• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • About
  • Donate
  • Start
    • Contact
    • We Need Your Support (Donate)
    • Newsletter Signup
      • Daily
      • Weekly
    • Into the Storm (Hosted by Justin Deschamps)
    • Follow Our Social Media
    • Best Telegram Channels & Groups
    • Discernment 101
    • Media Archive (Shows, Videos, Presentations)
    • Where’s The Hope
  • Browse
    • Editor’s Top Content (Start Here)
    • Best Categories
      • Consciousness
      • Conspiracy
      • Disclosure
      • Extraterrestrials
      • History
      • Health
      • NWO Deep State
      • Philosophy
      • Occult
      • Self Empowerment
      • Spirituality
    • By Author
      • Justin Deschamps
        • Articles
        • Into The Storm (on EdgeofWonder.TV)
        • Awarewolf Radio (Podcast)
      • Adam AstroYogi Sanchez
      • Amber Wheeler
      • Barbara H Whitfield RT and Charles L Whitfield MD
      • Chandra Loveguard
      • Conscious Optimist
      • Marko De Francis
      • Lance Schuttler
        • EMF Harmonized (Cell Phone, Wi-Fi, Radiation Protection
      • Ryan Delarme
      • Will Justice
  • Products
    • EMF Harmonized (Cell Phone, Wi-Fi, Radiation Protection
    • Earth Science & Energy
    • Free Energy
    • AI and Transhumanism
    • Space
    • Nikola Tesla
    • ET
      • Ancient Technology
      • Crop Circles
      • UFOs
    • Conspiracy
      • Anti NWO Deep State
      • Domestic Spying
      • Freemasonry
      • Law & Legal Corruption
      • Mass Mind Control
      • NWO Conspiracy
      • Police State and Censorship
      • Propaganda
      • Snowden Conspiracy
      • Social Engineering
    • Misc.
      • Council on Foreign Relations
      • Music Industry
      • Paranormal
      • Pedagate and Pedophilia
      • Q Anon
      • Secret Space Program
      • White Hat
  • Sign Up
  • Election Fraud
  • Partners
    • EMF Harmonized
    • Ascent Nutrition

Stillness in the Storm

An Agent for Consciousness Evolution

  • Our Story
  • Support Us
  • Contact
  •  Tuesday, July 15, 2025
  • Store
  • Our Social
    • BitChute
    • CloutHub
    • Gab
    • Gab TV
    • Gettr
    • MeWe
      • MeWe Group
    • Minds
    • Rumble
    • SubscribeStar
    • Telegram
      • Best Telegram Channels and Groups
    • Twitter (Justin Duchamps)
    • YouTube

PLOS: Life, the Universe, and Everything: What are the Odds?

