Why
is there something rather than nothing is the question that Jim
Holt sets out to investigate in his philosophical book Why does
the World Exist?: An Existential Detective Story. Along the way,
he encounters, talks about and to various philosophers and scientists
dead and alive. Holt weighs, filters and digests ancient and modern
ideas to reach a satisfying and rational answer to the existential
question of the creation and sustenance of the universe. He leaves no
(philosopher's) stone unturned and even enters, boldly and
confidently, into the unstable and volatile world of quantum
mechanics.
It is
a wild ride indeed that will make your head buzz with thrill and
excitement with its revolving universal doors that contain possible
worlds to infinite degrees. Holt approaches nothingness as if it were something to behold and looks at it from any possible angle he can
get his hands on. He spins and twists the Ferris wheel of thought and
speculation to shed some light on the origin and purpose of our
existence in this endlessly vast spacetime that is doomed for a Big
Crunch, Chill, Bounce or what-have-you.
As I
was reading Holt's book, I was accosted by a host of ideas and
counterclaims that I wished to make, yet somehow the author had the
ability, like a grandmaster or a psychic, to foresee my own
objections; he even made allusion to one of my principal allegories I
wish to demonstrate here, i. e. apples.
Apart
from their flesh, in certain accounts, having tempted Adam and Eve
with the “curse” of knowledge, and apart from the fact that they
also had a say and unofficial credit in Newton's discovery of
gravitation, apples are used here to show both something and
nothing at the same time.
Here it goes. Let us say, you have two apples, and you eat one of
them. You are left with one. And then, because of their intrinsic
delicious properties, you cannot help yourself and end up with no
apples whatsoever. Zero. Zilch. We went backwards here from something
concrete in your hand, two scrumptious green apples, to their
nonexistence, no apples at all. But how can you have or
possess no apples? How do you know for a brute fact that you
have no apples?
Certainly,
you can make an inventory and check that you have peaches but the
variable “apple” is not there, hence empty, and you add to your
shopping list that you need to buy more apples. But in its absence,
an apple has no particular shape or form whatsoever. In fact, no
apples may easily be the equivalent to no oranges.
While in their presence (something) they look different, in their
absence (nothing) they “look” the same; put differently, they are
identical when not being there. In short, (no) apples = (no) oranges.
Somehow that does not make a whole lot of sense.
That
brings me to my second allegory, a parade of some sorts. Last
weekend, we went to a parade that was supposed to start at 11:30 am.
We got there, due to my German upbringing a land in which one breathes and eats
punctuality, ten minutes before it was supposed to start. The street
was buzzing with regular traffic; no one was sitting at the sidewalk;
no trace of any possible parades was to be seen. We were early.
So we
waited. More than half an hour passed and still no sign. Nothing. We
got to feel restless. The expectation of finding something, a
parade in this case, exasperated us when we found nothing but
cars driving by and people who lived gleefully unaware, not to say
ignorant, of any such event. From a purely phenomenological point of
view, my world was filled with the expectation of a parade and its
nonexistence disappointed me; nothing else would replace or console
that desire, at least for that time being.
I had
stumbled upon the existence of this parade a year ago, accidentally
passing by and seeing what we have termed the Hare Krishna parade,
perhaps due to the persistent and accompanying chant of Hare Krishna.
Last year, we were thrilled to find something that we did not expect
to see whereas its absence this time around disappointed us. Our
expectation comes to color our definition of something versus
nothing. (If interested, it turned out that the parade lasted less
than ten minutes; how life disappoints those who expect something
specific to happen!)
To go
back to Holt's book, it comes down to a matter of perspective. My
answer is, again he predicted it too, that nothing is the
absence of something, the same way darkness is the absence of
light. We need something to be able to distinguish it from or
to contrast it with nothing. Yet I suspect that nothing and
something are intricately embedded within each other, just like the
yin and yang of Taoism.
So those who set out to find nothing
will do so, while others with the expectation of something will find
and see something, following the uncertain principle of Heisenberg,
the good-old speed versus position riddle of quantum physics. That is
where our rational thinking hits an impasse and God bless quantum
physics for that!
In
fact, my previous assumption of one apple and one apple equaling two
apples might be wrong in the first place. Every apple is different in
its shades, taste, and looks. Objects like apples are unique in this
world, made of individually discernible particles, so no two apples
are ever identical even if they happen to look similar. You merely end up with one
example of apple A and another one of apple B; you cannot add up apples with oranges. (Question: What
happens to my apple when I move backwards in time?)
To
conclude, Holt is asking the right questions and looking at the right
places for an adequate and appropriate answer, particularly when
dipping his philosophical fingers in the particular fountainhead of
quantum physics – but alas he comes out with his hands empty – or
rather full of nothingness – for which evidently neither he nor
his hands ought to be faulted due to the vast complexity and wondrous
simplicity of his topic.
However one thing is certain: this book is definitely not a waste of spacetime. If I had to choose between something, the existence of this book and nothing, its nonexistence, there is no doubt in my mind: I would take the book!
1 comment:
The only major point that I get from your column is that you like Jim Holt's book. I don't understand what point you're trying to make in bringing up the two "analogies" that you discuss; i.e. two apples and couple of parades. You say these analogies, depending on whether they exist or not, and what we expect in this regard, are somehow related to the issue of "something" versus "nothing." Would you please explain clearly and in detail, exactly what you mean, because after reading your blog twice, I haven't even the slightest idea what your point is or what you're trying to say. (Please don't take offense.) Thanks. — Julian
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