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/sci/ - Science & Math


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15991871 No.15991871 [Reply] [Original]

Is the Universe really going to end in permanent and infinite darkness?

>> No.15991874

>>15991871
Is the hero really going to be killed by the villain? We're in that chapter of history now.

>> No.15991892

>>15991871
welcome to death

>> No.15991901

anyone can make a guess at whats going to happen in a trillion years, none of us will be around to see the results so there is no way to prove or disprove the veracity of the guess, which is why its not science, its just faggoty

>> No.15991927

That seems to be a likely fate based on our current understanding of physics. But it relies on the following assumptions:
>The Universe is an isolated system
>The laws of thermodynamics apply on a universal scale
>We have a complete understanding of dark matter and dark energy

>> No.15991955
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15991955

>>15991871
We can only hope that intelligence gains access to either space-time manipulation, isotropic computing vaccum energy or basement universi.

>> No.15992014

>>15991871
new boltzmann universes will pop up and make things interesting again

>> No.15992031

>>15991871
No, it is retarded doomer/atheist pseudoscience. Remember, we don't know what even dark matter is nor where our current heat comes from. Believing in heat death will coincidentally only turn you into a high time preference consoomer it seems.

>> No.15992243

>>15992031
Exactly. The mathematics they use to arrive at conclusions like heat death is just pseudomaths. You can't prove it's going to happen which proves that God will come and save us and take us to heaven where we can to do everything we want and get a big mansion and a sports car and $1million dollars hard cash prize

>> No.15992470

>>15992031
>nor where our current heat comes from
Have you not heard of stars?

>> No.15992493
File: 1.68 MB, 1843x3969, heat death survival.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
15992493

>>15991871
No. There are a lot of possible ways the heat death of the universe might be survivable.

>> No.15992495
File: 181 KB, 1108x1009, no_death.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
15992495

>>15991871
>>15991892
There's a good chance something like eternal recurrence is true.

>> No.15992500

>>15991871
Yes, and there are no possible ways in which the heat death of the universe will be survivable in any sense.

Unless God exists, we're in a simulation, we're already boltzmann brains (which is kind of worse), we're not in the lowest state of physics, or some other major metaphysical change occurs this is so certain that there is no coherent challenge to it anywhere.

Sorry that makes (You)r brain stressed.

>> No.15992770

Maybe

>> No.15992834

>>15992493
This graph is very incomplete. All of these solutions fall into one of a few categories, those being: purely theoretical, passing the problem onto someone else, and even the few reasonable solutions require the ability to reverse entropy and/or technology that may not be possible to build.