I have doing a bit of checking around at university websites and am beginning to suspect that "multiple parallel universes" has become part of the dogma of their astronomy departments.
Just like Eugene Koonin explained that multiple universes explains how the DNA/RNA/protein interrelated system could have come about, even though in a single universe it would appear to be impossible, in an infinite cosmos anything is possible no matter how far fetched it might ordinarily appear to be.
In the case of astronomy it is known that the basic constants of the universe are "fine tuned" for life to exsist in this universe. Isn't that strange?
Not really, we are told. With multiple universes only ones where the constants are fine tuned for life to exist will be populated with creatures who then will marvel at such fine tuning. So what would ordinarily seem to be highly improbable really is inevitable if the universe is populated with an almost infinite number of parallel universes.
Just like Eugene Koonin explained that multiple universes explains how the DNA/RNA/protein interrelated system could have come about, even though in a single universe it would appear to be impossible, in an infinite cosmos anything is possible no matter how far fetched it might ordinarily appear to be.
In the case of astronomy it is known that the basic constants of the universe are "fine tuned" for life to exsist in this universe. Isn't that strange?
Not really, we are told. With multiple universes only ones where the constants are fine tuned for life to exist will be populated with creatures who then will marvel at such fine tuning. So what would ordinarily seem to be highly improbable really is inevitable if the universe is populated with an almost infinite number of parallel universes.