protons moving around the ring and keep them all in a tight beam. And that gives you a limit on how much energy you can have in the, in the accelerator. The other thing, of course, is that everything needs to be timed very carefully. This is another aspect of the technological challenge. These particles are moving very fast, right? 99.999999% of the speed of light, or some number of nines, it doesn't really matter. So when they pass by and you are accelerating them, you better accelerate them at exactly, exactly the right moment. But if you tried to do that at arbitrarily higher energies in a very small ring, basically everything would just splinter apart very quickly. It's not that you don't have the energy to accelerate them. You know, the, the energy in a single proton moving at these speeds is not very much like the Planck mass is not very much. By macroscopic energies, you know, the Planck mass is about 10 to the minus 5 grams. Okay. It's not hard to make that much energy. The point is to put it into a single particle, to put into individual particles with many such particles, and then keep them tightly collimated as they zoom around the beam. Now, it might be, by the way, that future technology is able to do this without building a giant circular particle accelerator. That's absolutely possible. These estimates of solar system size, accelerators, et cetera, are thought experiments just to convince you that with current technology, that would be very hard. But who knows about future technologies? Richard Knynenborg says, is the NAND gate, the NAND gate being functionally complete, relevant in John Wheeler's IT from bit concept? So I'm answering this question. I'm not going to give you an answer that will satisfy you, I think, but just to elaborate a little bit on John Wheeler's it from bit concept, because people are getting it wrong. Not just rich Richard, but professional physicists. So John Wheeler, famous physicist, he was famous for doing physics and coining terms like black hole and wormhole and things like that. I think that the single thing that John Wheeler was best at was advising graduate students. Richard Feynman was one of his students. Hugh Everett was one of his students. Kip Thorne was one of his students. Jacob Bekenstein was one of his students. Robert Garoche was one of his students. He really did pretty well with the graduate students and he wrote a paper. He was a brilliant guy. I'd seen him give talks. He's passed away now, but he was wonderful with words. As you might expect from the fact that he's the one who coined terms like black hole and wormhole. Space time foam was another idea that he had. And he wrote a paper and he coined the phrase it from bit. And it's one of those phrases that as soon as you hear it, you like it. Like, ah, that's cute. And maybe a little bit of gloss on what it means. It represents matter, reality, whatever bit represents information. So you don't have to read the paper, you just have to go, oh, John Wheeler is saying that the world is really made of information in some sense. However, if you actually do read the paper, what you find out is that he wasn't saying that at all. And I've only recently in the last couple years realized this by reading the paper. And so I've been saying this. So if you've heard me say this before, I've been saying this a lot. He was not saying that the world is made of information. The point is that despite the fact that he was Hugh Everett's thesis advisor, Wheeler was never really a believer in the many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics. John Wheeler was an acolyte of Niels Bohr and he said that very clearly. Like Niels Bohr was his favorite human being of all time. And he was a follower of Bohr's way of thinking about, about physics. Wheeler tried very hard to convince himself and Hugh Everett and other people that Many Worlds was compatible with the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics. But of course that failed because it's really not, it's really a repudiation of that. And so Wheeler himself eventually said that he didn't like many worlds. What he liked was the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics. And he was smart enough and he knew Bohr personally and he knew all the these people to really understand the depth and the radicalness of the claim being made by the Copenhagen interpretation, which most people are not. Most people use the Copenhagen interpretation as a stand in for not thinking that hard about quantum mechanics, just assuming there are measurements and you get results. But people at the beginning, like Bohr and Heisenberg and Wheeler, who really thought through what it meant, had to face up to the radicalness of it, because Heisenberg especially emphasized the fact that the Copenhagen interpretation was saying that nothing exists until you measure it. It's not that there's a wave function or a matrix or whatever that exists, and then when you measure it, you get some aspect of that which is a more conventional way of thinking. The real Copenhagen claim is that nothing exists until you measure it. All that exists is the outcome of a measurement or the all the collective outcomes of all the measurements. Okay. That's what John Wheeler was getting at with it from bit. He was saying that the fundamental kind of measurement in quantum mechanics is the measurement of a single spin. He was arguing that other measurements could be built up from that single spin, single qubit kind of measurement. And then. And that measurement gives you one bit. It gives you either up or down, right? One bit's worth of information. And Wheeler was not saying reality is made of information. He's saying reality is made of measurement outcomes, which is a very different claim. He wasn't thinking of reality like a computer. He wasn't thinking about gates or information processing or anything like that. He was making a statement about the foundations of quantum mechanics. Mechanics. So no is the simple answer. Nand Gates have nothing to do with Wheeler's it from bit concept, of course, because people didn't read the paper. But just like the motto, we now have it from Qubit, which is supposed to be an upgraded version of what Wheeler was saying. It's a completely different thing than what Wheeler was saying. Itfrom Qubit really is saying that reality is made of quantum information, quantum bits in some sense. So that's a very different way of thinking. And there different kinds of quantum gates are super duper relevant. Someone like Daniel Harlow works with quantum information processing, gates and things like that all the time. Sid Huff says you've commented a few times on the fact that you and Jennifer bought your first house around three years ago. You also mentioned your experience learning to chop firewood. What other things about home ownership have you found interesting, enjoyable, challenging, all things considered. Are you happy to be a homeowner? So it's not quite that I learned to chop firewood. I grew up chopping firewood. You know, I lived in a house in the suburbs, a tiny little house, and you know, from, I don't know, approximately 8th grade, 12th grade. Anyway, we lived in a suburban house and we had a wood stove and a fireplace and I chopped a lot of wood. And burned a lot of wood in the fireplace place. But then I haven't done it since then, so I've taken it up once again. And there is a certain pleasure one gets out of the. Out of the manual labor that leads to something important and enjoyable around the fireplace. But to answer the question, super happy to be a homeowner mostly because, I mean, I've owned, we owned our condo before, right, but that's a different thing. You're in a condo association, you have to share. You get people to do of a lot, lot of the work. When you're a homeowner, you're responsible for it, an individual homeowner. And of course, our house is 100 years old, so it has, you know, it has issues. And we were smart enough, I guess we were smart enough to not overextend ourselves with the cost of the home. We bought a home we could afford in the sense that we knew we would have to do work on it. So before we moved in, a lot of renovation was done. The floors were fixed, the wiring was replaced and things like that. After we moved in, we had to replace the whole roof. It's 100-year-old slate roof and we had to replace it. And that was a non trivial undertaking, let's put it that way. So we still have a list of things we want to do over the next few years. We have to save up money to do them. So thank you podcast supporters for helping me to fix my house and keep it from falling apart. I do like it, I'll confess. Jennifer is better at it than I am. She's more into it than I am. She's more knowledgeable and trustworthy about these things. You know, her family was into it. Her brother and her father both spent time renovating or even constructing, in the case of her brother, houses. So she's familiar with a lot of what goes on. And, you know, she knows the difference between Wayne Scotting and other things, things that I just don't know the diff, the what the words mean. I just nod along and say, yes, that sounds good. So a lot of the actual work is being done by her. I have my little parts that I take care of. Like every light bulb that needs to be changed is mine. But when it comes to big things like, you know, the landscaping or whatever, I defer to her judgment and she enjoys it. So it's good. She's taken up, you know, feeding the squirrels, as we've said, around the house and everything. But overall, yes, you know, the huge benefit of living in Baltimore is that it's more affordable than many of the other big cities that I might like to live in. So we can have a nice house near to campus. I walk to work every day and more than enough space to like have a room that mostly. The room that I'm talking in right now is mostly used for recording the podcast and nothing else. We have so much, much room that I can have a podcast room, right. Which is just really nice. And sometimes we feel guilty that we have so much house, you know, because we grew up in not nice houses like this. So this feels good and, and it's nice to shape the house. Jennifer likes to say that the house changes you because things like we didn't care about having a fireplace when we moved in, we didn't care about having a dining room. We never had a separate dining room before. Right. All the modern houses like the one we lived in la, we were the first people to live there in that house, in that condo, in that townhouse. And so very modern, open concept, et cetera, et cetera. That was fine. We never used the dining room space that much. And now we have a formal dining room, right? Because it's a hundred year old house and we even thought about like, could we like bang down part of the wall separating the kitchen from the dining room, et cetera. But now that we're here, we love it. Like we use that dining room a lot. We have people over. I have group meetings with my students and things like that at the the house and we sit in the dining room and it's nice to have that space to do that. We don't need to have a TV in the living room because there's enough other places to put TVs. And you know, we don't, we don't like have people over to watch TV or whatever. So the usability of the house in ways that I didn't anticipate is really, really nice. I don't spend a lot of my time tinkering around the house. I will, I will say that that's not something that I have time for, but maybe, you know, I'm young, I can still, you know, grow and change in different ways. That might be something, something that I become more interested in as time goes on. Domino says, I came across Veritasium's YouTube video on the Dirac equation, which showed how he was able to quantize GR and as a side effect, theorize the existence of antimatter between your work and the rest of my healthy diet of popular science. Physics content. I know that quantum gravity continues to elude the Standard model, leaving QM and GR at odds regarding singularities and relegated to their respective corners of their domains of applicability. My question is basically how far did Dirac take us toward grand unification? Is it really only quantum gravity standing in the way or was his quantization of GR only the first step embarking on that journey? So there's a lot going on here that I have to unpack. What Dirac did with the Dirac equation didn't have anything whatsoever to do with gr. GR means general relative relativity. General relativity is Einstein's theory of gravity, where space time is curved and responds to energy and momentum. What Dirac did was come up with an equation for the electron, the behavior of the electron that was compatible with special relativity. Special relativity doesn't have curved space time doesn't have gravity, happened around 1905, whereas general relativity happened happened around 1915. So gravity has nothing to do with the Dirac equation. He wasn't doing that. And he wasn't even the first to reconcile if you want special relativity with quantum mechanics or quantum field theory, because we already had Maxwell's equations, which were a classical theory of electromagnetism. And people looked at the quantum theory of electromagnetism before they had directs theory of the electron. But what he did was make the electron have an equation that was compatible with the rules of special relativity. The electron is special because it's a fermion, it has spin, etc. That was the real breakthrough. Now