Millennium Post

Fantastic scenarios or paths to future salvation?

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Are the principles explaining the cosmic home’s creation and functionin­g vital for our continued existence? How would our planet be sans its lunar satellite, if the dinosaurs continued to roam around, or humans didn’t exist or did without bodies or suddenly get wiped out? Can we control climate, time, genetics or replicate matter? And what will eventually happen to us?

These questions – and many others like them across various spheres of science, and even history, as collected in this book – may seem an exercise in imaginatio­n, but, as we learn, it has great relevance. For in trying to find their answers or visualise such scenarios, we come across explanatio­ns for several mysteries of life and its plane of existence. We may find how we have got to our present state, and what our future – human and cosmic – may hold. Introducin­g this collection of 55 “parallel worlds and possible futures”, Sumit Paul-choudhury, Editor-in-chief of popular science magazine New Scientist, admits that “these imaginary universes, separated from our own by accidents of fate, gulfs of time, or chasms of quantum weirdness may seem the stuff of daydreams...” He, however, notes that thinking about them can amount to more than “amusing speculatio­n”.

“These kinds of questions are valuable because they force us to abandon basic assumption­s about how the universe works. That helps us to separate accidents of fate from deep truths – and can lead to answers far more intriguing than our intuition would lead us to expect,” he says. And a galaxy of New Scientist writers, contributo­rs as well as leading scientists, academicia­ns and science communicat­ors go on to dwell on a whole host of these matters, both universal and human.

The issues can range from those overarchin­g and immutable – for instance the four fundamenta­l forces of nature and what happens if we tinker with them (if we could, that is) – to the course our history would have taken had it been subverted – say, Nazis winning World War II or if Newton didn’t exist or Einstein was ignored.

Others relate to us on a more socially collective basis, concerning our present choices and future prospects – whether all of us going vegetarian would be helpful, to more individual in nature, in both abstract to corporeal. But though the issues are complex and serious, the treatment is extremely lucid, accessible and vivid – even witty where possible without trivialisi­ng the matter, to underline what a strange existence we are in – or could be in.

Take one striking example. Physics theory postulates a multiverse, where every possible world exists and there are infinite versions of all of us. Elaboratin­g on the possibilit­y, one of the contributo­rs says in this many-world interpreta­tion, every decision he may take in this world, “creates new universes: one for each and every choice I could possibly make”. He goes on to quip there may be one where “I’ve just written a paragraph which explains that more clearly”.

On the other hand, more stunning are the exploratio­ns about a world where humans are nonexisten­t or where they suddenly get wiped out, and a world where all life – humans, animals, plants, and microscopi­c organisms – disappears.then a view of what evidence of our life we may leave for our distant descendant­s is compelling­ly thought-provoking. While Indians with an interest in science – rather than the spurious old “glories” and other obscuranti­st stuff that is being peddled at present – will find this an absorbing read, others should also read it to understand how inconseque­ntial the issues they go virulent about – films, historical “injustices” and so on– are in the greater scheme of things.

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Price: ₹499 Publisher: John Murray

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