I was surprised to find a very unusual statement about the composition of the universe printed in Brigham Young University's student daily newspaper. The potential implications of the statement stunned me. If the statement is true, BYU has made an astonishing leap of scientific knowledge. Brace yourself, gentle reader, for the astounding statement verbatim [Dai94]:
The best minds in physics [Laf94, Efi93] consider quarks to be the building blocks, not paper, recycled or otherwise. Why aren't they aware of this? Why does the newspaper continue to publish just this tantalizing tidbit with no further explanation? How could the universe be printed on recycled paper? Several possibilities came to mind.
This can be quickly dismissed by a simple experiment: light a match. Did the universe catch fire? No? (It didn't for me, either.) This demonstrates that the universe is not composed of the same material as the Sunday funnies. Actually the situation is more complicated than that. There are several alternatives which must be considered before that conclusion is justified.
This can be dismissed by a similar experiment: light two matches. The sophist may claim that the ignition point is higher still, but consider arc welding, the exhaust from military jets taking off, volcanos erupting, or television ads for Corning's "Visions" sauce pans. Anything which still doesn't ignite can't be paper. (However it may be like wet campfire wood at 9 o'clock at night when dinner hasn't been cooked, yet.)
Even in an inert atmosphere, paper will char at high temperatures. I haven't observed the universe charing around birthday candles or the sun, have you? Additionally the existence of air is the basis for classical, brilliant work [Cos71].
Clearly, then the universe is not made of paper. But could the reality be something more subtle, more esoteric? Consider the following:
This is patently absurd. Imagine all the paper that would be required to record the position, momentum, superpositions, and quantum entanglements of every star, planet, rock, atom, and photon in the known universe. (Of course, that could be why the paper must be recycled.)
return to a previous stage of a cyclic process. So the Universe doesn't burn every time we light a match is because it continually recycled (returned) to some previous stage. Think of it: the basic building block of the Universe is
the pulp of wood or some other fibrous matter(again from the Oxford). Are quarks made from some fibrous material?
This cannot be entirely ruled out, but seems unlikely. Paper bank notes begin to fray and wear out after only a year in my wallet. How much faster would quarks wear out, especially those that are heavily used? Where do we return (recycle) used quarks to get shiny, new ones?
Proffit points out that this brings up a plethora of questions: Why isn't the universe stable? What if Microsoft plans to create their own and compete with the current one? (Maybe this is a Microsoft universe; that would explain why it crashes so often and why Microsoft dominates the industry.) How often are backups done? Why is recycled paper the media of choice? We do not speculate on these further.
Although BYU trumpets this astounding idea, this reviewer finds absolutely no basis for it and many contradictions with mainstream science. Perhaps it is a "fringe science" matter, such as, N-rays, polywater, or Pons & Fleischmann's cold fusion [Str94]. (After all, BYU is geographically close to the University of Utah.)
[Cos71] Cosby, William H., Jr., Ed.D., Why is There Air?, 1971.
[Dai94] The Daily Universe, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah, May 16, 1994, page 1.
[Gra96] Grace, Colin, <balaam@ozemail.com.au>, private communication, April 19, 1996.
[Hal95] Hall, Kelly, <hall@cs.byu.edu>, private communication, 1995.
[Pro97] Proffit, Spencer, <Spencer_Proffit@byu.edu>, private communication, April 12, 1997.
Modified Tue Feb 11 10:07 2003
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