there is a subtlety that is a historic fact, historical fact that trips people up. The Schrodinger equation as written down by erwin Schrodinger in 1926 or 25, he wrote it down, published question 26. There's sort of two versions of that equation. There's the literal version that Schrodinger wrote down, which is non relativistic. So it applies to electrons in atoms. As long as they're outside the regime of relativity, it works very, very well. But it's very, very simple to generalize the Schrodinger equation to a much more general, powerful form which is completely compatible with relative relativity. If the Hamiltonian, the thing that drives the Schrodinger equation, is relativistically invariant, that's just what you would do in modern quantum field theory. For example, you have a Hamiltonian, you have a state, it obeys the Schrodinger equation with that relativistic Hamiltonian. But they weren't clear about that back in the 1920s. Right. So they were still working things out. So it was thought that maybe rather than just coming up with a relativistic Hamiltonian, you should change the Schrodinger equation to something that that would be the equivalent of the Schrodinger equation that was relativistically invariant and would reduce to the Schrodinger equation in the non relativistic regime. If you know a little bit about the Schrodinger equation, you know that there's the, the wave function is in there and there's a first derivative with respect to time and a second derivative with respect to space. And instantly, you know it's not relativistic because relativity treats time and space the same footing. So Dirac was looking for an equation that would treat time and space on the same footing. Now this is too much history, but that's okay. I'm just going to get it right this once and then you'll know Schrodinger as my quantum field theory Professor Sidney Coleman like to say Schrodinger was no dummy. He knew about relativity. He wasn't just like guessing things because he wasn't that smart. He tried first to make a relativistic equation, and he did. And he invented what was called the Klein Gordon equation, which is still the equation that we use to describe classical scalar fields in classical field theory. So he discarded it because it didn't work for what he wanted, which was describing the behavior of electrons in atoms, because the electrons are not scalar fields. They're Fermi, and that matters. Okay, so Schrodinger proposed his non relativistic equation just because he had an idea for a relativistic one, but he knew that it didn't fit the data. Okay, Dirac proposes, you know, tries to come up with a generalization of the Schrodinger equation that would be relativistic and would still describe the electron. And that's what he thought he did when he invented the Dirac equation. But he didn't. And this is where people get confused, because what the scientists do when they first invent things is not necessarily how we correctly interpret them later. The correct way to think about the Dirac equation is it's not a replacement of the Schrodinger equation. The Dirac equation is the equivalent of Maxwell's equation for the electromagnetic field or the Klein Gordon equation for a scalar field. That is to say, the Dirac equation is a classical equation for a spin 1/2 particle. In fact, a spin 1/2 particle with electric charge. So it's actually both a particle and the antiparticle. That's another complication that, you know, Dirac had to deal with but was sorted out later. You take that classical equation of motion and you quantize it, and what you eventually will event invent is quantum field theory. And that's what we have today. We don't use the Dirac equation today as a generalization of the Schrodinger equation. We just do quantum field field theory. So anyway, the Schrodinger equation works even for special relativity. The Dirac equation is a wonderful classical equation of motion which can then be quantized to give you the quantum behavior of the electron. And none of it has anything to do with gravity. As far as we know, Robo or Robbo says the Self and How to Know it with J. Eric Oliver was a great episode considering the self help as a group of processes. Somehow for me, this makes some of the challenges to and techniques for optimizing life's experience a bit more tractable. You made a comment in the Reflections post about the inadequate amount of time to explore the topics that were touched on. I'm wondering whether this factor should not overrule your policy of not having repeat guests. I should emphasize that differently. Should not overrule your policy of not having repeat guests guests. I'd encourage you to loosen that restriction a bit when a conversation reveals content that could be interesting for another one or two podcasts. If that's a bridge too far, then as an alternative suggestion, you might invite an acolyte of the first guest to dive into more details. So you know, I get it. I hear it. People have said things like this before. I'm glad you liked that podcast. There are many podcast guests, probably most who have more than one hour's worth of stuff to say and would be a useful person to talk to to again, or in a longer conversation or with a related person or whatever. Here's the thing. It's much more work for me to never have repeat guests, right? It's much easier to have guests who I have had before. I know the basic picture of what they're talking about. We can have more conversation about it. It's just easier for me. But what it means is that the number of guests, the number of separate distinct guests I would have, would be more much smaller. Right? Many, many podcasts, if you go out there, if they have the same sort of cadence that we do, one a week, and they fall back on regularly appearing guests, that's great. You get a certain familiarity. You Know, it's comfortable, you know what's coming, but it's not as novel. You're hearing the same guests over and over again. Part of my, A big part of my motivation for doing Mindscape is I want to talk to people and learn things from them that I don't know. And so by imposing on myself the constraint that no guest appears multiple times, I am forced out of my comfort zone. The thing is that Eric Oliver, who I thought was great on the podcast, but I never would have chosen him if, you know, I. I didn't need podcast guests. I thought would be good if I could just rely on the old regulars and go back to them again. In again, the variety and diversity of guests would be smaller and I mean, maybe I would have had Eric on or not, but that kind of person, I knew nothing about him before I had him on the podcast. I didn't know about his work or whatever. So, you know, I had to think about would he make a good podcast. A lot of people invite themselves on the podcast. A lot of PR people invite their clients on my podcast. And I usually say no, right, because there's more invitations than there are slots. So I'm not like in any sense short of podcast guests. But the diversity would be much reduced if I had repeat guests because I'm not going to increase the pace at which I do the podcast for sure. So that's the trade off. And I choose to make it. I choose to play tennis with the net. As Robert Frost once said, he was asked why he doesn't write free verse, and he liked the structure of the poetry that he wrote and he compared it to writing free verse would be playing tennis without a net. The point is, you know, you can play tennis without a net, but you're choosing to challenge yourself by putting the net there. And that actually makes the activity more enjoyable in some sense. That's what it's like for me, having to do a different guest every single week. And so I like that some people are going to like it or not. I mean, it's also completely possible that years in the future I'll just get lazy and just have my favorite people on again and again. Colin Johnson says, what is the most advanced possible sci fi tech you can imagine becoming a reality? Thank you. Next 20 years, I'm the worst person to ask this question to. Like, I don't. I don't either have a very great grasp on what the technologies are that are coming, nor am I any good, or do I ever deceive myself into thinking I'm any good at making predictions about time scales for things happening. That's just not. I don't think anyone is any good at it. But I know that I'm no good at it. So that gives me a little bit of a. Of a benefit. You know, I think that the obvious thing, there's lots of obvious things. AI is already here in some sense. We can argue whether AI is really AI or not, whether LLMs are really AI. But certainly it is a transformative technology that is going to have a big impact. I think embodying AI in robot like things will be a big deal. I think it's bizarre to me that there's so much effort placed in humanoid shaped robots. Like, there's just no reason to think that's the best possible shape for a robot. But okay, people like it, you know, all right, go nuts. It's your money. I still think that a lot of medical advances and neurological neuroscience advances are going to be super important. So I can absolutely imagine that in the next 20 years we'll have workable neural implants where we can talk to the computers directly from our brains, one way or the other. And again, like I said, I'm not any good at this. So I could be completely wrong about that. And that would is absolutely allowed. Gene editing, synthetic biology, things like that. The ability to design new organisms or to change the design of ourselves as organisms. I don't think people have dealt with that very much or really come to terms with that. I think that's going to be super duper important. I think that, you know, space travel is not going to be that different 20 years from now than it is now. I don't think we'll be parking on Mars or anything like that, as we talked about with Kelly and Zach Wienersmith before. But I hope that there is more space travel out there. I don't think computers are going to be. I don't think quantum computers are going to change things. They might have certain killer apps, like Scott Aronson, former Mindscape guest, has been pointing out they could be cracking classical encryption by then. That has an effect, right? But I don't think it truly changes most of the world. It changes a little tiny part of the world by a lot. But I think that the real benefit of quantum computers is going to be materials research. Like basically solving quantum mechanics problems for chemistry and materials and things like that. I don't know what the solutions will teach us, but that could lead to some dramatic new technology. I'm just not an expert. Once again, Joshua Hillerup says, do you think that morality is rational in the decision theory perspective, as, as in preferences are transitive, et cetera? I think that's up to you. I think that morality is not objectively out there in the world. I think that people develop their own moral systems and I think that it is a good goal for people to have to develop moral systems that are rational in the decision theory sense. But many people don't. Many people have moral systems that are not rational. What does it mean to not be rational? The transitivity that Joshua refers to is if you prefer A to B and you prefer B to C, you should prefer A to C probably. Usually people do things like that, but there's also like more subtle things like independence of irrelevant alternatives. If you prefer A plus B to C plus B, then you should prefer A to. See that's. I'm not sure that everyone has that embedded in their moral calculus all the time. But again, because I don't think it's more, it's objectively out there in the world. It's up to you and the moral framework that you develop and the moral framework that society develops along with you to try to make sure that it's as rational as possible. Jesse Rimler says in a previous ama, you described a preference for regulated capitalism with redistribution and a strong welfare state. An extension of that vision, already practiced at scale in the Nordic countries, is the socialization of profit through public capital ownership. The state acquires equity states and companies capturing returns for citizens without directly managing firms. Norway's Sovereign Wealth Fund is the most dramatic example. The Alaska Permanent Fund is a homegrown one. In Norway, publicly owned assets exceed 50% of GDP. Finland is at 30%. My question is, does this kind of public ownership factor factor into your vision of a well functioning economy? And if the answer is not for the us is that because of genuine structural constraints or just political will? Again, this is something that I'm not a super expert on, so I'm open to be educated about this. I think my vague impression would be that this kind of socialization of profit through public capital ownership, ownership is perfectly okay in certain specific circumstances. I mean basically those circumstances where the company that is being owned almost runs itself. I mean, I understand that the theory is the state acquires equity stakes while the companies are still managed privately, but that's a bit of a dance there to make sure that that happens correctly. I mean, in ordinary private corporations, the stakeholders have a lot of say in how the managing gets done. I have very low confidence in the ability of governments to correctly manage companies. Okay, so this is why I think that there is a role for capitalism. I believe that incentivizing owners of companies to do the things that would lead