But we'd wager most people don't think that line
applies to the actual rules of the universe itself. As it turns out, though,
researchers at Microsoft, along with scientists at Brown University and even
one expert who consulted for Disney's "Wrinkle in Time" think the
laws of physics might actually be slowly changing, complicating our quest to
understand the cosmos.
Popular Mechanics published a lengthy explainer this
week about a paper, titled "The Autodidactic Universe" and published
earlier this year, in which the team argued for that precise mind-bending
hypothesis. An autodidact, of course, is someone who learns without a mentor or
teacher — and, these researchers say, the universe itself may be one.
"We ask whether there might be a mechanism
woven into the fabric of the natural world, by means of which the universe
could learn its laws," the authors wrote in the paper, which has not yet
been peer reviewed.
Over time, the theory goes, the universe has sought
stability. PopMech draws parallels to animal evolution, too. There are no
trilobites or dinosaurs anymore, but cats and dogs have survived because they
adapted to the environment around them — and the cosmos may have done the same.
In an early version of the universe, for example,
Newton's laws of gravity — that all matter in the universe attracts other
matter with a force directly proportional to the product of their masses and
inversely proportional to the square of the distance between their centers —
might not have been true yet.
"Over time, that system will teach itself, and
some fundamental laws will arise, and that's really what they're talking about
[in the paper]," Janna Levin, a professor of physics and astronomy at
Barnard College of Columbia University who wasn't involved in the research,
told PopMech. "If the universe can compute with a given set of algorithms,
then maybe it can do the same kind of thing we see in artificial intelligence,
where you have self-learning systems that teach themselves new rules. And by
rules, in cosmology we mean laws of physics."
The paper's authors also acknowledge their own
skepticism and wrote their conclusions with caution, warning that their work is
only a baby step in the formation of a new theory and requires additional
research.
"Of course, this is just a first step,"
the authors write. "There are varied potential spin-offs from our
approach."
It's mind-bending to imagine that the laws of
physics might learn and adapt over time. But it reminds us that the universe is
stranger than we'll ever know.