Quote from jem:
last month stu said the tunings could be explained by inevitable consequences... but not random chance or a theory of everthing.
this month stu is arguing the tunigs can be explained by eternal inflation but not multiverse. (but you watch he will change the subject.)
On a humorous note... for years Stu has been arguing Penrose does not understand probability. It seems like a pyschotic break... Stu lecturing Penrose about probability. (as if no fellows or profs exist in the stats dept over at oxford or cambridge or when he is giving lectures.)
As long as you keep making up things I don't say, and try to make Penrose mean something as a mathematician he can't mean, then you'll remain ignorant in the those things.
But then that's what you need to be, pushing religious inference and conclusion. Ignorant.
Quote from jem:
Why don't you. Inflationary universes have proponents but just about all scientists would agree they need a multiverse (or almost infinite regions with different constants) to explain the tunings. So I have no idea why the hell you are arguing this point.
Why the hell am I arguing this point? Why the hell with you indeed, but it's more like - what the hell are you talking about most of the time?
I see you didn't manage to answer that straightforward question after all.
Can't you explain what you think scientists mean by a multiverse or even, what you imagine they mean when they say multiverse?
Do you even understand what is meant by cosmological inflation? Obviously you don't. Why am I asking.
Quote from jem:
If there is only one homogeneous universe arguing for inflation does not really explain away the fine tunings.
Arguing the universe is not homogeneous is arguing multiverse. See your weinberg video.
Throwing red herrings won't help you.
There are various models for inflation. Don't you think the scientist you chose to refer to, Professor Steven Weinberg, is aware of inflation and any associatated questions about cosmological constants?
So why then do you think he stated ... "I don't think it requires a fine tuning of the constants of nature."
It must be because you just pick out stuff to misunderstand, and ignore the stuff he clearly understands about cosmic inflation you don't.
As far as homogeneous goes,
The early universe could not have been homogeneous or exactly uniform according to quantum mechanics. That is not an argument for multiverse.
You're trying to assert the multiverse proposal would explain so called 'fine tunings' but it isn't even science. No better than a guess. In place you prefer a no science, no information, no knowledge, imaginary fantasy to take its place.
Yet the scientists YOU brought up, one being Professor Stephen Hawking, describes the multiverse as a "..consequence predicted by many theories in modern cosmology".
Professor Weinberg says "I don't think it requires a fine tuning of the constants of nature."
All the scientists you have referred to including Penrose do not accept fine tuning is anything else but an appearance which can be explained almost entirely by science.
'Almost' is just enough for you try to force a magic tuner/creator/designer where it won't go and doesn't fit. That is simply pathetic for anyone considering themselves adult.