to success for their companies is good thing. It's good in certain ways. It's good in doing exactly what it's meant to do, making profit for those companies. Now, whether making profit for those companies is good for society is a separate question. I would like the question of how companies should behave in order to make profit to be left up to the companies. I think that the role of government is to shape the land landscape so that the things that the companies do in their self interest align with the interest of the broader society. So make things illegal to do that literally hurt society. Make things less lucrative to do if there's some reason to do them, but they have deleterious effects and so forth. You know, it's much like. There really is an analogy between economics and physics here. The flow of money in a society in some ways can be thought of as an equilibration procedure. You know, if you had to say, if you had two flasks full of liquid and you put a little pipe between them, so liquid could flow back and forth, we all know that if you just let it go, the liquid will, will equilibrate, right? It'll be the same level in both containers. And if you had to ask what would the liquid do based only on knowing the position and velocity of every molecule of liquid, that would be this enormously complicated question to actually figure out to do the computation of what would happen to the liquid. And the wonderful thing is you don't need to. You can just say from the macroscopic point of view, oh yes, it will find the equilibrium where both liquids are at the same height. Markets, when they work are like that. The calculation that you would need to do to distribute things in the way that is best suited to successful trade and allocation of resources and things like that is just beyond the capacity of most people to do, or maybe any people to do. But the collective behavior does it by the market mechanism, again, when the market is working. So I think that it's best to let the markets solve problems like that. What should be the price of your goods? How much should you put into R and D? How much should you invest in new technologies or whatever and let the government set the rules for what the constraints are? You know, you need to be able to allow your employees to unionize. You need to pay a certain number of taxes or whatever. So use the markets to solve these difficult coordination problems. Use the government to set the landscape in which these coordination problems are solved so that the solution benefits as many people as possible. I suspect that that would involve a minimal, if any, amount of socialization of profit, but I'm willing to be shown otherwise if there are counterexamples. Okay, I'm going to group three questions together. One is from David Wright saying, how should a reasonable, educated person respond to the growing consensus that we've been visited by extraterrestrial beings and that they walk among us? Given the distances and timescales involved, isn't this so unlikely that it's not worth considering? Ed said stuff says, if the classic popular conception of a UFO landed on the White House lawn, how would you speculate that it functioned? Would building on any existing physics theories explain it? Or would we need something completely new? What features would that new physics theory necessarily require? And Paul Soldera says in the movie and book Hail Mary, the alien civilization has advanced to space travel but hasn't discovered relativity. What are the chances we would have advanced in space travel and science in general without understanding or discovering relativity? So they're all about extraterrestrials flying around in their spaceships in different ways. David's question goes first, because the answer is very straightforward. Yes, it is so unlikely that it is not worth considering. I don't think there is actually a growing consensus that we believe been visited by extraterrestrial beings. There's a lot of noise about that in certain circles, and it's kind of sensational enough that people listen to it and pass it around, but there's very little to zero evidence that it happens. As I said before, this pops up all the time. Like we're always told, oh, yes, in the next six months, we're going to get the final answers, and we never, ever are. Because it's not true, the answers aren't there, or the answer is, no, this didn't not happen. So it's not even a matter of distances and timescales. It's just thinking about what you're saying, like, why in the world would aliens do all the effort to visit us? And by the way, they have to time the visit correctly. Right? Like, for most of the history of the Earth, there was not an advanced technological civilization here on Earth to talk to. So either the aliens somehow knew that we were going to arise at exactly this time, or. Or they've been lurking here for a very long time just waiting for us to get technologically advanced. Both of those Are just absurdly unlikely. And then there's no possible chance that the aliens are in these tiny spaceships big enough to land on a lawn. There's no propulsion that would work that way, et cetera, et cetera. And finally, there's no possible scenario under which they are technologically advanced enough to visit us, but clumsy and incompetent enough to crash or let their picture be taken or whatever. It's not that hard to hide from human level technology. If you have technology that is likely to be a billion years more advanced. Okay? So no, it's just very easy to explain all this away by human beings being silly. That's the explanation. If it did happen, as Ed says, how could that technology work? It wouldn't land on the lawn. That's just not going to happen. Okay? Newton's laws are still true. If you want to travel through space, if you want to propel your spaceship, you need to push something else in the other direction. Now, you could use something like light sails or something like that. That wouldn't leave a lot of fuel behind. That could use, well, interstellar ramjets, use the ambient material in the interstellar medium. So who knows what the technology would be for actually traveling from one star system to, to another. That's perfectly plausible in the laws of physics. But probably there's technologies we haven't invented yet one way or the other. You need a lot of propulsion. You need, you know, if you want to travel at any reasonable speed, you need to really push yourself very hard. So it's not going to fit into something 10 meters across or anything like that. Of course, there could be a giant mothership that sends down little baby ships. That, that's plausible. So that could land on the White House. Lawnish shouldn't have been so definitive about that in terms of could existing physics theories explain it? Or we need something completely new. I think the chances that new physics will play a like beyond the standard model physics, new fundamental physics would play any important role in interstellar propulsion, etc. Are very, very low. For exactly the usual reasons that the laws of physics underline. Everyday life are completely understood. There isn't any room for new physics that has a dramatic impact on everyday level things. And everyday level things includes spaceships. Honestly, even though we don't bump into spaceships now, there's a couple of footnotes there. Of course, there's an enormous amount of room for technology that is novel, but based on known physics. All of the technologies that are novel that we were just talking about, whether it's AI or you know, biohacking or whatever. This is still based on the standard model of particle physics. So new materials, new propulsion systems, new fuel sources still within the standard model of particle physics. 100% possible and in fact very, very likely in something that literally travels across interstellar distances. The one loophole there is gravity. You know, Einstein's general theory of relativity works very well, but there's aspects of general relativity that remain at the edge of our understanding, whether it's warp drives or wormholes or things like that. I'm skeptical of all of them as practical future technologies. So I don't think that they will be involved. But it's possible. The possibility is there. Finally for Paul's question. Could you imagine an alien civilization that hadn't discovered relativity? I think that's extremely unlikely, you know, so it's certainly possible to imagine alternative trajectories for the history of science and the history of physics in terms of which discoveries come first. But look, why did we discover relativity? Well, because we discovered electromagnetism. Maxwell and Faraday and all those people figured out electromagnetism in the mid 19th century and within 50 years we knew about relativity because relativity is based on the symmetry group of electronics. Electromagnetism, that's really what you needed to figure out. And the fact that there's no ether that you could detect. I can't imagine any super advanced civilization not understanding electromagnetism. And honestly, if you understand electromagnetism and you're not, you know, I don't know, held back for some reason, if you're relatively intelligent and you understand em, you're going to discover relativity pretty quickly. So I think that even though the details might be very, very different by the time you're building spaceships, you have discovered relativity. Okay. Jackson Bernaches says, do you think consciousness was a trait that natural selection optimized for or something that arose by chance along with intelligence? If it was selected for, what advantages might it provide versus an unconscious but intelligent system? So of course natural selection technically doesn't optimize for things, it takes advantage of things that stumble across. The difference is the whole point of natural selection is that it's not forward looking. Natural selection does not go, oh, this new problem is going to pop up. I had better evolve something to be prepared for it. So that's what optimizing is all about. Natural selection does provide a mechanism for adaptation to existing circumstances. Okay, so that's probably what you mean. I think it's probably just a slight wording issue There. So I think that the question is, is consciousness adaptive or is it more like a spandrel? Does it just come along for other reasons? I think it's kind of, again, not an expert on this one, but it seems not even adaptive, but almost inevitable to me. Right. Going back to the conversation we had with Malcolm McIver years ago here on the podcast, and as well as other people who've talked about the origin of different aspects of intelligence, we talked to Patricia Churchland, other people about the fact that when you think about the evolution of thinking, broadly construed, so including including puzzle solving aspects, but also self awareness, consciousness, experience aspects, they do kind of go hand in hand. You can absolutely have some thought processes without consciousness, but at some point you're approaching more and more complicated problems in the world, looking for more and more sophisticated ways to adapt to them. MacGyver's point is that when fish climb onto land, they now have more time to think about what is happening. And this leads to the ability to imagine different hypothetical scenari in the future. We talked to Adam Bulley about mental time travel and the role that that played in the evolution of consciousness. So I think that it's not that consciousness itself is adapted adaptive, but rather that the various capacities that lead directly into consciousness are individually adaptive. And therefore consciousness, I predict, would just go along for the road ride most of the time under the right circumstances. Right. I mean, again, some, you know, bacteria do fine. They thrive quite well without any consciousness at all. But in the right circumstances, when the opportunity is there, consciousness will come along for the ride when aspects of it are being selected for. For adaptive reasons. Ari Moody says not having been alive during the Apollo program, I find found myself deeply moved by Artemis 2 and seeing the moon in such a. A different way. I grant that 90% of the purpose for it was geopolitical, but a bit was also curiosity exploration, achieving something purposeful. What are your takeaways from the mission and what is the bigger impact you hope it carries? You know, there's always a debate among scientists, or at least an ongoing discourse about scientists among scientists with respect to crude space flight. Crewed, Crewed, not cre rud. That is to say, putting people in space because it is super duper expensive and pretty darn dangerous as well, you know, I mean, it's a, it's a dangerous occupation being an astronaut and it's very expensive and there is some scientific return for it, but it is minimal per dollar. You get a lot more scientific return from sending robots and satellites into space than you do sending human beings into space, but so, but that's okay. There's more to life than getting the biggest scientific bang per buck, right? There is something inspirational and human centered and explorative about sending people into space and seeing how we can adapt to these new environments and how we can behave and what we can learn about them. It's very, very tiny. Like what we've done so far is just very tiny, right? We've sent people to the moon for brief periods of time. We just send people flying around the moon, not even landing on it. With