Objective and subjective time in anthropic reasoning
Brandon Carter

TL;DR
This paper explores the relationship between objective cosmic time and subjective biological time, proposing a new size limit for animals based on gravitational and atomic constants, and linking this to the weakness of gravity via anthropic reasoning.
Contribution
It introduces a revised argument for animal size limits based on flesh tensile strength and connects this to the anthropic principle to explain gravity's weakness.
Findings
Animal size limit inversely proportional to gravity g
Size of animals related to fundamental constants
Gravity's weakness potentially explained by anthropic reasoning
Abstract
The original formulation of the (weak) anthropic principle was prompted by a question about objective time at a macroscopic level, namely the age of the universe when ``anthropic'' observers such as ourselves would be most likely to emerge. Theoretical interpretation of what one observes requires the theory to indicate what is expected, which will commonly depend on where, and particularly when, the observation can be expected to occur. In response to the question of where and when, the original version of the anthropic principle proposed an {it a priori} probability weighting proportional to the number of ``anthropic'' observers present. The present discussion takes up the question of the time unit characterising the biological clock controlling our subjective internal time, using a revised alternative to a line of argument due to Press, who postulated that animal size is limited by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEducation and Critical Thinking Development
