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| | #196 (permalink) |
| Bearly Believable Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: UK: ENGLAND:
Posts: 1,341
| Re: On Creating Imaginary Worlds: Questions and Answers If a system is very sensitive to its start conditions, and if we also live in a universe where start conditions - at a quantum level - cannot be determined (which is the current hypothesis), how can the result be predetermined? Where systems are not so sensitive, our approximate knowledge of the start conditions allows us to estimate the end result so that we can make practical use of it. |
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| | #197 (permalink) |
| Determined inevitability Join Date: May 2008 Location: UK: ENGLAND:
Posts: 28
| Re: On Creating Imaginary Worlds: Questions and Answers Whether or not we can actually determine something ourselves is irrelevant, this does not make it deterministic or not, it is simply a reflection of our inability to calculate to that level. For example, just because we cannot see half the universe does not mean it isn't there. Regardless on whether or not we can determine the quantum level of matter, this level still determines the end result. |
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| | #198 (permalink) |
| Bearly Believable Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: UK: ENGLAND:
Posts: 1,341
| Re: On Creating Imaginary Worlds: Questions and Answers This thread is in the Aspiring Writers forum, not Science/Nature; so even if I agreed with your argument (which I don't), it would not colour my response to the question at hand. The story idea that we were looking at presupposed the preprogramming of genomes to produce specific (and similar) creatures many (perhaps hundreds) of millions of years in the future on a number of different planets.
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| | #199 (permalink) |
| Determined inevitability Join Date: May 2008 Location: UK: ENGLAND:
Posts: 28
| Re: On Creating Imaginary Worlds: Questions and Answers Sorry, I was arguing against your argument, rather then against the refutation of the idea. Evolution is not effected at all by the genetic code of an organism (simplification of course, but near-to-nothing), simply firing an organism with the right genetic code at a different planet will only produce a lifeform based on the same material (for Terran creatures, carbon and DNA based), not the same creature. When it comes to evolution it is conditions which is the deterministic factor, not genomes. |
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| | #200 (permalink) | |
| Bearly Believable Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: UK: ENGLAND:
Posts: 1,341
| Re: On Creating Imaginary Worlds: Questions and Answers Quote:
)Needless to say, I agree with you on this. | |
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| | #201 (permalink) |
| Nope, It's Definate Join Date: Oct 2007 Location: Australia
Posts: 117
| Re: On Creating Imaginary Worlds: Questions and Answers Doesn't Laplace's Demon say something about being able to determine the future? Not 100% sure of that one so don't beat me up about it. |
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| | #202 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Jun 2008 Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 5
| Re: On Creating Imaginary Worlds: Questions and Answers Would it be ok to have a lake at the base of a mountain range? The lake is around 140 miles at its widest point. I'm trying to put some obstacles in my characters path that they will have to go around (I'm nice like that ). |
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| | #203 (permalink) |
| Blistered User Join Date: Nov 2007 Location: Colorado
Posts: 178
| Re: On Creating Imaginary Worlds: Questions and Answers Not only would it be okay... Its quite natural to have lakes at the bottom of a mountain range, assuming your world has gravity. 140 miles is rather large though, so I would guess it would have to be a very large mountain range, and possibly one that surrounds the lake in some fashion (not completely surrounds it necessarily). Maybe a crescent shaped mountain range or something. - Z. |
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| | #204 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Jun 2008 Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 5
| Re: On Creating Imaginary Worlds: Questions and Answers Thanks for the help Zubi. ![]() I like the idea of the crescent shaped mountain range surrounding some of the lake & looking at my map it would mean the lake wouldn't have to be quite so big. An alternative obstacle I was thinking of is to have an inland delta. Do they only occur in certain climates? I'm wondering if having one would it affect the flora and fauna and other geological phenomenon that could/should occur in the country as well? |
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| | #205 (permalink) | |
| Science fiction fantasy Join Date: Jun 2007 Location: SOUTH AMERICA
Posts: 485
| Re: On Creating Imaginary Worlds: Questions and Answers Quote:
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| | #206 (permalink) | |
| Science fiction fantasy Join Date: Jun 2007 Location: SOUTH AMERICA
Posts: 485
| Re: On Creating Imaginary Worlds: Questions and Answers Quote:
Which might mean there is a reason, but we aren't aware of it. | |
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| | #207 (permalink) | |
| Blistered User Join Date: Nov 2007 Location: Colorado
Posts: 178
| Re: On Creating Imaginary Worlds: Questions and Answers No problem. Quote:
River delta - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia It would most likely imply that it is a fairly warm climate for the sediments to form, or possibly that they would form more readily in a warmer climate. It is not to say that you cant have deltas caused by ice formations in cold areas, but those might be much less permanent. You can also have rivers that have a very wide mouth without the deposits. Some of those are called estuaries. You can also have freshwater or inland deltas, or lakes caused by dams. - Z. | |
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| | #208 (permalink) |
| Greybeard Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Derbyshire
Posts: 401
| Re: On Creating Imaginary Worlds: Questions and Answers No, the new characteristics emerge through random mutation. It's the environment which determines whether these mutations are beneficial or not (they usually aren't). |
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| | #209 (permalink) | |
| Greybeard Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Derbyshire
Posts: 401
| Re: On Creating Imaginary Worlds: Questions and Answers Quote:
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| | #210 (permalink) |
| First Mate Fool Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: Australia, New South Wales
Posts: 560
| Re: On Creating Imaginary Worlds: Questions and Answers But I would imagine that erosion would occur in a hotter climate with less rain leading to looser and dry soils so more sediment collects in the water (this happens in the Murray-Darling river system in Australia). |
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