The Boltzmann brain paradox - Fabio Pacucci

1,257,119 views ・ 2022-08-23

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:07
How do you know you’re a person who has lived your life,
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rather than a just-formed brain full of artificial memories,
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momentarily hallucinating a reality that doesn't actually exist?
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That may sound absurd,
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but it’s kept several generations of top cosmologists up at night.
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They call it the Boltzmann brain paradox.
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Its namesake, Ludwig Boltzmann, was a 19th century physicist
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operating in a period when scientists were passionately debating
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whether the universe had existed for an infinite or finite time.
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Boltzmann’s main claim to fame was revolutionizing thermodynamics,
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the branch of physics that studies energy.
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He put forward a new interpretation of entropy,
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which is a measure of the disorder of a system.
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A glass is an ordered system, whereas a shattered glass is disordered.
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The second law of thermodynamics states that closed systems tend towards disorder:
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you won’t see a shattered glass return to its pristine state.
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Boltzmann’s insight was applying statistical reasoning to this behavior.
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He found that a system evolves to a more disordered state because it’s more likely.
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However, the opposite direction isn’t impossible,
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just so unlikely that we’ll never witness things like scrambled eggs turning raw.
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But if the universe exists over an infinitely long time,
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extremely unlikely events will happen,
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including complex things forming out of random combinations of particles.
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So what does that look like in a hypothetical infinitely old universe?
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In this unremarkable stretch of near-nothingness,
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about eight octillion atoms randomly come together to form a replica
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of the Thinker made of pasta.
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It instantly dissolves.
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Over here, these particles suddenly form something like a brain.
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It’s filled with false memories of a lifetime up to the present moment,
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when it perceives a video saying these very words,
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before decaying.
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And finally, by random fluctuations, all the particles in the cosmos
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concentrate in a single point,
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and an entire new universe spontaneously bursts into existence.
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Of those last two, which is more likely?
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The brain, by far—
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despite all its complexity, it’s a blip compared to an entire universe.
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Every one universe produced by random fluctuations has equivalent odds
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to heaps upon heaps of insta-brains.
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So by this reasoning, it seems extremely more likely
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that everything you believe to exist is actually a brief illusion,
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soon to be extinguished.
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Boltzmann didn’t get quite that far in his thinking;
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the brains themselves were introduced by later cosmologists building on his work.
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But they, like just about everyone else,
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were pretty sure that they themselves weren't just ephemeral brains.
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So the paradox was: how could they be correct and the universe be eternal?
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The resolution is something most take for granted today:
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that our universe has not existed forever,
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but rather time and space started with a Big Bang.
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So that’s the paradox over and done with, right?
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Well, maybe not.
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In the last century, scientists have found evidence supporting the theory
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of the Big Bang everywhere we look.
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Yet while we know that the Big Bang happened,
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no one knows what, if anything, preceded and caused it.
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Why did the universe begin in such an extremely ordered, and unlikely, state?
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Is our universe in an unending cycle of creation and collapse?
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Or might we be in one of many universes expanding within a multiverse?
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In this context, Boltzmann’s paradox has found renewed interest
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by contemporary cosmologists.
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Some argue that leading models for where the universe came from
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still imply that Boltzmann brains are more likely than human brains,
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suggesting something’s amiss.
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Others counter that slight modifications of the cosmological models
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would avoid the problem,
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or that Boltzmann’s brains can’t actually physically form.
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Some researchers even attempted to calculate the probability
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of a brain popping out of random quantum fluctuations
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long enough to think a single thought.
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They got this incredible number
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whose denominator is 10 to a number about a septillion times larger
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than the number of stars in the universe.
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The Boltzmann brain paradox, despite its absurdity,
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is useful because it creates a bar that models have to rise to.
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If, compared to numbers like this one,
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the current state of the universe is exceedingly unlikely,
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something in the model is almost certainly wrong.
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Unless you’re the one who is wrong...
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