Artemis 2, we sent people to the International Space Station for extended periods. And what we found is that it really messes you up being in zero gravity for that long. And there's real, real questions about whether human beings could even survive for extended periods in the gravitational field of places like the Moon or Mars, which is a sixth and a third of the Earth, Earth, respectively. Even if you could get there and solve all the problems of living and breathing and surviving, even the lack of gravity might get you in trouble. Of course you could build a fake gravitational field by spinning things around, but at some point you're asking like, why am I bothering and what are the dangers of this mechanism failing, etc. So, but still, and yet I believe, believe that it's worth seeing what we can do, right? Trying being curious, achieving something purposeful like you say. I'm a believer in that too. So really I think that all of these kinds of things are worth doing. There's very real decisions to be made about how much money should be spent doing different things. We are currently in a position where we do not make those decisions on rational bases, but maybe we can get back to that kind of decision making process and then hopefully we move things forward in that direction. It is very much inspirational, very much something that human beings should be trying to do. Peter Bamber says, I've heard that if a spaceship could be pushed up too close to the speed of light, then the crew would be able to make journeys of hundreds of light years well within a human lifetime. Even though generations of human lives would have passed back home. This appears to mean that generation starships as depicted in science fiction novels are unnecessary to reach the stars. Though the they can make for good stories. Is this correct? Well, we don't know what the right technology is going to be. You know, you're, you know, we need to build a big spaceship where many people can live for some period of time. We need to accelerate it to some speed. I don't Know what that speed is in order to get to these stars that are light years away. So the question is, what will come first? The ability to build a big spaceship that can have people live for hundreds of years but moves relatively slowly? Or the ability to build a spaceship where maybe it's not big enough for people to live hundreds of years, but it doesn't need to be because it moves very fast and human lifetime is enough? Who knows? I don't know, honestly. I think that suspended animation or putting people to sleep is also a very viable possibility. And for that matter, extending human lifespans is a very viable possibility. So I see, no, I mean, I see, yeah, no obstacles that are insuperable to doing interstellar travel. I don't know which way it will actually happen. That depends on details that none of us know the answers to. Steven Reed says. I recently watched your debate with Philip Goff from a few years back and want to know your thoughts on the following. From the physical perspective, do you believe it will ever be possible to know with a high degree of certainty if a non human mind or entity is actually conscious and be able to have insight into the nature of that experience? How would it ever be possible to design an experiment, even in theory, to determine the answer to this? If our minds are unable to generate these experiences, won't our knowledge about these experiences and whether or not they really exist be necessarily limited, no matter how clever an experiment we design? I don't, I don't think any of the words necessarily are right in this question. I think it's a legitimately difficult question. And I, I have prodded my philosopher friends to, you know, be better at understanding what consciousness is so that we will be better able to judge whether an artificial being is conscious or not by the correct standards. I suspect very strongly that consciousness is a. A lot like life in the sense that it's not one thing. It's many different aspects that come together in a certain way in human beings and might very well come together in different ways in other kinds of creatures. You know, remember we had Stuart Bartlett on the podcast years ago and we talked about what he and Michael Wong called Loyf L Y F E. I don't like the name, but I'd like the idea. The idea is that there's a bunch of things, I think they had seven different aspects that come together in life as we know it, but you could easily imagine life as we don't know it involving some of those aspects but not others. I suspect that consciousness is the same way. I Suspect that we're going to be talking about multiple different ingredients that go into consciousness. And an artificial being might have some of them, but not others. And we're going to have to decide how do we know what are the implications of these aspects being there or. Or not. Of course, the how we know question is always a very good one because there is. I mean, like you say, we can't introspect, right? We can't actually know what the AI is thinking. We can only know what the. Well, we can know. The nice thing about the an AI is that we can know what it's thinking in the sense that we can know what's going on inside the neural network that it's based on, right? In principle we can tear it apart and look at the electrons flowing from one gate to another in whatever detail we want. In practice that's super hard. And of course we also can't necessarily interpret it in any easy way. But in principle we can do it. And it's a little bit more ethical to do that than to do that to a human being. But that doesn't tell us what it's feeling. Just like when we were talking to Bing Brunton recently. Knowing the connectome doesn't take tell you the thoughts that is that are going on inside a regular old biological organism. So we will have to be more clever. But I'm not at all worried that we can't be more clever about deciding, having some decision procedure. When the external behavior of a AI or some artificial agent does act in certain ways, then we will for all intents and purposes declare it to be conscious and or possessing certain aspects of consciousness that would lead us to want to give it some rights and responsibilities in certain ways. Again, I think that's possible. I don't think we're anywhere close to doing it. I also think that the sort of diagnostic question is possible, but I really don't have great ideas about how to do it. I think it's that maybe I'm being way too optimistic about our ability to eventually do it. Richard Kashdan says you often talk about the many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics from a purely personal, non scientific perspective. Do you find the idea of branching selves provides you with any sense of optimistic nihilism regarding your own life choices? Or do you view the existence of other branches as mathematically true but practically irrelevant to the human experience? So I do know. You know, just for talking to some of the old time listeners to, to mindscape, I intentionally pick some questions from people who have not Gone through every single episode. Right. I want to be welcoming to the newer people. So we'll sometimes get questions that I have answered before or questions that are pretty like, oh, this, have you heard of this thing that I talked about a lot before? Richard's is not quite that, but I think it is getting at a relative, relatively forefront issue in thinking about many worlds. Yes, I do talk about the many worlds interpretation all the time. I don't think it affects my view of big existential questions at all. I mean, you have to give an alternative. You have to say, like, as compared to what? Right. Many worlds says that there is a quantum state that evolves deterministically and it describes multiple parallel realities, including things that are sharing a past with me, human beings, people, agents that are not me, but share a past with me, much as I said, like identical twins. Okay. The alternative is maybe. Well, one alternative is there's a single world that evolves in a truly stochastic way. So there's only one person that I can. That I will ever be. There's a sort of unified trajectory from my past to my, my future. It's just that we can't deterministically predict what the physics underlying that person will actually do. I don't see why one of those is any different than the other in terms of either how I think about purpose and meaningfulness in the world in some philosophical sense, nor how I should practically act in the world because of this. As I've said many, many times, the existence, the reality of living in the many worlds view of the world is that you, as an agent, see the world as behaving according to the rules of textbook quantum mechanics. That is to say, when you measure something, you can't predict what the outcome will be other than predicting the probability using the born rule, etc. So it doesn't affect my feeling of specialness or lack of feeling of specialness or anything like that. My life choices are exactly the same as they would be one way or the other. Jamie says I'm interested in the idea of free parameters. I remember reading Lee Smolin say as a critique that ADs, CFT and string theory both posit extra symmetries because that gives more free parameters and more room to play. You often say how hard it is to make new theories or models because of constraints imposed by known facts and maths or by lack of free parameters. If there are no free parameters, there's no room for anything new to fit. Are free parameters epistemic or ontological? Are there no free parameters in the universe as a whole. Is this the same as the question of brute facts? I mean, of course, we don't know the answer once and for all, to any of these questions. These are questions that are a very fundamental level of treating reality. So I'll interpret the question as, does string theory or some other plausible alternative to string the theory, make free parameters or posit that free parameters exist as brute facts? Or do they invent them, or is there some other ontological status for them? I'm not sure what Lee Smolin actually said. If he said that string theorists posit extra symmetries because that gives them more free parameters and more room to play, he's just 100% wrong. That is absolutely not what string theorists do. And he's doing it for rhetorical reasons, not for honest scientific reasons. String theory is in a weird situation where the theory, string theory as a theory, has no free parameters. You will often read that string theorists boast about that, right? And there was an original hope that this lack of any free parameters meant that they could uniquely predict the physics of our observed world. What turns out to be the case is that even though there are no free parameters in the theory, the set of the theory is a set of differential equations or something like that, right? As we were talking about before, just like Newton's laws are a set of differential equations. And just like Newton's laws, let's take Newton's laws for planets orbiting the sun, okay? The laws are very definitive, and there's one free parameter in them, Newton's constant of gravitation. But there are many, many solutions. There's circular orbits at every radius. There are elliptical orbits of all sorts, elliptical orbits of all different eccentricities and different orientations. And there's an infinite number, literally of solutions to the equations. String theory has zero free parameters, but an infinite number of solutions to the equations. This is completely unsurprising in some sense. The surprising and depressing thing is that the solutions in string theory can take the form of entirely different looking low energy laws of physics. By low energy, I mean, you know, at high energies, if you have a Planck scale particle accelerator, maybe you're seeing the intrinsic stringiness of the world, but at low energies, you're seeing the effects of some particular solution to the equations, which, unlike planets moving around the sun, the solutions to the equation define what space time is and the fields and particles moving within it. That's a new thing in string theory you didn't have in Newtonian mechanics. So there's one solution of string Theory that might look like three dimensional space time. Three dimensional space, one dimensional time. So four dimensional space time. With the particles and fields of the standard model of particle physics, there are other solutions that look almost exactly the same, but with different values for the parameters of the standard model. The mass of the electron, the coupling constant of electromagnetism and so forth. The mass of the Higgs boson electroweak hierarchy. All those numbers might be different from solution to solution. Also different from solution to solution are what particles there are, what forces there are, what symmetries there are. The number of dimensions of space can be different from solution to solution. And when it comes to predicting low energy physics, it turns out that what matters is what solution to the the equations you have, not just the equations themselves. So for all intents and purposes, string theory acts as if there are a lot of free parameters. There are a lot of parameters that tell you what solution you're in. Okay? Now string theorists don't put them in. They don't want them to be there, but you don't have a choice. That's the thing. When you have a set of equations and you're trying to solve them, you