Friday, August 9, 2013 By Julian Robles Leave a Comment

Spread the love
Have you ever wondered how likely – or unlikely – it is that you exist? Although it may sound pie-in-the-sky, it’s really a scientific problem, though you don’t have to be a scientist to be captivated by it.
Take, for example, the wonderfully-named Cosmicomics of 20th-century Italian writer Italo Calvino – a collection of whimsical, science-fiction-flavoured short stories. One of the stories, called “How Much Shall We Bet,” involves two characters, the narrator (with the unpronounceable name “Qfwfq”) and someone named “Dean (k)yK.” The two men seem to have existed since the before the beginning of the universe – somehow separate from the universe, whatever that could mean – and they seem to be immortal. All they do is make an endless series of bets regarding what sorts of things will happen in their cosmos.
As you might imagine, the series of events that they bet on, and the series of events that actually unfold, are rather familiar: They seem to resemble the actual events that have unfolded in the history of our own universe. Their first bet is on the formation of atoms; the narrator bets for it, while Dean bets against it. They go on betting on the formation of various chemical elements, and, looking billions of years ahead, they bet as to whether the Assyrians will invade Mesopotamia. We’re told that Dean always bets no, “not because he believed the Assyrians wouldn’t do it, but because he refused to think there would ever be Assyrians and Mesopotamia and the Earth and a human race.”
Let’s begin with the big philosophical questions: First there’s the issue of determinism – roughly, whether the “stuff that happens” in the universe is largely, or perhaps completely, determined by what came before. This is something that thinkers have wrestled with for 2,500 years, and I won’t attempt to add to that discussion here; but it is worth mentioning that most versions of determinism seem to place free will in jeopardy, making them rather unappetizing (though not necessarily wrong). (But I would say that, wouldn’t, if I were destined to say it?)
Secondly, assuming that the future is not fully determined by the present, there’s the string of probabilities associated with each development along the way to “us.” Thinking again of Calvino’s story: Before you can have Assyrians, you have to have human beings, and before you can have human beings you have to have life, and before you can have life you have to have a habitable planet orbiting a star at just the right distance… it does sound like a leaning tower of improbabilities, doesn’t it?
Certainly, the more specific the outcome, more improbable it seems. If you consider someparticular state of affairs, and then ask what the odds are, starting from today and going back even a short time (let alone the 3.8 billion years to when life first appeared on this planet), that particular state will seem extraordinarily unlikely. For example, imagine turning the clock back five years. From that perspective, what were the odds that, on this particular day, you would be sitting in this particular room, in this city, reading this particular sentence?
And what something even more basic – say, your own existence? A couple of months ago, a“probability chart” produced by Harvard Law School blogger Ali Binazir went somewhat viral, encouraging people to contemplate this very question. In the chart, Binazir calculates just how improbable it was that the right sperm from your father hooked up with the right egg produced by your mother – by his estimate, it’s about one chance in 400 quadrillion (that number seems only slightly more tame in scientific notation: 4 x 10^17). 
 And that’s hardly the whole battle: To even get to that stage, all of your ancestors, going all the way back to the beginning of life on Earth, had to survive to reproductive age. Multiplying the string of probabilities together, he concludes that the odds of your existence are an astronomical one in 10^2,685.000. (As you can imagine, not everyone in the blogosphere was kind to Binazir; one asked if it was painful to pull those numbers out of you-know-where.)
To be sure, we can quibble about the precise figures. But I’m sure we can agree that the chances of anything specific happening, viewed from a remote enough point in the past, seem absurdly low. And yet, for some reason, we often weave stories in which historical events have a flavour of inevitability to them. Think how many science fiction stories you’ve read on the theme of time travel, in which the time traveller attempts to “change history,” only to find that what was going to happen, happens anyway. Push history, and it pushes back.
If you’re a Stephen King fan, you’ll know that his latest book, 11-22-63, involves a time traveller who attempts to prevent the Kennedy assassination (which of course took place on the date that gives the book its title). As you might guess, even with several years lead-time, preventing the fatal shot from being fired from the Dallas book depository is no simple task. As filmmaker Errol Morris puts it in his review of King’s book: “What if history is too forceful to redirect? What if jiggering the engine produces no favourable outcome – merely a postponement of the inevitable? If he had lived, Kennedy might not have escalated the war in Vietnam, and might have kept America out of a bloody mire. But we don’t know. What if we were headed there anyway? Then our tampering might only make things worse. It is not historical inevitability, but something close.”
These kinds of questions, about the inevitability (or otherwise) of history, have made their way into our popular culture, so I’m happy to give the last word to Lisa Simpson. I’m thinking of a Halloween episode in which Lisa had lost a tooth; as part of an experiment for a science fair project, she leaves the tooth in a glass of cola overnight. Sure enough, the next morning she sees a peculiar mould growing on it; and looking through her microscope, she sees that she’s crated little cave men. Some hours later she looks again, and the little people are undergoing what appears to be the Renaissance; soon, one of the little people is seen nailing something to the cathedral door. She gasps: “I’ve created Lutherans!”

