Social Sciences, asked by nishchay26, 1 year ago

describe the importance of the universe​

Answers

Answered by SamikBiswa1911
3

Answer:

Is life important to the universe?

Yes, but it’s not so much living things as humans. Or as I put it, “people.” Because it doesn’t just include humans as they are on Earth. If there are any beings on other planets or elsewhere in the universe who are capable of creating new explanations, they are like us in the most important way. And it’s that kind of entity that is, ultimately, the most important thing in the universe.  

Almost all potentialities that the universe has for its future development come via that kind of entity because almost all—this is constructor theory again—almost all physical transformations that are possible at all are only possible in the presence of a large amount of knowledge. And a large amount of knowledge can only be created with explanatory knowledge, and explanatory knowledge is our speciality.  

Probably explanatory entities can only come into existence if there were first evolved entities that can create non-explanatory knowledge—which are living things. So life is important in that sense. It can go a certain way. It can’t understand quasars because life can only understand—can only create knowledge of; “understand” is the wrong word for non-explanatory knowledge—it can only have knowledge of things that affected whether some gene propagated or didn’t. Whereas, as I’ve argued, explanatory knowledge is universal.

Answered by Simrankaur1025
18

answer

If there are any beings on other planets or elsewhere in the universe who are capable of creating new explanations, they are like us in the most important way. And it's that kind of entity that is, ultimately, the most important thing in the universe.

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