can't just ad hocly say, well, I want this solution, even though it doesn't actually fit into the equations. I just like it better. It gives me more freedom. You're not allowed to do that. And string theorists don't do that. They have found that their equations allow for all these solutions and they're trying to deal with them. That's the string theory landscape problem. And other theories of fundamental physics might have the same problem, or not a lot of them. You know, it's certainly worth trying to get away from this problem by just starting with, with three dimensions of space, one dimension of time, gravity as we know it, etc. And trying to work from there, rather than trying to get some theory that fits everything and then map it down to the world in which we know that the, the start in the real world is much closer to the philosophy of loop quantum gravity, as I've described elsewhere. String theorists have good technical mathematical reasons to think that loop quantum gravity doesn't work, that no theory of quantum gravity that treats gravity separate from the other forces of nature can ever work, which is why they're so invested in string theory. But we'll have to see who's right and who's wrong about that. So the answer is we don't know what are the free parameters, what are the brute facts. That's something, as is often the Case in physics or in science, it's not a direct line from here is the way the world works. Let's make predictions. It's a back and forth between, well, I think that the world works this way. Look, little bit. What would that predict? Oh, okay, that would predict this wrong thing. But I can go back and tweak my way. And it's a give and take between the theories and the facts and our answer to the question of what are the brute facts and what are inevitable features of the theory. We'll have to wait until we understand things better. Jesse Fox says, I know our intuitive pictures can be misleading at the fundamental level of physics. So I'm curious what your own own thinking is like in practice. When you're reasoning about the quantum world, fields, branching universes, etc. Does your mind generate any kind of imagery at all, even as a rough intuition, or is it entirely abstract? Yeah, there's absolutely imagery there. You know, physicists and also, even more noticeably, mathematicians come in different varieties. Some physicists like equations, they don't like pictures. Some physicists like pictures, they don't like equations. Some physicists even like words, believe it or not. And I'm on the pictures side of things. I see things through pictures more than anything else. So look, when I talk about quantum fields, I will confess there is in my mind a little picture of a two dimensional surface with a vibrating field on top of it. But the thing is, the crucially, crucially important thing is I know that that doesn't matter. It's not important, it's not what is actually happening at the end of the day. The physics of quantum mechanics or quantum field theory or string theory, whatever is not visualizable in any accurate sense. Maybe it helps you to sort of make a proposal that you can then test by thinking about the equations underlying what's happening. But it's the equations that that matter at the end of the day. So if you find yourself faced with a situation where you don't have any visualization or any imagery, that's okay. It is the equations that matter. Other times the imagery can be very, very helpful. One of the very first papers I ever wrote was on the difficulty in making time machines, closed time like curves in two plus one dimensional gravity. And I was able to come up with an argument why it wasn't possible based on drawing pictures, drawing space time diagrams of anti de sitter space, of all things. And it was an argument that could only have been made by drawing the pictures. Like there's no way you would have come up with that argument just by thinking about the equations. In principle, the equations are what you use to check whether your argument is right or wrong. But the equation equations are very, the pictures are very helpful in getting there. And so I'm a believer in the pictures, but I don't reify them to what's really going on. David P. Reichert says Asking as someone who has only recently started listening to your podcasts, would you be up for summarizing what your views on AGI are in particular regarding its near future capabilities and impact, or lack thereof, and how you came to those views? Yeah, you know, I mentioned before about quantum computing, which is a different, different thing, but there's an analogy here. Quantum computers in some sense have an enormously larger power than classical computers do, but they also have limitations. You just can't make as many qubits as you can make bits, especially keeping them talking to each other without decohering. So we can in principle imagine all sorts of things that quantum computers are good at, but when it comes to practice, when it comes to what they were at will actually be good good at, there might be like a small, very well defined subset of problems where quantum computers are absolutely dominant and other problems that we would like them to be helpful for, but they're really not. So I think that we're in that stage with AI right now where people are just doing a bad job, in my personal opinion, about matching the capacities of the technology to the needs that human beings actually have. You've seen these surveys out there where young people, especially who you might think are the easiest to adapt the new technologies, etc, are incredibly turned off by the ubiquity of AI technologies in their lives when they didn't ask for it. Okay, and it's all very, very, very distorted by money. People want to make money off of these things, which is, I just, I just confessed above that I'm in favor of market forces in the right circumstances. But market forces aren't a very good way of finding truth. They're a very good way of finding prices. Those are two very different things. So there are aspects of the financial markets in particular, where truth is not the way to make money. And so hyping your technology, forcing it into everything, and even sometimes, like innocently, some companies might think they're not trying to force things on people, but they honestly think that in the future AI will be ubiquitous. So trying to figure out how to get it into their products sooner rather than later might be the right thing to do. And also so, and I think that's distorting the whole discourse about AI. The other thing, of course, as I mentioned before, is that large language models, which are the currently dominant technology in much of what we think of as a AI, are purpose built to sound human. And this. People like to anthropomorphize things. This is not a new discovery from AI. People love anthropomorphizing things. So when you give them a technology that. Whose entire purpose is to be anthropomorphized, they're going to do it. So I think it's just very important to realize that what LLMs are good at is different than what human beings are good at. And some of the people who are very, very smart and very, very advanced in knowing about how the computer programs work make this mistake, in my view of treating them as, you know, well, they're more intelligent than human beings now, and they haven't figured out what the word intelligence means in that sentence. You know, as we, as we saw in the, in the discourse, in the question above from DMI about the principle of least action, where you ask an LL and what is the LLM going to do? It's going to look at what people have talked about before, okay. And it's going to try to figure out what would fit into this discourse. And it says something that is not the most important thing to say because that wasn't the thing that people generally talk about. You know, when you go online these days, especially on X, which used to be Twitter, a lot of the accounts that are replying to things are bots run by, by AI. And I recently saw a post, because I follow the Philadelphia 76ers was a post about Paul George and how well he was playing. And there were all these responses saying, yes, Tyrese Maxey is playing great. And you're like, why would they say that? That was not what the post was about. Of course it's a bot. And in recent months, there have been a lot more discourse on how well Tyrese Maxey is playing than Paul George. So the bots are, are just used to that and they don't even pay attention because attention is not a capacity that they have in this particular. I mean, they're not very advanced bots. You can always fix that. So anyway, I think that the near future capabilities and impact are big, are very, very big. If we use LLMs appropriately in the right circumstances, they can be hugely transformative, and I suspect that they will be. I worry that they're not being used in the right ways or conceptualized in the right, right ways. And that could lead to dangers in all sorts of ways, as we'll, as we already have seen and as we will continue to see. Bob Richie says in the last century, many prominent physicists suffered from depression, paranoia, substance abuse and mental breakdown. More than a few committed suicide. What is your take on this tendency and does it continue with today's scientific geniuses? I don't, I, I don't know whether that's even a true thing. There are selection effects here, there's a small number of statistics here, and a few famous examples might very well bias our reasoning about it. So I would need to see a careful analysis of the relative rate of things like depression and paranoia among prominent physicists versus the general public, to be honest. But it's possible that there is a correlation there. I mean, not because being a prominent physicist leads you to depression or paranoia, but there could be common causes of both genius in physics and some other kind of disability or instability that could lead you to mental breakdowns, etc. So I'm by no means convinced that it's a real tendency, but I'm open to the possibility that it is. I would have to see a careful analysis to be convinced one way or the other. Tucker Hyatt says in Project Hail Mary, author Andy Weir compares star eating astrophage to a nuclear reactor for its ability to store and release enormous amounts of energy. Do you see any way that nuclear energy and the use of the strong nuclear force might evolve in a biological entity? I'm going to get myself in trouble here and say, no, I do not see such a way. I say I'm going to give myself a trouble trouble here because what do I know? And this is absolutely a case where there might be some clever path to doing something like that that I just don't see. But natural selection that drives evolution works in a very specific way. It's not just imagine the best possible thing and make it work, right? As you all know, birds fly, airplanes fly, but they fly in very different ways ways and you know, trying to do what birds do but in an airplane turns out not to work very well. Because when you have the ability to design something and you have the ability to use technology and bend metal to your will and so forth. The optimal way to fly has to do with jet fuel or propellers or things like that, not with flapping your wings. Evolution can find the solution where you do flap your wings, because you can imagine building that up by small incremental improvements. In my book the Big Picture I talk about there was a famous argument against evolution which said if you think about a mousetrap, the claim was a mousetrap is irreducibly complex. That is to say, it's complex, but it's complex in such a way that if you removed any one aspect of it, it would just fail. So it's either existing or not existing. You can't build it up piece by piece. And the argument was that biological entities are similar, therefore evolution can't be right. That was the argument. So that's not right. And in fact, multiple people pointed out ways that you could build up a mousetrap of the kind that we normally build today in a series of successively improved versions of catching the mouse. So you could biologically evolve a mousetrap, but maybe you can't biologically evolve a jet engine. That's completely plausible to me. Very few, if any, I don't think any organisms here on land use wheels, right? Cars and motorcycles and bikes and so forth use wheels. They're very, very effective, but it's hard to evolve them. So I think that nuclear power is like that, like the kinds of things that are necessary to even imagine using nuclear energy. I can't foresee a path of gradually improving technologies that would end up with a biological organism powered by nuclear energy. I could be wrong. This could just be a failure of my imagination. Robert Kitc asks a priority question. How variously coherent do you find a unified reading in which the quantum and classical are not separate ontological domains, but coarse grained organizational regimes of one emergent, temporally manifested reality, such that classical matter is the semi classical conserved structurally bound pointer selected manifestation of a constrained superposed deck of degrees of freedom and gravitation is understood as the intrinsic coupling of that organized energy structure to the materially analogous energetically responsive intrinsic structure of co emergent spacetime itself. So that reality is one world temporarily manifested from admissible possibilities, possibilities rather than many worlds equally realized? Well, I