{"id":646,"date":"2026-06-01T22:31:31","date_gmt":"2026-06-02T06:31:31","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/chris.tsehome.com\/?p=646"},"modified":"2026-06-01T22:32:30","modified_gmt":"2026-06-02T06:32:30","slug":"our-cosmic-habitat-by-martin-rees","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/chris.tsehome.com\/?p=646","title":{"rendered":"Our Cosmic Habitat by Martin Rees"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><a href=\"https:\/\/chris.tsehome.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-1.png\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-medium wp-image-648 alignleft\" src=\"https:\/\/chris.tsehome.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-1-189x300.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"189\" height=\"300\" srcset=\"https:\/\/chris.tsehome.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-1-189x300.png 189w, https:\/\/chris.tsehome.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-1.png 221w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 189px) 100vw, 189px\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p class=\"meta\" style=\"margin: 0px 0px 24px; color: #555555; font-style: italic; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-size: 16px; font-variant-caps: normal; font-weight: 400; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\" data-ogsc=\"\">by Martin Rees \u2014 Newbooks Library<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"caret-color: #222222; color: #222222; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-size: 16px; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; font-weight: 400; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; background-color: #ffffff; text-decoration: none; display: inline !important; float: none;\">Prologue<\/span><\/p>\n<h2 style=\"color: #2a5a8a; margin-top: 28px; margin-bottom: 6px; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\" data-ogsc=\"\">Could God Have Made the World Any Differently?<\/h2>\n<p style=\"margin: 0px 0px 14px; caret-color: #222222; color: #222222; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-size: 16px; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; font-weight: 400; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\">Rees introduces the central mystery: why anything exists at all, and why our universe&#8217;s specific recipe permitted complexity and life. He argues that a biophilic universe requires exquisitely fine-tuned laws\u2014many alternative recipes yield stillborn universes with no atoms, no chemistry, and no planets. If fundamental theory permits multiple recipes, then our universe may be just one element in a vast multiverse, and what we call laws of nature are merely local bylaws. Rees contends the multiverse concept belongs to empirical science, not mere metaphysics, and that our cosmic habitat may be a fertile oasis within this grander ensemble.<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"caret-color: #222222; color: #222222; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-size: 16px; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; font-weight: 400; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; background-color: #ffffff; text-decoration: none; display: inline !important; float: none;\">Part I \u2014 From Big Bang to Biospheres<\/span><\/p>\n<h2 style=\"color: #2a5a8a; margin-top: 28px; margin-bottom: 6px; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\" data-ogsc=\"\">Chapter 1: Planets and Stars<\/h2>\n<p style=\"margin: 0px 0px 14px; caret-color: #222222; color: #222222; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-size: 16px; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; font-weight: 400; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\">Rees traces how our understanding of the Sun evolved from Lord Kelvin&#8217;s erroneous age estimates to the discovery of nuclear fusion as stellar fuel. The Sun is roughly halfway through its 10-billion-year hydrogen-burning phase\u2014after which it will swell into a red giant and end as a white dwarf. He then discusses exoplanet detection, first via Doppler wobble (Mayor &amp; Queloz, 1995) and transit methods, noting the surprising variety of planetary systems. Many feature Jupiter-like planets on eccentric close orbits, but among millions of systems, habitable planets likely exist. Future missions may image them directly.<\/p>\n<h2 style=\"color: #2a5a8a; margin-top: 28px; margin-bottom: 6px; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\" data-ogsc=\"\">Chapter 2: Life and Intelligence<\/h2>\n<p style=\"margin: 0px 0px 14px; caret-color: #222222; color: #222222; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-size: 16px; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; font-weight: 400; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\">Rees examines the likelihood of extraterrestrial life and intelligence, distinguishing two questions: how life originates (possibly near-inevitable or a fluke) and whether simple life evolves into intelligence (possibly far rarer). Earth&#8217;s long gap between simple and complex life\u2014nearly 3 billion years\u2014suggests severe barriers to complexity. He discusses Mars exploration, exotic habitats (neutron stars, interstellar clouds), and Fermi&#8217;s paradox. SETI searches remain worthwhile despite long odds. Even if life is unique to Earth now, the Sun&#8217;s remaining lifespan and the cosmos&#8217;s far longer future leave vast time for life to spread, making space habitat development an insurance policy for humanity&#8217;s potential.