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Science's 125 Big Questions

Shadow Wrought writes "To celebrate their 125th anniversary Science is running a series of articles on the 125 Questions of Science. The top 25 each link to an article exploring the subject of the question in depth. Included are such questions as: Are we alone in the Universe? What are the limits of conventional computing? How did cooperative behavior evolve?"

10 of 351 comments (clear)

  1. questions by drewfuss · · Score: 5, Funny

    Are we alone in the Universe? What are the limits of conventional computing? Why I can't I get a date?

    1. Re:questions by cmburns69 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Are we alone in the Universe?

      Maybe.

      What are the limits of conventional computing?

      Undetermined.

      Why I can't I get a date?

      Because you got the first post on /.

      --
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    2. Re:questions by Hal_Porter · · Score: 5, Funny

      Dude, you should own all the boxes on the internet, script 'em them together into one kick ass rig, solve Seti and date some hot green chick.

      Hell, if there are no alien chicks, date the rig.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
  2. 125 Questions? What? by Knight+Thrasher · · Score: 5, Funny

    We already know the answer to the ONE question... What we REALLY need to do is build a machine to figure out what that question is - who's with me?!

  3. You know... by cpugeniusmv · · Score: 5, Funny

    42 * 2.9761904761904761904761904761905 == 125 Coincidence? I think not!

  4. Good questions by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 5, Interesting
    My favourite is why does time have an arrow? This is closely related to one of the listed questions "why is time different from the other dimensions?"

    Or to put it another way: Why does the entropy of any closed system always increase? Why do we take the 'causal' solution to Maxwell's equations when determining the field generated by an accelerating charge? Why does the evolution of a quantum system appear to involve an irreversible step - wavefunction collapse? These may in fact be the same question in different guises. I think it's the number one question in physics. Every fundamental law of physics has time reversal symmetry (or at least CPT symmetry) and 'future' and 'past' look as similar as 'left' and 'right' at a fundamental level. So the arrow of time we see so blatantly around us is in serious need of explanation. It's almost as if physicists live in denial about the fact that their fundamental theories clearly just don't seem to match up with reality. But there are some good books on the subject such as Zeh's.

    --
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  5. Why so much bio? by jcorno · · Score: 5, Funny

    More than half of the top 25 were biology questions. You'd think physics would be a little more strongly represented. But I'm all for answering the evolution questions if it'll stop my in-laws from giving me creationist literature.

    1. Re: Why so much bio? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 5, Informative


      > More than half of the top 25 were biology questions. You'd think physics would be a little more strongly represented.

      If you're interested in the physics questions you can cut out the journalistic middle-men and read John Baez's Open Questions in Physics. I found it informative, entertaining, and for the most part comprehensible to a moderately well informed non-physicist.

      Wikipedia has a List of unsolved problems broken down by field, but the field lists I read didn't strike me as particularly well done. YMMV.

      > But I'm all for answering the evolution questions if it'll stop my in-laws from giving me creationist literature.

      Facts, answers, and explanations aren't going to make creationists blink an eye.



      --
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  6. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    That for throwing it from a building. For it falling off the table, it has enough time for rotating 180 degrees. That simple.

    Here's something else interesting:

    Tumbling toast, Murphy's Law and the Fundamental Constants
    European Journal of Physics 16 172-176 1995