think there's two things. One is the unified reading in which the quantum and classical are not separate ontological domains. Etc, I think is more or less what we have in ordinary quantum mechanics, except that rather than saying quantum and classical exists simultaneously and there's some common thing behind them, we just say the quantum description is the common thing, thing is the fundamental thing, and there's a limit. There is a certain regime in which things look classical. Otherwise all of the words make perfect sense and seem to fit together, except at the very end. You say so that reality is one world temporarily manifested, blah blah, Blah. Rather than many worlds equally realized. I don't see how that follows at all. As I pointed out, the many worlds of quantum mechanics follow from the shrink equation. And you can't just throw around words and say, I don't believe in the many worlds. If you don't believe in the many worlds, then you don't believe in the Schrodinger equation either. You don't believe that the thing the Schrodinger equation describes is reality. Which is fine, some people don't believe that. Or you believe that reality obeys the Schrodinger equation sometimes and not others. And people will also believe that. But you have to be specific about that. Right? And as many, many physicists have found through the years, being specific about that is harder than it looks. In order to fit all of the data that we already know the quantum mechanics describes and yet alter it in some way to get rid of the other worlds turns out to be really, really difficult. Which is why there's only a couple of active possibilities that people take seriously. Anonymous says course graining to the level of sociology. How much of someone like sophomore Sean Carroll's chances of becoming a physics professor are fixed versus random fortune? Like, if you hadn't randomly chosen to write papers about a positive cosmological constant, would you have been screwed? I think that there's a lot of contingency in human lives. You know, my own career as an academic has bounced back back and forth to highs and lows in various ways. And one could certainly imagine small changes here and there, either making it much more successful or much less successful. Right. It is true. I wrote papers on the cosmological constant and dark energy before it was discovered that was not random. I actually, you know, cared about those issues and thought they were interesting. Right. So it's not quite just a roll of the dice there. There's some purposefulness to it. There were also cases where I had an idea idea and I didn't follow up on it and other people did and became famous and very successful because of it. And if I had just been slightly smarter about following up on that idea, or had more time or was nudged by some random remark, who knows that I could have actually had more success as a theoretical physicist. That's life. That's how things go. Is there some way of calculating the relative probability of different things? I truly, really don't know. If I hadn't written my general relativity textbook, it's much more probable that I would have gotten tenure at Chicago and I might still be at Chicago or I might have been stolen away by some other place, or it might have gotten tired of physics and quit. Like all of these are possible. So I think that all, and I tell people this when they're young students or postdocs or whatever. There's no strategy that is guaranteed in a scientific, scientific career, probably much like other careers, although I'm less familiar with them, to lead to success or failure. Okay, all you do are change the probabilities. You can increase your chances of getting a job by behaving in certain ways, decrease them in other ways. Maybe some of the ways that you could behave differently that would increase your chances of success are dislikable to you for other reasons and therefore you don't want to do them. Or maybe things that would lower your chances of getting a job are so important to you, you're going to do them anyway. That's fine. I just want everyone to know, to be cognizant of when they are increasing their chances or decreasing their chances. That's all any of us can do in this wacky, unpredictable world in which we live. Polina Vino says, are you a non cognitivist? Would you agree with the statement that X is morally wrong within your construction Moral framework is essentially a dressed up version of I don't like X, which you may have convinced yourself of by reasoning according to your moral framework. So I don't like to be too definitive about these labels because when people start talking about the labels on different moral theories, sometimes they have implications of those labels in the back of their minds that I don't necessarily have. So it's not the clearest method of communication. So to me, non cognitivism comes from the idea that moral statements are not propositions. That's usually how it's phrased. So a proposition is like two plus two equals four or F equals ma, or for that matter, two plus two equals five. Right. You know, propositions could be true and false. And so it's always seemed weird to me that non cognitivism is presented as the statement that moral claims are not propositions. I would say that moral claims don't map on to anything objectively true about the world. I'm not a moral realist or a moral objectivist like that. I guess that's that statement was closer to moral realism. The fact that moral the, the idea, the claim that moral statements are sort of out there in the world to be tested. You can be objective about morality, but not realist by saying that yes, we all make up morality, but there's uniquely a correct way to do it, and we should all make up the same morality. That would be morally objectivist. So I think I'm effectively a non cognitivist in that I don't think that statements of the form X is morally wrong are true or false in the same way that objective facts about the physical world or the logical mathematical world are true or false. Okay, they're more judgment calls and different people can feel differently about them. They're more like, what is your prior on the Philadelphia 76ers winning the NBA championship? Right. Different people are allowed to have different priors, just like they're allowed to have different moral judgments. I still would call it a proposition, but maybe people have ideas about what counts as a proposition that I don't necessarily have in the back of my own mind. Krzysztof Randomsky says how much are scientists open to popularizing their science? How far? How far should they go with simplifying it for the sake of reaching a wider audience? This question occurred to me, kristoff continues, during your talk with Daniel Harlow. I just couldn't shake off an impression that he is suffering when forced to talk in popular science language. He got his vitals back when you both spoke like scientists normally do during that last 15 minutes of the show. I remember Richard Dawkins in one of his books saying that we shouldn't run infantile scientific fair shows. Cheap spectacles underlying the coolness of science because science is hard and implying otherwise is misleading and cheap, shallow shows eventually get most people disappointed with science after they realize that it's much more difficult. You're undoubtedly in the top league of scientists with skills at explaining science, but I'm not sure if all researchers are that positive about it. So I don't think it's quite correct to say that Daniel was suffering when he was forced to talk in public popular science language. I think there's a much more innocent explanation, namely that he was trying to do a good job at it and he doesn't do it that often, which I think is completely fine. I mean, he understands the importance of doing it. But he's a young guy who has been doing amazing high level research in theoretical physics and he's been concentrating on that. So he doesn't just spend a lot of time taking his high level physics research and translating it into terms that are understandable to people who do, who don't have the background in jargon or concepts or whatever. And he was trying to be careful about like, all right, what am I allowed to say what am I not allowed to say? What makes sense? How can I translate things? Right? Because it's hard, it's a skill to take these very difficult conceptions in science and turn them into something understandable. It's just not. It's not just automatic. Even though everyone who is a high level research scientist was at one point in the their youth not a high level research scientist. And therefore, in principle, you might think they should know what it's like, right? In fact, you forget you have embedded certain ideas and certain ways of thinking and talking so deeply in how you go through the world that it's really hard to put yourself back in that state of mind where you don't have all this background. And even if you could put yourself in that state of mind, there's a question of translation. How do you speak ordinary language in a way that both is fair and honest and respectful of the underlying science, but gets some truth across to the general public? I mean, I'm always very happy to admit that there are levels of understanding, right? You can always understand something about what is going on in physics without any math or physics background, background whatsoever, but you're not going to understand it as well as if you have the math and physics background and really dig into the details. This is just like true for every different field that has, you know, expertise involved in it to answer the. Sorry, that was all background to answer the actual question. Some scientists like doing science communication and popularizing and are good at it. Some interestingly like it and are not good at it. That's also true. Some don't like doing it themselves, but appreciate the importance that it be done. And some give lip service to liking it, but don't really like it. They kind of disdain it and they look down upon people who do it. And some just don't like it. People think it's a waste of time, they shouldn't be bothered. Okay, so you get the whole. A whole spectrum of possibilities. I think that the median scientist does appreciate the importance of doing some outreach to a broad public. They don't spend much time doing it themselves. And also they don't always put their money where their mouth is in terms of actually supporting the people who do it because they're devoted to doing the science and the research, and that's what they've been trained to do their whole lives. So that's not completely surprising. Jan M. Says the origin of COVID 19 is fiercely debated between proponents of a zoonotic versus a lab leak. Origin of the SARS CoV2 virus. Do you have an opinion in this issue and any thoughts why the US Government backs the lab leak theory? So, no, I don't have any opinion on this issue. My feeling from not being an expert is that most of the experts that I take seriously, seriously are on the natural side of the origin issue rather than a artificial lab leak origin. But there is debate, and that's good. There should be debate. My one strong feeling is that the debate should be a scientific one, carried out by experts, not a political one. And I think that a huge amount of the discourse about this issue is taken on by politicians and pundits and podcasters rather than expert scientists. And then it becomes very emotionally charged and cynical, symbolic and tribal. Right. And so the easiest part of your question is why the US Government backs the lab leak theory. It's tribal. People have decided that if you're conservative and Republican, then Covid was not a big deal. It was a plot. There was malfeasance by the CDC and Tony Fauci and all that stuff. And that goes hand in hand with a lab leak theory has nothing to do with the merits of the case. So I'm open to whatever the merits of the case are. I'm not especially interested. I don't think it matters that much. People care a lot for reasons that escape me a little bit. But I want the actual discourse to be done by scientists who are trying to find the truth, not political, cultural figures who are trying to make a cultural or political point. Jake Torren says, after. After extensive debate, the American Ornithological Society has decided that it is inappropriate to name bird species after people. Many of the honorees were dead white European males. Accordingly, all such common names are being changed. It occurs to me that many physics terms, units, laws, equations, similarly honor dead white European males. What do you think about the AOS policy? American Ornithological Society. And has there been any similar debate in the physics community? So I think it's a tough question, honestly. I think this is a legitimate one where there are good points on both sides. I mean, I have sort of provisionally taken the attitude that names are labels, names are not history lessons. Right. So names don't actually tell you what happened. I mean, there's a. There's a cutesy maxim that says that things are named after. After. Not the first person to discover them, but the last person to discover them. Right. Like if there were people who discovered them before others were willing to listen, those people were ignored. And finally, when the time was right and someone Rediscovered it. That person gets their name on it. So there's always historical inaccuracies in the naming of things. I think it's a little