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Personally, I remember "facts" about the event. Like, who was there, when it was, what was said. I don't have mental images of an event.


So it's like an analytical description of the event?

You don't remember sensations about an experience, like touch, smells, etc?


Basically? It's a "sense" or "vibe". "There was a guy begging on the street" is what I remember. Not the actual words or a picture, just the "vibe" of that sentence. Definitely no touches, sounds, smells, or pictures.

My wife, who has a very visual and auditory memory, to the point that she can basically re-watch movies in her head, is still dumbfounded by this fact.


If you have something to describe "in your mind's eye" then you don't have aphantasia. We can't "see" anything in our mind.


  Calculations show that everything we see today, from atoms to galaxies, 
  exists because just one extra particle of matter survived for every billion 
  matter–antimatter pairs.
Everything about the Universe boggles the mind, but I was unaware of this.


Huh... considering such annihilations should have left nothing but energy behind, from our standpoint, how could we distinguish which of these sequences of events actually happened?

* The early universe produced slightly more matter than antimatter, and they annihilated until matter and energy remained.

* The early universe produced overwhelmingly normal matter and energy, and almost no antimatter.


If you put a lot of energy into a small place, you end up producing particles. We know this and in fact we can do it in particle accelerators. We understand how this happens with a very high degree of precision. The big bang was, essentially, just a huge amount of energy in a tiny place. So according to everything we know about particle physics, lots and lots of matter-antimatter pairs should have been produced. We also know there are some tiny violations of matter-antimatter symmetry that might have caused only one kind to remain after things spread out and cooled down. We know this because we have observed the weak nuclear force violate that symmetry in experiments. But these violations are so tiny that it seems a truly ridiculous amount of matter was necessary in the first place. The only assumption here is that what we currently know about particle physics and quantum field theory still holds true somewhat close to the big bang. I understand that this might seem unsatisfactory on many levels (and it still is to many physicists), but assuming that only one kind of matter was created in the big bang would require a completely new mechanism beyond any currently known physics.


The proportion of matter and anti-matter depends on the temperature.

With increasing temperature, the thresholds of generation for various particle-antiparticle pairs are exceeded, so those kinds of particles and antiparticles are generated in collisions and become a component of the matter of that temperature.

At very high temperatures, matter is composed of almost equal quantities of particles and antiparticles, of a very large number of kinds.

With cooling, some particle-antiparticle pairs are no longer generated and the existing are annihilated, so they cease to be a component of matter.

When the temperature diminishes to a few tens of MeV, then the only particle-antiparticle pairs that remain are of electrons and positrons, while the rest of the matter consists only of free protons, free neutrons, photons and various kinds of neutrinos.

With further cooling, protons and neutrons begin to bind into nuclei, i.e. nuclei of isotopes of hydrogen, helium and lithium.

Then, with even further cooling, the temperature becomes insufficient for generating positrons, so the huge number of existing electrons and positrons annihilate with each other, leaving a much smaller number of electrons, which is equal to the number of protons (free or bound in nuclei of deuterium, He isotopes and Li isotopes), and the amount of charged antiparticles becomes negligible.

At the stage when the temperature is a few tens of MeV and the variety of the particles composing matter is minimal, any memory of what may have happened at other temperatures is erased.

Thus, we cannot extrapolate the Big Bang towards higher temperatures, because there is no evidence of what may have happened before, e.g. of whether higher temperatures have ever existed. The existing evidence could also be matched by a cooler earlier Universe, which has been heated somehow up to a temperature of a few tens of MeV, decomposing any previous matter.

Our astronomical data is consistent with the visible Universe starting at a temperature of a few tens of MeV and high concentration, then cooling and expanding from that state, e.g. this explains the observed chemical composition of the celestial objects.

It can be fun to speculate about what may have happened before that, but it must be kept in mind that for now there is no way to verify any theory that attempts to model earlier stages, e.g. there is no way to verify if the Universe had ever been hotter than a few tens of MeV, i.e. if there have ever been any other abundant antiparticles except positrons (and antineutrinos, which remain abundant even at the present low temperatures, but the nature of antineutrinos is not well understood even today, as anything else that are named antiparticles participate in electromagnetic generation/annihilation reactions with their particle correspondent, while the exact differences between neutrinos and antineutrinos are not clear).