<\/p>\n<h2 style=\"color: #2a5a8a; margin-top: 28px; margin-bottom: 6px; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\" data-ogsc=\"\">Chapter 3: Atoms, Stars, and Galaxies<\/h2>\n<p style=\"margin: 0px 0px 14px; caret-color: #222222; color: #222222; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-size: 16px; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; font-weight: 400; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\">Rees traces how spectroscopy revealed that stars are made of the same elements as Earth, overturning Comte&#8217;s pessimistic claim that stellar composition would remain unknowable. Cecilia Payne&#8217;s 1925 thesis established that hydrogen and helium dominate stellar composition (98% of the Sun&#8217;s mass). The chapter&#8217;s core argument is stellar nucleosynthesis: heavier elements are forged inside stars and expelled via supernovae, recycling gas through successive stellar generations. Fred Hoyle&#8217;s pivotal prediction\u2014that carbon nuclei must possess a specific resonant energy for three helium nuclei to combine\u2014demonstrated both the success and fine-tuning of nuclear physics; altering the nuclear force by just 1\u20132% would eliminate carbon. Gravity&#8217;s extreme weakness (10<sup>36<\/sup><span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>times weaker than electromagnetism) explains why stars must contain ~10<sup>57<\/sup><span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>atoms and live billions of years\u2014enabling complexity and evolution.<\/p>\n<h2 style=\"color: #2a5a8a; margin-top: 28px; margin-bottom: 6px; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\" data-ogsc=\"\">Chapter 4: Extragalactic Perspective<\/h2>\n<p style=\"margin: 0px 0px 14px; caret-color: #222222; color: #222222; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-size: 16px; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; font-weight: 400; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\">Galaxies are the fundamental building blocks of the large-scale universe, yet they remain less understood than stars. Rees describes how galaxies cluster hierarchically\u2014into groups, clusters, and superclusters\u2014but the universe is smooth on scales larger than ~200 million light-years. This large-scale uniformity makes cosmology tractable. Hubble&#8217;s law reveals an expanding universe with no privileged center. Rees surveys advances in telescopic power\u2014from Keck and the VLT to the Hubble Space Telescope\u2014and the opening of non-optical windows (radio, X-ray) that revealed energetic phenomena like black hole jets. The Hubble Deep Field images confirm large-scale uniformity and allow direct observation of the distant past. Cosmology is simpler than biology: extreme conditions reduce complexity, making stars simpler than insects.<\/p>\n<h2 style=\"color: #2a5a8a; margin-top: 28px; margin-bottom: 6px; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\" data-ogsc=\"\">Chapter 5: Pregalactic History<\/h2>\n<p style=\"margin: 0px 0px 14px; caret-color: #222222; color: #222222; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-size: 16px; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; font-weight: 400; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\">Rees recounts the Big Bang&#8217;s evidence and pregalactic cosmic history. Lema\u00eetre&#8217;s \u201cprimeval atom\u201d and Gamow&#8217;s nucleosynthesis calculations preceded the decisive 1965 discovery of the cosmic microwave background by Penzias and Wilson. In the first few minutes, 23% of hydrogen fused into helium with traces of deuterium and lithium, but no heavier elements emerged. The CMB originates from when the universe became transparent (~300,000 years), after which darkness prevailed until the first stars. Dark matter\u2014five to ten times more abundant than visible matter\u2014is demonstrated by galaxy rotation curves, cluster dynamics, and gravitational lensing, yet its nature remains unknown. Gravity amplifies tiny initial density fluctuations (Q \u2248 10<sup>\u22125<\/sup>) into galaxies and clusters, confirmed by COBE&#8217;s detection of CMB temperature anisotropies. Rees expresses 99% confidence in Big Bang extrapolations back to ~1 second, reserving 1% for unknown physics before that era.<\/p>\n<h2 style=\"color: #2a5a8a; margin-top: 28px; margin-bottom: 6px; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\" data-ogsc=\"\">Chapter 6: Black Holes and Time Machines<\/h2>\n<p style=\"margin: 0px 0px 14px; caret-color: #222222; color: #222222; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-size: 16px; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; font-weight: 400; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\">Black holes are objects so completely collapsed that gravity has overwhelmed all other forces, permitting no escape\u2014not even for light. Rees traces their conceptual history from Zeldovich and Novikov&#8217;s \u201cfrozen star\u201d to Wheeler&#8217;s 1968 coining of \u201cblack hole.\u201d Observational evidence includes stellar-mass black holes and supermassive ones in galactic centers (2.6 million suns in ours, over a billion in others). Paradoxically, black holes are among the best-understood objects: the Kerr solution exactly describes them using only mass and spin. An observer orbiting a rapidly spinning hole could \u201cfast-forward\u201d through future time due to extreme gravitational time dilation. On backward time travel, G\u00f6del found general relativity permits closed timelike curves; wormholes would require exotic negative-pressure material. Rees entertains Novikov&#8217;s \u201cchronology protection\u201d argument\u2014that physical laws constrain time loops\u2014while noting that even a working time machine couldn&#8217;t send travelers back before its own construction date.