quixotic and impossible to correct the namings so that they accurately reflect the historical. Historical reality, because historical reality is a mess. And it's also hard to change the names of things. Having said that history exists, and if you. And it is true that due to sexism and racism and all sorts of isms that have existed over the centuries, if all you do is name things after figures that were prominent at the time when the discoveries were being made, you will end up with a lot of things named after. After dead white European males. And maybe you want your nomenclature to be more inclusive or at least less pointed toward a particular part of history, and therefore you want to change the names. I am, you know, as. As a pragmatist. I'm in favor of letting the individual subfields make up their minds. If the American Ornithological Society has made this decision. I haven't looked at the details of their. Their process for deciding, and I'm perfectly willing to go along with it. Physics has not had nearly that much effort into changing the names of things like the Schrodinger equation or the Dirac equation or whatever. It would be very, very difficult to do so just because those names are so ingrained in how we talk and how every textbook is written and things like that. Sometimes there have been efforts. Astronomy has been a little bit more along those lines than physics has. So Henrietta Levitt, for example, was the astronomer who discovered the Cepheid luminosity period relation. And so some people, fairly recently, not in her lifetime, have said we should call this, you know, Leavitt's law or something like that. Right. And, you know, I think that's fine. I don't. I don't attach huge importance to it. Right. I mean, it's kind of. Of symbolic. I get that symbols matter. They are not irrelevant. So symbolic things should be taken seriously. But I don't think they're the most important things. I would rather it's not true that there's a finite amount of attention to be put to things, but given that there's some attention to be put to things, I think that lowering the amount of misogyny and sexism in the existing community is more important than relabeling things historically to be a little bit more fair, more inclusive. Grace Monk says, why aren't there more college classes on the philosophy of physics? I took a philosophy of quantum mechanics course with Nina Emery in college, and it completely changed the way I thought about the world. Even as a humanities major, my understanding is that classes like hers are quite rare. I know that many departments don't have philosophers of physics, but should that really account for a lack of classes on the kinds of physics and philosophy problems central to the podcast. Podcast and to your teaching? Well, I'm trying to be fair here. You know, I think there should be lots more classes on philosophy of physics and lots more people doing philosophy of physics. I don't think it's that rare, though. I mean, maybe I'm completely wrong here. I can usually think of in philosophy departments that I know about that are of a certain size, there's usually people doing philosophy of physics, and I guess that they usually teach undergraduate courses. Maybe some of them don't. Nina Emory, by the way, was my host when I visited Mount Holyoke just a few weeks ago to give a talk. I'm sure her class was great. I do think, you know, within philosophy, philosophy of physics is an extremely respected sub discipline. Maybe extremely is too strong there. It's a respected subdiscipline. Let's put it this way. I think that the typical philosopher on the street thinks that philosophy of physics is very good philosophy. They don't quite respect it as much as what they think is the centrally important area. Areas of metaphysics and value and political philosophy and things like that. Okay, that's fine, epistemology, but they get. The philosophy of physics is important and respectable in physics departments. It's not respected at all, of course. I think that what's missing is I think there should be more recognition of the continuity between philosophy of physics and other areas of philosophy. Philosophy, you know, thinking about space and time is kind of central to metaphysics in. In general, maybe even to epistemology, probably not to value or politics, but it's a smooth continuum, not a discrete set of differences. I do therefore think that more philosophy departments should have a little bit more emphasis on, if not people specializing in philosophy of physics than at least people who know a lot of philosophical philosophy of physics and physics, for that matter, because it is of a continuum. That's why natural philosophy is important. I think all of physics and all of philosophy are part of a continuum, for that matter. I love the point that taking philosophy of physics completely changed the way you thought about the world. I think that's the ideal that we're all shooting for. And it certainly is true for me. Thinking about how time works, or how space, space, time works, how forces and Matter and energy work changes the way I think about the world, and I think that it also provides a set of analytical tools that are very useful in a variety of circumstances. So I think it would be good if we were a little bit broader at that. Yeah, so I would think that though. So there you go, take it for what it's worth. Norton ewart says. On April 7, Martin Johnson posted a full paged ad in the New York Times with the headline the Universe may be older than 13.8 billion years. After the headline, he supplies five hypothetical equations, some abstract and presentational links, and the statement that the author alone is responsible for the last three equations above displayed. What is the strategy behind an ad like this? I accept that the universe may be older or younger, but I understand, and I understand why scientists would publish on this topic. But why would you place an ad in the New York Times? Who is he trying to convince? Yeah, I'm not at all surprised. Surprised by this. Look, you would be surprised probably at the volume of not just email that I get. Like email is cheap, right? I've had people who have sent me emails once a day for years in a row and I have a filter in my Gmail that just deletes them right away. Certain mailing lists that I'm on and I just delete them right away. I get regular appearances of new theories, of everything, especially in the LLM era that we're now in, that makes it too easy to do. LLMs are notoriously sycophantic and they will tell you how brilliant you are, et cetera, and I just delete them right away. But I also get physical mail, right? I get manuscripts, I get letters, I get books that people have self published. So it's clear that not only do people think that they have the capacity to come up with important new ideas in physics, even though they lack the tradition, traditional background and academic superstructure that publishing physicists have, but they also think that other people will pay attention to them and they have the resources to try to mail them books. And I kind of feel bad because I just throw them all away. I don't look at them. I'm happy to tell them, I don't look at them. I don't ever ask to be sent these things, but they nevertheless do it. So if you had slightly more resources, why would you take an ad out in the Near York Times? Why not? Clearly, these people are not very good at judging the importance of their physics ideas. Therefore, maybe it shouldn't be surprising that they're not very good at judging how to get those ideas out to a broader community. And again, as I've said before, the real problem with these people is not that they are outside academia or they have different training or whatever, it's that they don't listen, that they are truly uninterested in improving their understanding. That's what makes them crackpots, right? That they think that their idea is right and everyone should listen to them, but they have no special obligation to listen to what anyone else says. So they're kind of not worth talking to or responding to. David Carr says. Do you have any thoughts on the reports of nuclear and space technology scientists who have died recently? I only see it being reported by conservative sites, so my first instinct is that they are sensationalizing it somehow, but I can't find it any reliable sources on it. Yeah, this is actually a brand new thing that I just noticed in fact. So no, it's complete bs. It's zero credibility here. There is literally a Wikipedia page on the recent conspiracy theory that scientists are dying. Okay? Scientists are being killed. Nuclear and space technology scientists. You dig into it and you're like someone who was a secretary at the Jet Propulsion Lab is included in the list of scientists who have reportedly been killed. A lot of them are like in their 70s and you know, people die sometimes. Look, if you, if it were at all real, if you cared about it, not you personally, David, but if someone cared about it, you would calculate the base rate, right? Are these people in these particular subfields dying at a higher rate than expected compared to the public, given their demographics, et cetera? Is there a selection effect? Can you predict ahead of time, blah, blah, blah, none of this is done. It's all just the usual conspiracy theorizing like, ooh, all these people have died. How could that be a coincidence? There's no connection between these people other than they are scientists. And now people are looking for scientists dying, saying, see, another scientist died. It must be a conspiracy that is killing them. No, it does not need to be a conspiracy that is killing them. There are easier explanations than that. Maxwell Grody says, do you see a connection between self locating uncertainty and Rawls's veil of ignorance thought experiment? If the thought experiment were reframed such that when you were designing your preferred society behind the veil, you also knew that everybody else who will exist also gets to design their preferred society and the society that actually gets implemented is an aggregation across everyone's preferred operation options. Then does the veil of ignorance become a self locating uncertainty problem and does that Framing support Rawls's argument for his lexical priority. I'm worried that I'm going to get this wrong. So I think my answer is there is a self locating uncertainty aspect to Rawls's veil of ignorance thought experiment. So for those of you who don't know, John Rawls as a political philosopher said that we should design the ideal society society by forgetting what we know about our position in society. You know, basically he's saying there's just too much motivated reasoning going on in being a certain kind of person, whether it's a certain race or certain income class or education level or whatever, you're gonna, given the actuality of our contingent existence, we're gonna be happy with society that privileges people like us. So he says, if you want to try to be careful and design better society, you would say, what if I didn't know who I was? What if I might end up being anybody? What if I might end up being the worst off person in society? And he argues that what you would do is to try to design a society where even the worst off people were not that badly off and it ends up being very egalitarian for that reason. But he's nuanced about it. It's easy to caricature his view, but that's the basic thrust of it. And so in some sense there's some self locating uncertainty going on there. You know, you're a person but you don't know which person you are. It's attempting to be a legitimate version of the typicality anthropic move. Right, that we were talking about before. Rawls is not saying you are a typical observer, which is the bad anthropic move. He's saying you can design the good society by imagining that you were a typical observer and didn't know anything beyond that. What kind of society would you design? So in that sense, yes, there's some self locating uncertainty involved. What I don't see or I'm not sure of is how that helps or you know, what relevance that fact has to thinking about it. I don't think that thinking about it in that way leads you to any slightly different conclusions than Rawls himself was led to. But maybe I'm missing something about that. I'm open to the possibility. Eric Connolly says in your interview with Paul Peter Singer, you pushed back a bit against the idea of utility being quantifiable and additive. To me, it seems a natural step is to treat utility more like a vector than a scalar, having different components like say, pleasure and Freedom. My utility Vector might be 1 comma 2. Someone else's might be 2 comma 1. These vectors are harder to compare than scalars having the same magnitude. Maybe this is nonsense, but is it something philosophers think about? So I don't know if philosophers have ever thought about that, but I think that there is an obvious problem with it, which is that vectors don't have an ordering, right? The nice thing about scalars simple numbers is that you can say that a certain number is bigger or smaller than another one. You can't say if you have a Vector and another 12 comma 1, which is bigger, unless secretly you want to say, I mean the length of the vector and then you're back to a scalar again, or you want to sort of privilege the first component over the second component or something like that. So on the one hand I think that in fact it's absolutely true that different people have different