By Dan Falk

Originally posted on: PLOS Blog
More on this subject:

Do we live in a Universe of Coincidence or Intent?

https://stillnessinthestorm.com/2013/07/do-we-live-in-universe-of-coincidence/

We are One – Scientific Proof

https://stillnessinthestorm.com/2013/08/we-are-one-scientific-proof-for/

-Julian 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: dna, Perfect, spirituality, universe, we are one

Notices and Disclaimers

We need $2000 per month to pay our costs. Help us one time or recurring. (DONATE HERE)

To sign up for RSS updates, paste this link (https://stillnessinthestorm.com/feed/) into the search field of your preferred RSS Reader or Service (such as Feedly or gReader).

Subscribe to Stillness in the Storm Newsletter

“It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it.” – Aristotle

This website is supported by readers like you.

If you find our work of value, consider making a donation. 

Stillness in the Storm DISCLAIMER: All articles, videos, statements, claims, views and opinions that appear anywhere on this site, whether stated as theories or absolute facts, are always presented by Stillness in the Storm as unverified—and should be personally fact checked and discerned by you, the reader. Any opinions or statements herein presented are not necessarily promoted, endorsed, or agreed to by Stillness, those who work with Stillness, or those who read Stillness. Any belief or conclusion gleaned from content on this site is solely the responsibility of you the reader to substantiate, fact check, and no harm comes to you or those around you. And any actions taken by those who read material on this site is solely the responsibility of the acting party. You are encouraged to think carefully and do your own research. Nothing on this site is meant to be believed without question or personal appraisal.

Content Disclaimer: All content on this site marked with “source – [enter website name and url]” is not owned by Stillness in the Storm. All content on this site that is not originally written, created, or posted as original, is owned by the original content creators, who retain exclusive jurisdiction of all intellectual property rights. Any copyrighted material on this site was shared in good faith, under fair use or creative commons. Any request to remove copyrighted material will be honored, provided proof of ownership is rendered. Send takedown requests to [email protected].

What is our mission? Why do we post what we do?

Our mission here is to curate (share) articles and information that we feel is important for the evolution of consciousness. Most of that information is written or produced by other people and organizations, which means it does not represent our views or opinions as managing staff of Stillness in the Storm. Some of the content is written by one of our writers and is clearly marked accordingly. Just because we share a CNN story that speaks badly about the President doesn’t mean we’re promoting anti-POTUS views. We’re reporting on the fact as it was reported, and that this event is important for us to know so we can better contend with the challenges of gaining freedom and prosperity. Similarly, just because we share a pro/anti-[insert issue or topic] content, such as a pro-second amendment piece or an anti-military video doesn’t mean we endorse what is said. Again, information is shared on this site for the purpose of evolving consciousness. In our opinion, consciousness evolves through the process of accumulating knowledge of the truth and contemplating that knowledge to distill wisdom and improve life by discovering and incorporating holistic values. Thus, sharing information from many different sources, with many different perspectives is the best way to maximize evolution. What’s more, the mastery of mind and discernment doesn’t occur in a vacuum, it is much like the immune system, it needs regular exposure to new things to stay healthy and strong. If you have any questions as to our mission or methods please reach out to us at [email protected].

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Search Our Archives

FUNDRAISER!

Latest Videos

Guarding Against Bio Tech and EMF - Fix The World Project | Just In Stillness

From around the web

News “they” don’t want you to see

Newsletter

You can unsubscribe anytime. For more details, review our Privacy Policy.

Thank you!

You have successfully joined our subscriber list.

.

We Need Your Support

Support our work!

Weekly Newsletter Sign UP

Only want to see emails once a week? Sign up for the Weekly Newsletter here: SIGN UP. (Make sure you send an email to [email protected] to confirm the change or it won’t work).

Latest Videos

Footer

  • Menus
  • Internship Program
  • RSS
  • Social Media
  • Media
  • Privacy Policy

Copyright © 2025 · Privacy Policy · Log in · Built by

This website wouldn't be the same without the ethical web hosting provided by Modern Masters. Modern Masters ethically serves small businesses in metaphysical, paranormal, healing, spirituality, homesteading, acupuncture and other related fields. Get the perfect website for your sacred work at Modern Masters.