From what I've heard, the sub-atomic particles only appear to be
random, which is why many phycists love the string theorems, it
would put the so called randomness into place.
Besides, I believe that the sub-atomic world and the larger
universe in general are kept by two different sets of rules, as
neither work on the other outside certain parameters (at least
as far as I remember). The "randomness" of the particles really
works to keep what we're doing in certain set boundaries, but
to also give each thing the particles make up a bit of randomness
that's so small it's barely measureable (such as the dripping of
a faucet, or "precise" machine movements).
And on a side-note, just from glancing around, I think the
multi-verse is a load of BS by guys who really can't figure out
any other way why the stuff works. Alot of points may be
valid, but not sound. Or, in terms of lack of knowledge, a point
can be very sound, but because of interpretations, wrongly
held concepts, etc could throw off the theory. I believe that
if there were, we probably would have stumbled onto it by
now. (See Asimov's, "The Gods Themselves")
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"Marino could do it."
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