weights that they give to pleasure or freedom, whatever when calculating utility. But I think that the idea utilitarianism kind of only has a grip if you reduce all of those different components of the vector to a single scale scalar number that you can then put in an order. Kevin o' Toole says recently, hiking with friends, wearing polarized sunglasses, I showed them the 45 degree lens trick. I don't know many, maybe some of you folks out there have seen this before, but if not, it's very worth looking up on the Internet. Anyway, Kevin says in the trick, two perpendicular lenses allow no light through. So you imagine polarized lenses and they polarize light in certain directions. So you put them at 90 degrees to each other, it blocks out all of the light because you're blocking both polarizations. And anyway, Kevin continues, I should let Kevin talk, but adding a filter between them at 45 degrees allows some light through the whole chain. I then added this. I added that this also happens when letting through photons one at a time and that no classical theory could explain explain this behavior so it is visible evidence that the world is quantum. They all accepted this, but the more I think about it, the wronger it feels. A classical theory of light as either waves or particles seems like it easily could just include a polarization parameter that changes as it is filtered. Is there something more accurate I could have said where my little sunglasses experiment actually defies classical explanation? So this is exactly the kind of real world thing that I personally am bad at. But your feelings are exactly the same as my feelings. I was never convinced that this particular 45 degree thing is somehow Strong evidence of quantum behavior. But of course, it depends on what you mean by quantum behavior. You know, in the real world, the real world is quantum. So all behavior that we actually see is quantum. So if you're saying that a certain phenomenon is evidence of quantum mechanics, what do you really say? Saying is that there is no classical theory that could explain this. And like you, I'm not at all sure that that's true, because it's a super strong claim that there's no possible classical theory that could explain this. Is the claim somehow that just classical electromagnetism doesn't explain it, or that I can't come up with some modified version that couldn't explain it? I am not that confident that there is no classical theory that could explain it, which is why never bring up experiments like that. I think something like the Stern Gerlach experiment, which is harder to do, you can't just do it outside with your sunglasses. But that's much stronger evidence of quantum theory. For that matter, by the way, the stability of matter is a much stronger piece of evidence for quantum theory. Electrons do not spiral into the middle of a nucleus. That tells you that electrons are wave like in some sense. But when you look at them on a screen, they look part the of article like classical physics doesn't explain that very well. Ophir Averbuch says, I am a grad student in a field other than philosophy. I'm considering applying for the philosophy job market, having a philosophy appointment. Do you find that not having formal philosophy training creates frictions, both academic and social, with your philosopher colleagues? Do you think that you have colleagues that are dogmatically unwilling to take your comments in seminars seriously, or who say spiritual snarkily behind your back, those scientists should stick to their science and leave it to us philosophers to do the philosophy. Well, I think, unsurprisingly, people are different. Different people have different attitudes towards this. In my particular philosophy department at Johns Hopkins, I've seen none of that whatsoever. My philosophy colleagues seem to respect me as a philosopher very, very well. And also the other people I know, not at Johns Hopkins, but within my subfield of foundations of physics, also seemed to respect me philosophically as well as scientifically. At the same time. I know that I tried to apply for jobs either in philosophy departments or jointly in physics and philosophy departments at other places, at other times, and sometimes not always sometimes. The reason why it didn't happen is because people in the philosophy department department thought that I could not teach philosophy classes right? And I don't think that's true. I am teaching them, so it can't be true. Maybe they don't think I teach them well. But look, that's actually reasonable. Like I don't think it's true in the case of me, but I certainly don't think that just because someone is an expert in some other field and sort of cares a little bit about philosophy, that entitles them to say they would be good philosophy professor. I think that what matters is would you be a good philosophy professor? Some people would, some people wouldn't. I don't think you necessarily need a strong background in Kant and Hegel or Plato and Aristotle or Zhuangzi or whoever to be a good philosophy professor. But you do need to be able to literally do philosophy. Right? So the fact that I had written philosophy papers, that I had them published, that's what matters to the people in the, the, in the philosophy department. As far as I have traditionally known, of course, who knows that they're not talking behind my back? I don't think they are. I have pretty good colleagues at Johns Hopkins, but you know, maybe they're just super duper clever at hiding that. Final question for this month's AMA comes from Karolyi Cantor who says. Greetings from Hungary. Do you have any thoughts or reflections on our election results? Were Viktor Orban's long standing rule was finally voted out, especially given his close political alignment with and strong support from both Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin. Well, I mean, the joke here is, of course Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin are both deeply unpopular people, so strong support from them might not be very helpful in this. Look, the serious thing to say is, on the one hand, you know, super congratulations to the people of Hungary who were able to get themselves out from rule by authority. Authoritarian figure. That's not always guaranteed. It can be very difficult. And they did it peacefully. And he conceded in some sense the election was just so overwhelming that even a would be authoritarian could not pretend that it was not a repudiation of his rule. I think it's a very important historical result, honestly, this result from Hungary, because when you do have authoritarians involved in power, it can be easy to lose hope, to think, well, you know, they're authoritarians. There's no democratic process which will remove them from office once they get the levers of power in their hands. But that's not true. Power doesn't really work like that. It's not concentrated in the hands of one person. People can be authoritarians as long as the right set of other people go along with them. And when the other people stop going along, they're going to stop succeeding at their authoritarian rule. So there's always reason to keep fighting, to keep pressing, not to despair. Maybe it works, maybe it doesn't, but it might work. And that's enough to keep us motivated to try to do it. And examples where it happens, there have been recent examples in South America. Hungary is another example where literally a very, very close compatriot of right wing populist figures elsewhere in the world has been kicked out of office due to the work of the people. The other reason why. So not only did it work, but it's a reminder that at the end of the day, the reality of right wing populism is itself deeply unpopular. Okay, there are moments when it seems popular, because usually not just because it's the actual right wing populism that is popular, but because the alternatives have been bad for whatever reason and they've become unpopular. That's a very important factor in politics. But once you see the right wing populism at work and you realize, I didn't vote for that, you get all of these, you know, right now, I don't know if you know, right now in the United States, there's all these newspaper stories about interviews with Trump supporters who are like, I don't like what he's doing. I never thought he would do that. And it's a very strong temptation for people to on the other side just roll their eyes and say, like, come on, how could you not know? He told you he was going to do this. But nevertheless, our way of getting information to voters is very bad right now. So people don't know. And then when once these people get into office and start doing terrible things, people who previously supported them are like, no, I didn't want that. And I'm optimistic enough to think that, you know, respect for other human beings and democratic values and liberal tolerance and even love and compassion and empathy for your fellow human beings is more prevalent than a sort of narrow, nationalistic, hatred based view of the world. They both exist. In fact, most people have aspects of both of them to them inside themselves to some extent or the other. But more people in the modern world want to be good and want to be open and want to welcome their fellow human beings into the community. And that's something that we just got great evidence for from the election in Hungary. So thank you very much, people from Hungary, for doing the right thing and sticking with it and succeeding rather than giving up. It's something that we should all keep in mind as an example. And with that note, look, I don't pick the last question in every AMA randomly. I try to end on a happy note. And on that note, thanks very much for supporting the Mindscape podcast. It really means a lot to me. Hope you enjoy the ama. I'll talk to you next time.
Sean Carroll’s Mindscape AMA | May 2026
Date: May 4, 2026
In this AMA (Ask Me Anything), Sean Carroll addresses a wide array of listener questions from science and philosophy to culture and personal reflection. The episode moves fluidly through advanced physics, serious ethical dilemmas, the culture of science communication, sports fandom, and lighthearted personal anecdotes. Carroll’s tone remains thoughtful, deeply informed, and candid, with his signature blend of intellectual rigor and approachable humanity.
Timestamps: [03:00] – [15:45]
“I'd much rather have people self-identify as fans of a certain team and put a lot of their emotional energy into rooting for that team than other much more harmful ways to make irrational choices about how to live your lives.” (Sean Carroll, [06:30])
“Let's all just have fun and enjoy the games. And also, we need to crush the Celtics tonight.” ([14:15])
Timestamps: [17:00] – [30:30]
“If Boltzmann brains do dominate ... we are cognitively unstable. Then we have no reason to trust any conclusions we have about the universe.” ([24:00])
Timestamps: [31:00] – [39:00]
“We should absolutely always be in favor of rationality, of fairness, of free speech, of open inquiry, of all those good things that a good modern post-Enlightenment liberal should care about.” ([36:55])
Timestamps: [40:00] – [45:00]
“A straightforward reading of what we understand about the laws of physics makes it very, very unlikely that there is anything like life after death.” ([43:45])
Timestamps: [46:00] – [50:00]
“I'm not sure that it helps us a lot with understanding the nature of consciousness… I don't see why that gives me any insight into the nature of consciousness at all.” ([48:45])
Timestamps: [50:15] – [52:30]
Timestamps: [54:00] – [62:00]
“It means that if you have a choice between two options and one raises utility... you do the one that raises the utility more... If you don't buy some version of that, then you're not really a utilitarian.” ([112:30])
Timestamps: [72:00] – [76:30]
Timestamps: [120:00+]
“Just because these numbers have the mathematical properties of a probability doesn’t mean that you can magically say, therefore one of them happens and the other doesn’t.” ([131:20])
Range: Scattered throughout
“It would only be accountable if at the time when you did the thing, it was reasonable to think that doing that thing might have led to this effect...” ([156:00])
Timestamps: Throughout, with highlights at [177:00] (home ownership), [207:00] (sports fandom)
“Sports fandom is non-rational in the sense that there's no real moral calculus or ethical considerations… but it's fine.” ([05:40])
“The response to the weaponization of rationality is just to be rational. The response is to be truly rational, not to give up on it...” ([36:20])
“I control what I can control, and the laws of physics and the existence of the soul after death are not things that I can control.” ([44:25])
“My life choices are exactly the same as they would be one way or the other.” ([226:00])
“Physicists are a show-me-the-money kind of field… If they can ignore the foundations of quantum mechanics and get on fine with their lives, they will do so.” ([160:00])
Sean Carroll’s May 2026 AMA is a tapestry of serious scientific discussion, philosophical rigor, personal anecdotes, and genuine openness. He navigates the questions with clarity, humility, and (often) a gentle sense of humor. Whether exploring the deep puzzles of quantum reality, addressing ethical dilemmas, or discussing fandom for a basketball team, Carroll provides a master class in how to think carefully, live sanely, and communicate clearly with audiences ranging from physicists to first-time listeners.