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“Everything you see is in the past, as far as you’re concerned. If you look up at the Moon, you’re seeing a little over a second ago. The Sun is more than eight minutes in the past. And the stars you see in the night sky are deep in the past, from just a few years to millennia.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“In fact, it’s possible that the only reason we can remember the past and not the future is that “things can only get worse” is a truth so universal that it shapes reality as we know it.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“We are a species poised between an awareness of our ultimate insignificance and an ability to reach far beyond our mundane lives, into the void, to solve the most fundamental mysteries of the cosmos.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“There is simply no easy way to hold infinite space in a finite brain.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“It’s not that it can’t be true, but that if it is, nothing makes sense, and we might as well give up on trying to understand the universe at all.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“Every attempt to bend some part of the world to our will creates disorder somewhere else, often in the form of heat.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“And from time to time, the fluctuation doesn’t produce a Big Bang, it just re-creates last Tuesday—specifically, that moment when you stubbed your toe on the kitchen table and spilled an entire cup of coffee on the floor. That moment. And every other moment of your life. And everyone else’s.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“What therefore gravity hath joined together, let not a cosmological constant put asunder.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“Many other physicists get a little blasé about the vastness of the cosmos and forces too powerful to comprehend. You can reduce it all to mathematics, tweak some equations, and get on with your day. But the shock and vertigo of the recognition of the fragility of everything, and my own powerlessness in it, has left its mark on me. There’s something about taking the opportunity to wade into that cosmic perspective that is both terrifying and hopeful, like holding a newborn infant and feeling the delicate balance of the tenuousness of life and the potential for not-yet-imagined greatness. It is said that astronauts returning from space carry with them a changed perspective on the world, the “overview effect,” in which, having seen the Earth from above, they can fully perceive how fragile our little oasis is and how unified we ought to be as a species, as perhaps the only thinking beings in the cosmos.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“Perhaps the promise of a final judgment serves to somehow make up for the unfortunate fact that our imperfect, unfair, arbitrary physical world cannot be relied upon to make existence good and worthwhile for those who live right. In the same way a novel can be redeemed or retroactively ruined by its concluding chapter, many religious philosophies seem to need the world to end, and to end “justly,” for it to have had meaning in the first place.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“The thing we’re watching is essentially fully in the past, but the “now” for that exploded star is unobservable to us, and we won’t receive any knowledge of it for millions of years, which makes it, to us, not “now,” but the future.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“Acknowledging an ultimate end gives us context, meaning, even hope, and allows us, paradoxically, to step back from our petty day-to-day concerns and simultaneously live more fully in the moment.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“But the shock and vertigo of the recognition of the fragility of everything, and my own powerlessness in it, has left its mark on me.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“As for me, I love it all. I first learned cosmology was a thing when I was about ten years old, through encounters with books and lectures by Stephen Hawking. He was talking about black holes and warped spacetime and the Big Bang and all sorts of stuff that made me feel like my brain was doing backflips. I could not get enough. When I found out that Hawking described himself as a cosmologist, I knew that was what I wanted to be.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“So how do we see so many things that are so far away that they’re receding from us at more than the speed of light, and, in fact, always have been? If something is moving away at more than the speed of light, a light beam emitted from it is getting farther away from us, not closer. The trick is that the light we’re picking up left the source long ago, when the universe was smaller and the expansion was actually slowing. So a light beam that started out being carried by the expansion of space away from us (even though it was emitted in our direction) eventually was able to “catch up” as the expansion slowed and it reached a part of the universe that was close enough for the recession speed to be less than the speed of light. It entered our Hubble radius from the outside.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“As appealing as it sometimes seemed to have the whole story and meaning of life written down for me once and for all in a book, I knew I would only ever really be able to accept the kind of truth I could rederive mathematically. LOOKING UP Over the millennia since humanity’s first ponderings of its mortality, the philosophical implications of the question haven’t changed, but the tools we have to answer it have.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“As an aside, the fact that pretty much all the hydrogen in the universe was produced in the first few minutes means that a pretty large fraction of what you and I are made of has been hanging around the universe in one form or another for almost as long as the universe has been here.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“Do we still have to take the trash out next Tuesday if the universe is going to die someday?”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“Today, we are finding that the particle physics models we’ve developed through decades of rigorous testing in the best Earthly laboratories are incomplete, and we’re getting these clues from the sky. Studying the motions and distributions of other galaxies—cosmic conglomerations like our own Milky Way that contain billions or trillions of stars—has pointed us to major gaps in our theories of particle physics.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“In some ways, this is the ultimate goal of theoretical physics: to find a way to take all the complicated messy stuff we see around us and rearrange it into something pretty and compact and simple that just looks complicated because of our weird low-energy perspective.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“If every state the universe has ever been in could be revisited through random fluctuations, that means this moment right now could happen again, exactly the same in every detail. Not only could it happen again, it could happen again infinitely many times.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“Unfortunately, as far as observations are concerned, dark energy doesn’t give us a lot to hold on to. It is, as far as we can tell, invisible, undetectable in laboratory experiments, completely uniformly distributed through space, and only really noticeable at all by its indirect effects over scales much larger than our galaxy.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“Acknowledging an ultimate end gives us context, meaning, even hope, and allows us, paradoxically, to step back from our petty day-to-day concerns and simultaneously live more fully in the moment. Maybe this can be the meaning we seek.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“Every”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“order does not spontaneously appear out of nowhere, and if you leave something alone long enough, it will inevitably decay into disorder. Anyone who has tried to keep their desk tidy will understand this, the universe’s most intuitive and maddening natural law.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“overview effect,” in which, having seen the Earth from above, they can fully perceive how fragile our little oasis is and how unified we ought to be”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“the universe started to cool down enough for some familiar particles to form.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“And in general relativity, gravitational attraction is just a consequence of the bending of space.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“A rocky planet orbiting an ordinary star near the edge of a spiral galaxy developed life, computers, political science, and spindly bipedal mammals who read physics books for fun.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything
“If dark energy is a cosmological constant, the equation of state parameter w equals -1 exactly, and we get a Heat Death. If w is at all lower than -1, even one part in a billion billions, dark energy is phantom dark energy, capable of tearing the universe apart. Because it’s impossible to ever measure anything with complete, uncertainty-free precision, the best we may ever be able to do is say that if the Big Rip does occur, it will be so far in the future that all structure in the cosmos will have decayed already by the time it happens.”
― The End of Everything
― The End of Everything


