|  Anthropic Principle | 
In General > s.a. constants; cosmology;
  observational cosmology; relativistic cosmology.
  * History: The idea was
    proposed by Dicke in 1961, and the term coined by Brandon Carter in 1974;
    It has been a focus of controversy (even intense antipathy in some quarters)
    ever since; It has been claimed that it represents a departure from Copernicanism
    in cosmology.
  * Idea: The claim that the ability
    to support life, and possibly intelligence, is a valid constraint on physical
    theories; It is like a modern version of the argument by design, as opposed to
    causality.
  * Applications: Dimensionality of
    spacetime (three spatial dimensions are required for the stability of planetary
    orbits, and more than one time dimension would destroy causality – Tegmark);
    Considerations re constants of nature and contents of the universe.
Versions > s.a. Fine Tuning;
  multiverse; quantum cosmology.
  * Weak: Relatively uncontroversial;
    Accepts the laws of nature and the values of the physical constants as given and claims
    that the existence of life then imposes a selection effect on where and when we observe
    the universe; For example, the current age of the universe cannot be less than the
    nuclear-burning time of a massive star, and cannot be much older than this (because
    the stars would have all burned out); Life can only exist when the universe has roughly
    its observed age; This is a logical consequence of our existence.
  * Strong: The presence of observers
    imposes constraints on the values of physical constants; It could be used to infer the
    existence of a creator who tailor-made the universe for our benefit, or in conjunction
    with the idea of an ensemble of universes generated by early-universe processes with
    different values of the constants; The idea is that we live in one that is
    conducive to life – highly speculative, but it makes the strong anthropic
    principle more palatable from a physical point of view, since it just becomes
    an aspect of the weak version.
  * Refined: The observer is
    "weighted" according to the amount of information processed.
  * Other versions: They
    differ partly on the issue of which observers are important in the selection
    process for universes (ants? extraterrestrials? only Homo sapiens?); Participatory;
    Final (Intelligent life, not necessarily human, will exist forever; Puts tight
    bounds on the future of the universe; advocated by Tipler).
  * Views: (Stoeger) The weak
    anthropic principle is a logical necessity, but the strong version only
    makes sense if variations in initial conditions, values of the constants,
    or laws of nature allow some scope for anthropic selection; The multiverse
    proposal may accommodate this possibility; (Smolin) It is only justifiable
    if one has a theory that independently predicts the existence of different
    universes, and such a theory, to be scientific, must be falsifiable, such
    as his natural selection theory.
  @ References: Hawking in(82) [weak];
    Feoli & Rampone NCB(99)gq/98;
    Ćirković & Bostrom ApSS(00)gq/99 [final];
    Kamenshchik & Teryaev ONCP(08)-a0705,
    NQ-a1302 [mesoscopic, and many-worlds quantum theory].
  > Related topics:
    see civilizations; foundations
    of quantum mechanics [micro-anthropic principle]; Large-Number Hypothesis;
    spacetime topology.
References > s.a. cosmological-constant problem.
  @ General: Carter in(74);
    Davies 82;
    Rosen AJP(85)apr;
    Rosen AJP(88)may;
    Thirring APH(88);
    Carter in(89);
    Abramowicz & Ellis Nat(89)feb;
    Gribbin & Rees NS(90)jan;
    Balashov AJP(91)dec [RL];
    Demaret & Lambert 94;
    Linde in(03)ht/02;
    Carter gq/06-conf.
  @ I: Gale SA(81)dec;
    Barrow & Tipler 86;
    Carr pw(01)oct;
    Davies 06;
    Lewis & Barnes 16.
  @ Overview, status: Hogan RMP(00)ap/99;
    Müller ap/01;
    Bettini phy/04-in [history];
    Ćirković AAT(04)-ap/05 [epistemological].
  @ Assessments:
    Smolin ht/04-ch [no falsifiable predictions];
    Hetesi & Balázs APPB(06)ap;
    Schneider & Olum a1304;
    Lewis & Barnes a2104 [in defense of the anthropic principle].
  @ And fundamental physics: Agrawal et al PRL(98);
    Kane et al NA(02)ap/00  [strings];
    Bjorken PRD(03)ht/02 [standard model];
    Hartle in(04)gq [and quantum gravity];
    Page PLB(09) [proton mass and charge];
    Jenkins APPBS(09)-a0906 [fermion masses];
    Gould a1207/ApJ
      [connection with the search for extrasolar life/intelligence];
    Meißner IJMPE(14)-a1312-proc [chiral symmetry and fine-tuning of nuclear forces],
    ScBull(15)-a1409 [nuclear physics];
    Page a1703 [anthropic estimates];
    > s.a. spacetime dimensionality;
      standard model of particle physics [3 generations].
  @ And cosmology:
    Roush SHPMP(03) [and cosmological principle];
    Vilenkin in(07)ap/04 [cosmological constant prediction];
    Wilczek hp/04-ch [multiverse and dark matter];
    Freivogel JCAP(10)-a0810 [dark-matter abundance];
    Ellis & Smolin a0901 [WAP and string theory, predicition of Λ < 0];
    Loeb IJAB(14)-a1312
      [argument against the anthropic explanation for a small cosmological constant];
    Piran et al PRL(16)-a1508;
    > s.a. inflationary models.
  @ And solar astronomy: Balbus PRS(14)-a1406
      [anthropic consequences of equal lunar and  solar angular radii].
  @ Generalizations: Galantai a1501 [the universe as "roughly-tuned" for computation].
  @ Related topics:
    Ćirković SAJ(00)ap [and infinite past],
    FS(02)phy/01 [entropy fluctuation],
  AAT(03)ap [ancient origins];
    Susskind ht/04 [and supersymmetry breaking];
    Carter a0708-conf [objective and subjective time];
    Maor et al a0812 [and causal entropic principle];
    Sivanandam a1002-FQXi [and the limits of physics];
    Armstrong a1110
      [anthropic problems and paradoxes, anthropic decision theory];
    Benétreau-Dupin PhSc(15)-a1412 [and probabilistic reasoning].
  > Other related topics:
    see fine-structure constant; information;
    many-worlds quantum theory; neutrino;
    solar system [comets].
"The anthropic principle is the duct tape of cosmology" – Rocky Kolb
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