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Alpha Mythos (verse)

A Top10 collection created by Jonas

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TheEmperor50 1 y 3 mo 8 d
Alpha Mythos (verse)
17 months member
1.8K
Omg, Jonas Cosmology is so immeasurable. and here's why:

1. Cardinal Ramsey:

Ramsey cardinals are large cardinal numbers that arise in the context of set theory. A cardinal number is a mathematical concept that represents the size of a set, which is a collection of distinct objects. In set theory, a cardinal number is called "regular" if it cannot be expressed as the union of fewer than itself many sets, each of which has cardinality less than itself.Ramsey cardinals are considered to be significantly "larger" than Bertrand Russell's concept of epsilon numbers, also known as platonic or Berkeley cardinals.Russell introduced the idea of epsilon numbers as part of his theory of types to resolve paradoxes like Russell's paradox. Epsilon numbers were intended to represent the next "level" of infinity after the aleph numbers. However, epsilon numbers would be considered very "small" large cardinals by modern standards. They are dwarfed by larger cardinal concepts like inaccessible, measurable and weakly compact cardinals. Ramsey cardinals, on the other hand, are considered to be well beyond even the largest "natural" large cardinals like weakly compact cardinals. They require very "non-constructive" arguments based on generalized pigeonhole principles and saturation properties. In fact, Ramsey cardinals are so "bizarrely" large that set theorists often need to define a whole "hierarchy" of less-extreme large cardinal axioms to even prove basic theorems about Ramsey cardinals. while Russell's epsilon numbers were an early attempt to go "beyond" Cantor's aleph numbers, they are now seen as representing a very "mild" level of infinity compared to the truly gargantuan Ramsey cardinals. The exponential gap between these two concepts illustrates how far set theory has progressed in developing ever more "powerful" large cardinal axioms.

2. Max Tegmark's Four Tier Multiverse Hierarchy: Max Tegmark's Four Tier Multiverse Hierarchy is a conceptual framework that categorizes different types of parallel universes or multiverses. According to Tegmark, there are four distinct levels or tiers in this hierarchy:



Level I - Inflationary multiverse: This consists of vast number of bubble universes created during cosmic inflation in the early universe. Each bubble has different physical constants and properties.

Level II - Quantum multiverse: This comprises of many worlds created by the "splitting" of the universal wavefunction due to quantum superpositions. Each branch corresponds to a different realization of quantum possibilities.

Level III - Universe ensemble: This includes all possible universes that are mathematically consistent according to the laws of physics. It can be considered the "set of all computable universes".

Level IV - Ultimate multiverse: This is the "totality of all abstract mathematical structures that actually exist". It corresponds to Platonism where mathematical structures are considered to exist independently of physical reality.


Tegmark argues that levels I to III are based on hypotheses within physics and cosmology, but that level IV is guaranteed to exist based on mathematical reasoning alone. He sees it as a purely mathematical multiverse that contains all possible structures and configurations, including all possible lower-level multiverses. The hierarchy represents an "onion-like" structure where each level contains or generates the lower levels. Tegmark's ultimate goal is to understand the mathematical structure that corresponds to our particular universe, in the context of the level IV mathematical multiverse. This multiverse theory has generated considerable debate and discussion. Critics argue that the higher levels are purely speculative and not based on sound physical hypotheses. But proponents see it as a unique and unifying way to frame the multiverse concept by grounding it in basic mathematical existence.
Last edited: 1 y 3 mo 8 d ago.
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Th
TheEmperor50 1 y 3 mo 8 d
Alpha Mythos (verse)
17 months member
1.8K
3. Fundemental Layer: encompasses all possible multiverses, megaverses, realms, etc. This fundamental layer would constitute a metaphysical totality that includes all of reality and possibility.Within this fundamental layer, there would be an infinity of "superspaces" that each contain vast megaverses or ensembles of multiverses. These megaverses would span many dimensions, physical constants, and logical possibilities. The megaverses within these superspaces would contain "infinite-dimensional realms" that go far beyond our 4-dimensional spacetime. They would include realms with exotic geometries and topologies governed by higher-dimensional physics.The number of such megaverses, superspaces, and infinite-dimensional realms within the fundamental layer would be literally infinite, constituting an endless regresses of higher and higher structures.s.

see also:
Ultimate_reality
Absolute
Last edited: 1 y 3 mo 8 d ago.
Jo
Jonas 1 y 3 mo 8 d
Alpha Mythos (verse)
24 months member
5K
hey @Yes what do you think of my verse? Characters here range from High 1-A to 0 (Boundless). the supreme architects are considered as the most powerful , they are boundless but can be higher.
Last edited: 2024 y 11 mo 8 d ago.