The Beginning and the End: The Meaning of Life in a Cosmological Perspective
Clement Vidal

TL;DR
This paper explores fundamental questions about the origin, purpose, and future of the universe through a cosmological perspective, proposing new ideas like artificial cosmogenesis and cosmological ethics.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of artificial cosmogenesis, analyzes fine-tuning and natural selection in cosmology, and discusses the search for extraterrestrials and cosmological ethics.
Findings
Fine-tuning is a conjecture needing further study.
Artificial cosmogenesis offers a new research avenue.
Binary star systems are promising candidates for extraterrestrial life.
Abstract
Where does it all come from? Where are we going? Are we alone in the universe? What is good and what is evil? The scientific narrative of cosmic evolution demands that we tackle such big questions with a cosmological perspective. I tackle the first question in Chapters 4-6; the second in Chapters 7-8; the third in Chapter 9 and the fourth in Chapter 10. However, where do we start to answer such questions? In Chapters 1-3, I elaborate the concept of worldview and argue that we should aim at constructing comprehensive and coherent worldviews. In Chapter 4, I identify seven fundamental challenges to any ultimate explanation. I conclude that our explanations tend to fall in two cognitive attractors, the point or the cycle. In Chapter 5, I focus on the free parameters issue, while Chapter 6 is a critical analysis of the fine-tuning issue. I conclude that fine-tuning is a conjecture and that…
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