- Patrick Jane
Let
me start today's post with an addendum to last week: Mr Tuniak and I
had stayed for dinner at the Gemini station. Captain Nemo would have
been proud of what they served us. All the food was something that
had lived or grown in the ocean. Our hosts insisted that we should
try everything.
On
Monday I still felt well, but on Tuesday at noon my stomach started
to rebel. From then on I had to stay in bed until today. I don't know
if there was a connection with the – for me unusual – cuisine of
the Gemini station or if I had incurred a virus from somewhere. The
result was that I was unable to go to Mr Tuniak's today. A friend of
mine was nice enough to take over for me. Of course, she only agreed
to do it after lecturing me about the way I have handled this blog.
She claimed that I had ignored basic journalistic principles and that
the “flashbacks” I use so often were based on pure speculation,
since I had no way of knowing what had really happened and what
people had been thinking. I was far too passive as well. I countered
that Mr Tuniak wanted his life to be told as a story and that the
readers would surely know that I hadn't been there
during the “flashbacks”. But in general things happened the way I
described them, otherwise Mr Tuniak would surely have complained. But
she didn't accept my explanations and said that I must have slept at
the university.
Allright.
So I guess today we will learn how it should be done.
Mr
Tuniak was expecting me in his office. After a bit of small talk,
where I introduced myself, I asked him:
I:
Looking back at your life – and I guess that will also be true for
the events you haven't talked about yet – one can't help but notice
how many unusual people you have met and how many strange places you
have visited.
T
(Mr Tuniak): Yes. What of it?
I:
Well, it just seems improbable to me that...
T:
Do you want to say that I have only invented everything I told your
friend?
I:
No, definitely not. I know that you have a time machine you can use
and that alone is sufficient to explain a lot of these...
coincidences. Or what would seem to be coincidences. But not
everything.
T:
Such as?
I:
Let's take the Gemini Foundation as an example. You talked about it
last week. You first came into contact with them right in the middle
of the ocean. By accident. No time travel involved.
T:
If you are not accusing me of lying, then what are you thinking?
I:
Are you combining events? When you are talking about your life, are
you uniting events that otherwise would have happened with several
weeks in between them, because this way you'd get a better narrative?
T:
You mean you'd have less of a problem with these coincidences if
there was more time in between?
I:
They would seem more probable, yes.
T:
I'm sorry to disappoint you, but things happened exactly as I have
described them. And I have even heard of a theory that could explain
these – as you would call them – improbable coincidences. Come
with me.
Together
we drove to the time machine in the forest. During the drive Mr
Tuniak was telling me where we would be going.
T:
There's a Russian mathematician, named Feodor. You have never heard
of him because he's been hiding from the world since the 60s.
I:
Feodor? Is this his first or last name?
T:
His first name. He hasn't used his last name for forty years. He has
developed a theory which he calls Biased Probability.
I:
Has he published about it? Are there peer reviews?
T:
No, the exact details are still a secret. He wants them to be
published after his death. But I have personally... tested it. And as
far as I can tell, it works.
I:
You tested them in an experiment?
T:
In a way.
I:
But you didn't check the formulas? You just proved it for one single
case?
T:
If you want to be exact: yes.
We
arrived at the time machine. Mr Tuniak activated it.
When
we left it again, we had moved to a construction site. We were right
in the middle of an unfinished skyscraper, somewhere around the 90th
floor. There was no plaster on the walls, no glass in the windows and
there were several places where one could see conduits in the
brickwork. The building had the general shape of a pyramid and was
located inside a big city.
I:
Where are we?
T:
Pyongyang. Ten years in the past from your point of view. We are in
the Ryugyong Hotel. It can't be found on any map and the government
is acting as if it didn't exist.
I:
What? This is a huge building!
T:
Yes, but there isn't enough money to actually finish it. It's the
perfect hiding place because everyone is pretending that it wasn't
here. Come on, we have to go up one floor.
There
were elevator shafts, but no elevators. We had to go up a staircase.
At the top a man was already expecting us. He was around 70 years
old, had short white hair, small dark eyes, glasses and a scar on the
left side of his face. He was Feodor. He spoke English with a strong
Russian accent.
F
(Feodor): Did any cats follow you?
T:
No, none. I took extra care.
F:
Well, well, then I am happy to see you, Lex. And who are you?
