Multiverses.

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Dark Knifer

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May 12, 2009
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Calgetorix said:
Dark Knifer said:
It's possible for an alternate universe to have different rules, but highely unlikely we can imagine that. Maths is not always constant. Maths says that the sum of the angles of all triangles equals 180 degrees, and I happen to know that is not always the case. So it's possible our consistencies in our universe do not apply in another universe.
180 degrees on a linear surface, yes. If the sum is greater than 180 degrees, it is because you have drawn it on a sphere. If it is less than 180 degrees, it is on a saddle. Mathematics predict that so it is constant.
I hoped no-one would figure that out, but still, it could be possible for other universes to have different consistancies then our own, we just can't comprehend them.
 

klakkat

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May 24, 2008
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Aby_Z said:
There is an infinite possibility of universes.

That means there is a universe in which no other alternate universes can exist.

In other words, it's bullshit as it can not allow a factor which destroys the idea completely. It's like dividing by 0.
Dividing by zero is possible, by the way. It's just a ***** and a half (and typically requires graduate-level math to accomplish). Dividing by zero results in a singularity (infinity point) which is also mathematically impossible to deal with directly. However, a lot of higher math involves ways of computing them indirectly, which is very possible.

That said, I also agree that a universe with no math is impossible. This is somewhat of a fundamental thing; math merely describes the fundamental laws that govern the universe, with as much accuracy as our human minds can manage, it does not form the universal laws. So, those universal laws must still exist for a universe to exist, though the laws may be different from ours there still exists a system of math that can describe those laws