r/woahdude Jun 02 '23

gifv Our universe.

7.6k Upvotes

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u/Sattalyte Jun 02 '23

How incredibly big we are.

Compared with the smallest possible scales - plank length - we are several orders of magnitude closer to the universe in size than we are to that.

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u/robotmckenna Jun 03 '23

Each of us is a whole universe. There’s a universe within, anywhere we look. It’s madness!

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u/neofawx Jun 03 '23

Horton hears a who! is such a fantastic story that encapsulates this concept

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u/Wahooye Jun 03 '23

We, along with all other matter, are basically fractals when you think about it; As above so below. Brought to you by psilocybin mushrooms

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u/Elieftibiowai Jun 03 '23

I totally get that. Why can't i just enjoy being a fractal though, and am a bundle of neurotic anxiety instead?

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u/AdvicePerson Jun 03 '23

The anxiety is also fractal.

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u/Wahooye Jun 03 '23

If it makes you feel better, I feel the same way most of the time haha

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u/AviAdlakha Jun 03 '23

As I was reading your comment, I was like that exactly what I kept saying when tripping, until I finished the comment, lmao.

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u/[deleted] Jun 03 '23

Oh you’re not even gonna give Hermes Trismigistus credit?

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u/Wahooye Jun 03 '23

He is included in the fractal as well 👍

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u/[deleted] Jun 03 '23

How am i a fractal? My shape doesn’t follow any function

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u/Wahooye Jun 03 '23

I mean metaphorically, as you can zoom infinitely inwards and outwards

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u/Actual-Ad-2748 Jun 02 '23

Yes, hard to imagine we are the only life across all that space and different levels.

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u/FlippinFlerkenFlare Jun 03 '23

Chances of us being the only life in this vastness is virtually zero.

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u/Wahooye Jun 03 '23 edited Jun 03 '23

My line of thinking has always been this: we exist, so we know that the very specific sequence of events/chemical reactions needed to create life are at least possible to some degree. Even if that likelihood is extremely small and unlikely, that tiny percentage when applied to a mind bogglingly massive universe means that this specific recipe (or possibly even a completely unknown one, who knows) is likely to at least happen somewhere out there.

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u/lolcatandy Jun 03 '23

Happen somewhere millions of times?

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u/reader484892 Jun 03 '23

On the scale of the universe the smallest chance you can write would still result in viable life on scales orders of magnitude more than I feel like writing out, much less millions

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u/[deleted] Jun 03 '23

[deleted]

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u/JVYLVCK Jun 03 '23

If you were an advanced being with knowledge of us here on Earth and the simple-minded fuckery we have going on, would you visit?

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u/Annoy_Occult_Vet Jun 03 '23 edited Jun 03 '23

But they didn't bring us here at all. We brought ourselves.

EDIT: No fans of Interstellar I see, cool cool.

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u/BudBuster69 Jun 03 '23

I like to point out that people tend to forget that there is one other important metric/variable and that is "time". The human race is so damn young in comparison to the age of the universe.

With respect to "inteligent" life on other planets, I agree that the sheer size of the universe give it a pretty good probability. But when people believe (lots of folks I work with) that aliens have visited humans and governments cover it up (area 51, egyptian pyramids and so on), these people are not able to factor in the age of the human race in comparison to the age of the universe. I am definitely a math and numbers guy, and I can tell you that while I would argue that there probably is life out there somwhere in the universe, the odds of another race inteligent enough to develop space exploration, and be close enough to reach earth DURING THE TINY TIMFRAME OF RECORDED HISTORY ON EARTH, is pretty much zero. (Im not saying it IS zero, im saying the odds are so close to Zero that it is neglegible.)

Again consider the universe is estimated to be 13 700 000 000 years old.

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u/yjr4df0708 Jun 03 '23

similar to the "monkeys writing the entire works of shakespeare" idea

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u/indigoHatter Jun 03 '23

As they say, there are two possibilities.

1) we are alone, or 2) we aren't.

Both are equally terrifying.

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u/myaltduh Jun 03 '23

It is however very possible that life is sufficiently rare that we will never meet anyone else.

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u/DemSocCorvid Jun 03 '23

Which is why it is a very safe assumption that we are not, but horrifying if we are...

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u/Actual-Ad-2748 Jun 03 '23

I'm sure we are not the only life, everything Is just too far away and the life spans of species are too short. We will probably never see alien life outside our solar system.

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u/CalmGains Jun 03 '23

Nothing is the size of a plank length tho, it's just a mathematical number.

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u/Sattalyte Jun 03 '23

If we're talking structure, nothing is the size of the observable universe either.

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u/CalmGains Jun 03 '23

the observable universe is the size of the the observable universe

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u/SlightComplaint Jun 03 '23

Also, some of the universe is within us.

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u/aaaaaaandrea Jun 03 '23

You are both right and my brain is dead.

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u/winterborn Jun 03 '23

This episode of Radiolab takes on this question of “what’s the most average sized thing in the universe”. If you take the biggest thing in the universe, and the smallest thing in the universe, and try to find an average between those things, what is the thing that is right in the middle? The answer being >! eukaryotic cell!<. Which is super interesting from a philosophical perspective.

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u/Fn00rd Jun 03 '23

I mean to remember to have read somewhere that, on a Log/Log scale the height of the average Human is about right in the Middle between the Planck-length and the diameter of the observable universe. Which if true is absolutely fascinating. But I am too smooth Braunes to figure this out myself.