You're basically entering cyclical universe model levels of speculation at this point, which is even wilder. Because you only delay the production of the original matter that seeded "our" universe to a point earlier in time. But given everything we know about particle physics today, it seems at least weird that matter-antimatter is such a well preserved symmetry on small scales and so little on large scales. But if the LHC or future colliders found a highly CP violating process (cough SUSY cough) just above the energy scales we can access right now, everything would fall into place pretty neatly.


There is no evidence for a cyclical universe, like there is no evidence about anything else that could have happened before the matter of the observable present universe had a temperature in the range of tens of MeV.

Like I have said, one can hypothesize that before that state when the temperature was in the range of tens of MeV the matter had been even hotter, or on the contrary, that it was cooler, but either way there is no evidence for any earlier conditions and whichever extrapolation is chosen it eventually reaches things that cannot be explained, e.g. if the evolution had been cyclical, why it has reversed, or if the matter was hotter, why it was surrounded by an empty space, allowing expansion and adiabatic cooling, or if it was cooler either whence the extra energy came or what could have caused an adiabatic compression.

So my opinion is that for now any discussion about what could have happened before the moment of time when the temperature was in the range of tens of MeV and there were no other antiparticles besides positrons and antineutrinos and no other abundant hadrons except free protons and free neutrons is a waste of time, because being unverifiable any theory about that time is non-scientific, unless someone would discover a really new theory about the structure of matter, significantly better than anything that has been proposed during the last century, which could offer additional insight.


As a former non-atheist, with plenty of people I know in the church that stubbornly refuse to acknowledge accepted science - I've long experimented with theologies in my head to fit the concept of God as they understand it into a cosmological model. Stuff like this is fun for me to point to. Maybe a watchmaker (set it in motion and then stepped away) "god" tipped the scales ever so slightly here (to be clear, I don't believe this, but communicating science to religious people can help to frame things in this way). To me this creates a much more powerful deity than some guy who somehow only created the universe 6,000 years ago but also for some insane reason made it look billions of years old.


Fitting the concept of god into a cosmological model is rather easy.

If we agree that everything we see is described by physics, then everything including us is simply a computation. And in principle someone can build a machine to carry out such a computation.

People in such a machine will be more or less like us, and the creator of that machine will be exactly like god, outside of space and time, omnipotent, omniscient but having to run the simulation to see what everyone does.

From this point of view creating universe 6000 years ago and making it look billions of years old does not look that insane, just a workaround for finite machine time.

So the main disagreement is not about existence of god, or materialism vs idealism, but whether a human is equivalent to a computation or not.


Alternately, an individual set things in motion that they couldn’t control or stop, and thus the universe was born. God could just be a random entity that got in over their proverbial head. We think creating a universe requires thought or intention but it could be a big mistake.


But was it a mistake born out of a mistake?


The main idea of what I am saying is that some entity could have kicked things off, for whatever reason, and not be able to stop or control it. Perhaps they were just like you or I, and they released some tech which formed the universe as we know it today. Perhaps they are outside of this universe and cannot see into it or control it, perhaps they were inside and were obliterated, perhaps they are still here somewhere sitting around waiting for the universe to end, who knows! Everyone expects a god to be all-powerful or something, but they could be some mortal being who only had a lot of power for a moment when they knocked over the first domino. We probably can't know how the universe started, in any case, so this is all just brainstorming for new sci-fi and fantasy novels at this point.


Fitting the concept of god into any scheme is easy, because the existence of god isn't falsifiable.


Why did that almighty watchmaker create anti matter in the first place that anihilates the normal matter? They could have just created the normal matter and zero anti matter. Why carefully fine tune these number?

All of these situations are quite convoluted if you want to fit a designer in there.