Mr
Tuniak introduced me and told him that I was here because I was
interested in his theory of Biased Probability. That seemed to excite
him and he made a gesture to indicate that we should follow him.
I:
Why did he ask about cats?
T:
Because he thinks they are spies for the CIA.
I
had asked the question very quietly and Mr Tuniak had also answered
in a whisper. But Feodor had still heard us.
F:
Project Acoustic Kitty. They trained cats to act as spies, to carry
bugs and they hid their antennas in the cats' tails. Officially
they've stopped the project, but I don't trust them.
He
led us to a black board with incomprehensible mathematical formulas
written on it. Feodor put a coin in his hand and held it so that I
could see it.
F:
When I flip the coin, on which side will it land? Heads or tails?
I:
Both are equally possible. The chances are 50:50.
F:
Wrong! It's more probable that it will land heads up, because the
coin is heads up right now. Now, if I were to put it on its side and
roll it on the floor, which side would it then fall down on?
I:
Again I think both sides are equally probable, but I'm sure you are
going to say that's wrong.
F:
You are a quick study. Again, it will more likely land heads up,
because it is a tiny bit heavier on the opposite side.
I:
Ok. What's that got to do with Mr Tuniak's chance meetings?
F:
Don't be hasty. I'm letting you in on the secrets of the universe.
The first secret is: There is no 50:50 chance. One result is always
slightly more probable than the other. Do you understand that?
I:
I understand what you are saying, yes.
F:
Now, knowing this, we have to ask ourselves: Which direction does the
universe tend to?
I:
Which direction? What are the two possibilities?
F:
Existence or Non-Existence. And lucky for us, the universe does tend
to the side of existence. I've even got proof for that.
I:
And the proof would be what?
F:
The Big Bang. Did you know that it is theoretically possible to
create something from nothing?
I:
I'm sure there are some laws of physics that forbid that.
F:
I didn't say that it would be easy. But theoretically I can create a
kilo of matter from nothing if at the same time I also create a kilo
of antimatter. You see? It's like taking a long equation and adding
somewhere +1 and -1. The end result – and that's what the laws of
physics are concerned about – doesn't change.
I:
But if you don't really change anything... what's the point?
F:
As the universe came into existence, right at the beginning there
should have been an equal amount of matter and antimatter. And those
two should have annihilated each other very quickly.
I:
But they didn't, otherwise we wouldn't be here right now.
F:
Exactly. So it can't have been exactly 50/50, there must have been
slightly more matter. And thus the universe was created. It means
that from its very beginning, it contained a imbalance. Can you still
follow me?
I: Just.
F:
But now think about the following: What is more probable,
objectively? That the universe exists or that it doesn't exist?
I:
That it exists. Again, otherwise we wouldn't be having this
conversation.
F:
Wrong! It is more probable that it doesn't exist. There are a lot of
factors that have to be just right. Before it came into being, there
was no reason for it to do so. And this is the second secret of the
universe: It prefers the improbable. It's improbable that it should
exist, yet still it does. Ask any scientist you like and they will
tell you how improbable it is that life was created. And yet we are
here. This is the biggest paradox ever: The improbable is more
probable.
I:
So, Mr Tuniak's improbable meetings and coincidences are... the
result of some cosmic law? A universal law?
F:
Yes! He himself is the product of it. If two women have a child it
should be a female. Yet he is male. He was born a hundred years
before his mothers were. He was born, because he lived.
Feodor
suddenly changed into Russian and started adding formulas on the
black board. Mr Tuniak whispered to me:
T:
He is showing you the probabilities of my life. You won't be able to
talk to him for the next few hours. I hope it's alright with you if
we leave now. He won't notice.
Before
we left Mr Tuniak wrote on a piece of paper: “Get into contact with
Gemini in May 2012 and make sure you have left this hotel before
2007” and put it on a table. Then we returned to the time machine.
After we had entered, he didn't immediately start the machine, but
turned to me first:
T:
So, what do you think?
I:
He's crazy.
T:
No doubt about that. The experiments he helped the CIA with in the
60s... But that does have no bearing on his theories.
I:
I'm not sure if I can believe him.
T:
And you haven't even heard his theories that are really out-there.
I:
Was this some kind of a test? Did you want to see how I would react?
T:
No. You started talking about probabilities. You claimed that my
whole life was too improbable. I just showed you that the whole world
is more improbable than you imagined.
NEXT
WEEK:
Why?
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