<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"caret-color: #222222; color: #222222; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-size: 16px; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; font-weight: 400; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; background-color: #ffffff; text-decoration: none; display: inline !important; float: none;\">Part II \u2014 The Beginning and the End<\/span><\/p>\n<h2 style=\"color: #2a5a8a; margin-top: 28px; margin-bottom: 6px; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\" data-ogsc=\"\">Chapter 7: Deceleration or Acceleration?<\/h2>\n<p style=\"margin: 0px 0px 14px; caret-color: #222222; color: #222222; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-size: 16px; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; font-weight: 400; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\">Rees opens with the 1999 Cornwall solar eclipse, using it to distinguish prediction from understanding\u2014Babylonians predicted eclipses without physical insight, while Halley grounded forecasts in Newtonian mechanics. The universe&#8217;s fate hinges on whether cosmic expansion decelerates enough to reverse. Ordinary atoms contribute only 4% of critical density; adding dark matter reaches ~0.3\u2014insufficient for recollapse. The 1998 Type 1A supernova results stunned cosmologists: expansion appears to be accelerating, implying a cosmic repulsion. Einstein&#8217;s cosmological constant, once his \u201cbiggest blunder,\u201d now seems prescient. Vacuum energy has negative pressure, producing antigravity\u2014yet theoretical expectations overshoot the observed value by 120 orders of magnitude. An alternative, \u201cquintessence,\u201d posits a diluting dark-energy fluid. The concordance model: ~4% ordinary atoms, ~30% dark matter, ~66% dark energy\u2014an extraordinary reversal from earlier assumptions.<\/p>\n<h2 style=\"color: #2a5a8a; margin-top: 28px; margin-bottom: 6px; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\" data-ogsc=\"\">Chapter 8: The Long-Range Future<\/h2>\n<p style=\"margin: 0px 0px 14px; caret-color: #222222; color: #222222; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-size: 16px; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; font-weight: 400; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\">In five billion years the Sun dies; eventually the Local Group&#8217;s galaxies merge into one system of aging stellar remnants. Farther ahead, rare stellar collisions light up dead galaxies, and gravitational radiation slowly erodes all orbits. Even black holes evaporate via Hawking radiation\u2014stellar-mass holes in 10<sup>66<\/sup><span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>years, supermassive ones by 10<sup>100<\/sup><span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>years. Rees recounts Dyson&#8217;s 1979 argument that life could process infinite information with finite energy by using ever-lower-energy quanta\u2014thinking ever more slowly but exhausting no limit. Two subsequent developments darken this optimism: protons likely decay, eroding stellar remnants within ~10<sup>35<\/sup><span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>years, and accelerating expansion means distant galaxies redshift beyond the horizon, imposing hard complexity limits. Wild-card scenarios include quintessence decaying into bubbles of renewed activity, metastable vacuum undergoing catastrophic phase transition, and strangelet contagion from accelerators. A Big Crunch could permit infinite happenings in finite time, offering a richer existential finale than eternal dilution.<\/p>\n<h2 style=\"color: #2a5a8a; margin-top: 28px; margin-bottom: 6px; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\" data-ogsc=\"\">Chapter 9: How Things Began: The First Millisecond<\/h2>\n<p style=\"margin: 0px 0px 14px; caret-color: #222222; color: #222222; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-size: 16px; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; font-weight: 400; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\">Rees traces the universe backward from the well-established one-second mark\u2014where the recipe requires just four ingredients (matter\/dark matter\/radiation proportions, expansion rate, smoothness parameter Q, and atomic properties)\u2014into the speculative ultra-early phases. By one second, kinetic and gravitational energies were balanced to one part in 10<sup>15<\/sup>; any significant deviation would have yielded a universe either collapsing too soon or expanding too fast for structure. The matter-antimatter asymmetry left roughly one extra quark per billion pairs\u2014an asymmetry in the ninth decimal place on which our existence depends. Inflation theory addresses the fine-tuning problem: a brief exponential expansion could stretch a microscopic patch to encompass our observable universe, establishing flatness and seeding structure via quantum fluctuations. Rees notes Penrose&#8217;s skepticism and the \u201cgraceful exit\u201d problem, while acknowledging inflation as the leading paradigm.