As a fun aside, have you heard of Nominative Determinism? From a purely rational standpoint, it is mere coincidence that I know a dentist with the last name “Pullum” and an electrician with the last name “Cable”. My confirmation bias doesn’t account for the 99.9% of other people with unremarkable names.

But then I realized… whenever I create fake people for unit tests I give them names that correspond to what they do. Could this be a sign that the universe is a simulation? And, that God is just a QA running some tests on it?

So maybe we’re living in an edge case!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nominative_determinism


Maybe it “looked away” to give its creation a bit of free will unconstrained by its own awesome deterministic power.


Overarching intellectual models exist for the sake of the problems they solve, rather than to stake claims of supremacy over all other models. Religious-style thinking has important meaning in certain contexts, especially crises and periods of apparent helplessness. Scientific rationalism is useful for solving certain classes of problems in certain ways. To posit universality to either betrays a medieval relationship to thought, not that the person, whether religious or scientific, may be close to succeeding at their position’s impossible sense of their own centrality.


The Universe seems vast, unimaginably immense for our meat minds to really grasp, and yet I can't shake the feeling that the Big Bang could have been an insignificant leftover of some even vaster phenomena.


So in our entirely sanitized and sterilized environments we would be free from airborne and waterborne disease, but the moment we step outside of it our underdeveloped immune systems would be incapable of fighting off the common cold? That seems like a bad idea.


That is what vaccines are for. All of the upsides of immune system training with none of the downsides of having to be sick first (also, see “the immune system is not a muscle” article other people posted: immune systems do not appear to generate cross-virus benefits, so there’d be no expected effect on common cold susceptibility)


Outside gets plenty of ventilation and UV rays.


Get in the habit of putting your phone down when you are in the room with your child. Don't have it on the dinner table, or anywhere you would socialize with your children. It's really best to just avoid using it as much as possible around your kids. Obviously, if you have to make appointments and stuff, that's different, but scrolling social media, reading news, etc. should be left for the evenings after kids are in bed. Kids don't really care what you say as much as they are always watching what you do.


The overall lesson for your kids should be that a phone is a tool you use to accomplish some task that takes a limited time. You turn on the phone, do the task (whether it be making a phone call, looking up an address, whatever) and then you turn it off. A phone is not a consumption/entertainment device that you sit down and just use, without a clear end state. You, as the parent, need to internalize this, and live that attitude yourself, and chances are the kid will follow your good example.

Problem is, many parents are also addicted to their phones, and won't be able to have the discipline to use them this way.


Another problem is that this tool is constantly trying to distract you. As jwz nearly said,

Every app attempts to expand until it is social media. Those programs which cannot so expand are replaced by ones which can.

See:

https://techcrunch.com/2024/07/10/spotify-is-no-longer-just-...

https://www.wikihow.com/Hide-Channels-on-WhatsApp (tl;dr there is no way)

https://www.thepearlpost.com/1342/tech/pinterest-is-now-a-so...

https://gearandgrit.com/stravas-evolution-the-journey-from-a...


I don't actually disagree with anything in this article, I would just argue that at some point you might want to consider why you are so interested in "fast career growth". Is it more money? More recognition? More power? To what end?

The standard cliches are true as far as I can tell (as I approach 50). "You can't take it with you", "no one wishes on their death bed that they had worked harder", etc. In 10 years, no one at your office is going to care how much time you put in at the office, but your partner and kids will. Do you want them to resent you for it?


maximize earning potential to early retirement.


Until microcomputer boom of the 70's and 80's there was the calculator boom of the early 70's. The availability of the microprocessor made small calculators widely available for the first time and they were very popular among the type of people that probably would've read Hacker News had it existed.


I find it ironic that there's a big "Follow @index@simone.org via your Fediverse account (like...)" over this article that I can't seem to close and covers up part of the article.


As a backend developer, I have a lot of respect for frontend developers that have to deal with edge-cases and minutiae that we don't have to. Building APIs and interfaces for computers is easy. Building them for people is HARD.


Because every computer record has a host of qualifiers on it (like "programmable", "fully automatic").


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