    There's a widespread suspicion among the public that toast sliding off a plate or table has a natural tendency to land butter side down, thus providing prima facie evidence for Murphy's Law: "If something can go wrong, it will". Most scientists, in contrast, dismiss such belief as ludicrous. Indeed, an investigation by the BBC-TV science programme Q.E.D. in 1993 claimed to have proved definitively that the whole notion was nothing but an urban myth. However, as I show in the paper, the experiments carried out by the programme were dynamically inappropriate (in that they consisted of people simply tossing buttered bread into the air - hardly common practice around the breakfast table). When the problem of toast sliding off a plate or table is examined more carefully - with the toast modelled as a thin, rigid, rough lamina - it turns out that the public perception is quite correct. Toast does indeed have a natural tendency to land butter side down, essentially because the gravitation torque induced as the toast topples over the edge of the plate/table is insufficient to bring the toast butter-side up again by the time it hits the floor. Note that this has nothing to do with some aerodynamic effect caused by one side being buttered - it is just gravity, plus a bit of friction.However, I go on to show that the tumbling toast phenomenon has far deeper roots than one might expect. If tables were a lot higher - around 3 metres high - the problem of toast landing butter-side down would go away, as the toast would have enough time to complete a full rotation. So why are tables the height they are ? Simple: to be convenient for humans. So why are humans the height they are ? Using a simple chemical bonding model of the human frame, I show that there is a limit to the safe height for bipedal, essentially cylindrical creatures like humans. The limit is around 3 metres - above that height, a simple fall results in gravity accelerating the skull to such a high kinetic energy that the chemical bonds in the skull are ruptured, causing severe fracturing. This limit, in turn, sets a maximum height on tables suitable for creatures with human articulation of about 1.5 metres - which is still not high enough to prevent toast landing butter-side down. It thus seems that human-like organisms are doomed to experience this manifestation of Murphy's Law.

    But then comes the real cosmic twist in the tale. The formula giving the maximum height of humans turns out to contain three so-called "fundamental constants of the universe". The first - the electromagnetic fine-structure constant - determines the strength of the chemical bonds in the skull, while the second - the gravitational fine-structure constant - determines the strength of gravity. Finally, the so-called Bohr radius dictates the size of atoms making up the body. The precise values of these three fundamental constants were built into the very design of the universe just moments after the Big Bang. In other words, toast falling off the breakfast table lands butter-side down because the universe is made that way.

    Having made this depressing discovery about the nature of our universe, I felt duty-bound to come up with some ways around it. After all, we should not be fatalistic about such things. There are any number of daft ways (eating from 3 metre high tables, eating tiny squares of toast, putting the butter on the underside, tying the toast to a cat, which of course knows how to get right-side up during a fall, etc. etc). The physicist's approach is to minimise the amount of time the toast is exposed to the turning effect of gravity. This means doing the opposite of what you might expect. If your toast is sliding off the table, you should give it a swipe with your hand, to increase its ho

  7. Re:There is only one real question by rossifer · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What is the nature and origin of the Universe?

    It is and has been. (seriously, that's all the answer there is).

    What existed before our universe?

    Unknowable. "Before" the universe began is "before" the concept of time has any meaning. Alternatively, if we could observe things that were "outside of the universe", we would have to expand the scope of the universe to include those observations, meaning that they were no longer "outside of the universe".

    What is the original nature of existence...of what we call "reality"?

    This is a vague question. One possible interpretation is that you're asking about the "super-universe" in a different way from the "before the universe" question. It has the same problems as the "before the universe" question (if we could know, we'd have to redefine the universe).

    The other interpretation is that you're asking if the nature of reality has changed through the lifecycle of the observable universe, presumably though alterations of fundamental laws from some initial "ideal" state. This question, while clearly less "grand", is more relevant, because it offers a source of falsifiable assertions and possible experiments.

    Being able to classify questions as "irrelevant" and "not answerable" for various reasons is a part of "knowing what you don't know" and the rather tricky subset, "knowing what you can't know". Wisdom (and a lot of saved time) lies in a deeper understanding of how to determine the value of questions.

    I must admit that about 12 years ago, I got comfortable with saying "I don't know" along with the realization that people are capable of asking bad questions as if they were the most important questions around. My favorite is "Why are we here?" It's worthless because it begs about four other questions that have no objective answer.

    The interesting form of the question is, "Why am I here?" and it can only be conclusively answered by exactly one person: the same person who asked the question. What's really tragic is how many people are afraid of answering it themselves and accept someone else's answer out of fear of "getting it wrong". *sigh*

    Regards,
    Ross