Jklint wrote: ↑August 18th, 2019, 8:23 pmWas it really necessary to fill the universe with so many black holes? Was this a way of erasing his own failures? All very legitimate philosophical questions. :mrgreen:
A good reason, because supermassive black holes are God and there are a lot of smaller wannabes around. SM black holes are huge beyond imagining, they are inconceivable, they are all powerful, they are creative (creating all galaxies). They are a realm which none may enter and leave and, at their cores, they are beyond time.
Sag A* + its creations + the self = our deity, God (or whatever name).
I admit to being sizist when it comes to black holes. Stellar black holes are wimps compared with the stars that produced them, let alone being worthy of the same generic label as galaxy-creating supermassive black holes. Like comparing a mouse with Everest.
When I saw the first rendering of Laniakea I imagined the realm in which it exists - the scale of it, and of its peers. I imagined that some of the entities would persist more or less, depending on how the areas they have with enough gravity to hold together for a while in the face of dark energy. They would have their own "survival of the persistent".
When looked at like that, it's hard to get worked out about what our other tiny Earthling post-apes are getting up to - at least until one of them tries to use you or rip you off, or shouts at you for not robotically following rules.
Politics v philosophy. We can be so very deep until some bastard pulls a stunt on us. At that moment ... straight back into MammonWorld. Years later, on our deathbeds, remembering a life of competition and struggle, we regret all the things we might have done ... had we not forgotten that the world has
always been an intrusive bunfight and we didn't have all that much choice.
Some say that Earth is hell. It seems reasonable. After all, no matter how fab a person's life may be, in the end they will be agonisingly gasping for death and failing to achieve it, and then they will stop being and their carcass will rot. Like everyone else's. And that's the best possible result for biological beings - a pleasant life followed by a quick death that involves less agony than usual.