<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"caret-color: #222222; color: #222222; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-size: 16px; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; font-weight: 400; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; background-color: #ffffff; text-decoration: none; display: inline !important; float: none;\">Part III \u2014 Fundamentals and Conjectures<\/span><\/p>\n<h2 style=\"color: #2a5a8a; margin-top: 28px; margin-bottom: 6px; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\" data-ogsc=\"\">Chapter 10: Cosmos and Microworld<\/h2>\n<p style=\"margin: 0px 0px 14px; caret-color: #222222; color: #222222; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-size: 16px; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; font-weight: 400; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\">Rees explores links between cosmic and microphysical scales. He opens with the striking idea that the universe&#8217;s net energy could be zero\u2014gravitational negative energy canceling rest-mass energy\u2014so a universe could arise at zero cost. He discusses Mach&#8217;s principle (whether inertia derives from cosmic mass distribution) and Dirac&#8217;s large-number hypothesis\u2014that G might decrease over cosmic time\u2014tested against evidence from planetary orbits, neutron-star binaries, distant-galaxy spectra, and the Oklo natural reactor, all constraining changes to less than one part in 10<sup>10<\/sup><span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>per year. Three spatial dimensions are biophilic: only in 3D do inverse-square forces yield stable orbits, and electron bound states become possible. Superstring\/M-theory posits ten or eleven dimensions, most compactified; some extra dimensions might be detectable at accelerators. Rees cautions that even a complete fundamental theory would not explain emergent complexity\u2014water&#8217;s turbulence, biological organization\u2014as these require autonomous conceptual frameworks. He critiques the \u201ctheory of everything\u201d label as misleading.<\/p>\n<h2 style=\"color: #2a5a8a; margin-top: 28px; margin-bottom: 6px; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\" data-ogsc=\"\">Chapter 11: Laws and Bylaws in the Multiverse<\/h2>\n<p style=\"margin: 0px 0px 14px; caret-color: #222222; color: #222222; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-size: 16px; font-style: normal; font-variant-caps: normal; font-weight: 400; letter-spacing: normal; orphans: 2; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; widows: 2; word-spacing: 0px; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; text-decoration-thickness: auto; text-decoration-style: solid;\">Rees confronts the fine-tuning problem: our universe&#8217;s recipe\u2014expansion rate, Q \u2248 10<sup>\u22125<\/sup>, small lambda, nuclear force balances\u2014seems exquisitely calibrated for complexity and life. He evaluates three responses: (1) Happenstance\u2014a unique theory fixes everything, though Rees finds this unsatisfying, citing Leslie&#8217;s firing-squad analogy; (2) Providence\u2014design arguments updated from Paley, now citing not biology but physics (carbon resonance, inverse-square stability), championed by figures like Polkinghorne; (3) Multiverse\u2014our universe is one habitable domain in a vast ensemble, like finding a suit that fits in a large shop. Rees prefers (3) and defends it as scientific through a four-horizon argument: from current telescopic limits to causal horizon to never-observable regions of our Big Bang to entirely disjoint universes, with no sharp epistemological break. He outlines multiverse scenarios (eternal inflation, black-hole spawning per Smolin, extra-dimension separation per Randall-Sundrum) and how they might be tested\u2014for instance, lambda is only 5\u201310 times below the galaxy-formation threshold, consistent with anthropic selection. Rees proposes that some \u201cconstants\u201d may be local bylaws, not universal laws\u2014arbitrary outcomes like snowflake patterns rather than fundamental dictates\u2014drawing a parallel to Kepler&#8217;s mistaken insistence on circular orbits, later superseded by Newton&#8217;s deeper but more permissive theory.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>by Martin Rees \u2014 Newbooks Library Prologue Could God Have Made the World Any Differently? Rees introduces the central mystery: why anything exists at all, and why our universe&#8217;s specific recipe permitted complexity and life. He argues that a biophilic &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/chris.tsehome.com\/?p=646\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[51],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-646","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-books"],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"jetpack_likes_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/chris.tsehome.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/646","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/chris.tsehome.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/chris.tsehome.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/chris.tsehome.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/chris.tsehome.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=646"}],"version-history":[{"count":2,"href":"https:\/\/chris.tsehome.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/646\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":650,"href":"https:\/\/chris.tsehome.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/646\/revisions\/650"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/chris.tsehome.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=646"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/chris.tsehome.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=646"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/chris.tsehome.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=646"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}