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27Anthropic arguments outside of cosmology and string theoryBelgrade Philosophical Annual 2016 (29): 91-114. 2016.Anthropic reasoning has lately been strongly associated with the string theory landscape and some theories of particle cosmology, such as cosmological inflation. The association is not, contrary to multiple statements by physicists and philosophers alike, necessary. On the contrary, there are clear reasons and instances in which the anthropic reasoning is useful in a diverse range of fields such as planetary sciences, geophysics, future studies, risk analysis, origin of life studies, evolutionar…Read more
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180Too early? On the apparent conflict of astrobiology and cosmologyBiology and Philosophy 21 (3): 369-379. 2006.An interesting consequence of the modern cosmological paradigm is the spatial infinity of the universe. When coupled with naturalistic understanding of the origin of life and intelligence, which follows the basic tenets of astrobiology, and with some fairly incontroversial assumptions in the theory of observation selection effects, this infinity leads, as Ken Olum has recently shown, to a paradoxical conclusion. Olum's paradox is related, to the famous Fermi's paradox in astrobiology and “SETI” …Read more
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255Three's a crowd: On causes, entropy and physical eschatology (review)Foundations of Science 9 (1): 1-24. 2004.Recent discussions of theorigins of the thermodynamical temporal asymmetry (thearrow of time) by Huw Price and others arecritically assessed. This serves as amotivation for consideration of relationshipbetween thermodynamical and cosmologicalcauses. Although the project of clarificationof the thermodynamical explanandum is certainlywelcome, Price excludes another interestingoption, at least as viable as the sort ofAcausal-Particular approach he favors, andarguably more in the spirit of Boltzmann…Read more
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52Putting the Cart Before the Horse: Co-evolution of the Universe and Observers as an Explanatory HypothesisFoundations of Science 23 (3): 427-442. 2018.The answer to the fine-tuning problem of the universe has been traditionally sought in terms of either design or multiverse. In philosophy circles, this is sometimes expanded by adding the option of explanatory nihilism—the claim that there is no explanation for statements of that high level of generality: fine-tunings are brute facts. In this paper, we consider the fourth option which, at least in principle, is available to us: co-evolution of the universe and observers. Although conceptual roo…Read more
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149Is the Universe Really That Simple?Foundations of Physics 32 (7): 1141-1157. 2002.The intriguing recent suggestion of Tegmark that the universe—contrary to all our experiences and expectations—contains only a small amount of information due to an extremely high degree of internal symmetry is critically examined. It is shown that there are several physical processes, notably Hawking evaporation of black holes and non-zero decoherence time effects described by Plaga, as well as thought experiments of Deutsch and Tegmark himself, which can be construed as arguments against the l…Read more
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104Nick Bostrom, anthropic bias: Observation selection effects in science and philosophy (review)Foundations of Science 8 (4): 417-423. 2003.
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108Evolutionary contingency and SETI revisitedBiology and Philosophy 29 (4): 539-557. 2014.The well-known argument against the Search for ExtraTerrestrial Intelligence (SETI) due to George Gaylord Simpson is re-analyzed almost half a century later, in the light of our improved understanding of preconditions for the emergence of life and intelligence brought about by the ongoing “astrobiological revolution”. Simpson’s argument has been enormously influential, in particular in biological circles, and it arguably fueled the most serious opposition to SETI programmes and their funding. I …Read more
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211Book Review: Modern Cosmology. By Scott Dodelson. Academic Press, London, San Diego, California, 2003. xiii + 440 pp., $70 (hardcover). ISBN 0-12-219141-2 (review)Foundations of Physics 34 (3): 541-544. 2004.
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123Enhancing a Person, Enhancing a Civilization: A Research Program at the Intersection of Bioethics, Future Studies, and AstrobiologyCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 26 (3): 459-468. 2017.:There are manifold intriguing issues located within largely unexplored borderlands of bioethics, future studies, and astrobiology. Human enhancement has for quite some time been among the foci of bioethical debates, but the same cannot be said about its global, transgenerational, and even cosmological consequences. In recent years, discussions of posthuman and, in general terms, postbiological civilization have slowly gained a measure of academic respect, in parallel with the renewed interest i…Read more
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350Anthropic fluctuations vs. weak anthropic principleFoundations of Science 7 (4): 453-463. 2002.A modern assessment of the classical Boltzmann-Schuetz argument for large-scale entropy fluctuations as the origin of our observable cosmological domain is given.The emphasis is put on the central implication of this picture which flatly contradicts the weak anthropic principle as an epistemological statement about the universe. Therefore, to associate this picture with the anthropic principle as it is usually done is unwarranted. In particular, Feynman's criticism of theanthropic principle base…Read more
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194Book Review: Anthropic Bias: Observation Selection Effects in Science and Philosophy. By Nick Bostrom. Routledge, New York and London, 2002, xiii+224 pp., $70 (hardcover). ISBN 0-415-93858-9 (review)Foundations of Physics 32 (11): 1797-1801. 2002.
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144Alternative explanations of the cosmic microwave background: A historical and an epistemological perspectiveStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 62 1-18. 2018.We historically trace various non-conventional explanations for the origin of the cosmic microwave background and discuss their merit, while analyzing the dynamics of their rejection, as well as the relevant physical and methodological reasons for it. It turns out that there have been many such unorthodox interpretations; not only those developed in the context of theories rejecting the relativistic paradigm entirely but also those coming from the camp of original thinkers firmly entrenched in t…Read more
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100The answer to the fine-tuning problem of the universe has been traditionally sought in terms of either design or multiverse. In philosophy circles, this is sometimes expanded by adding the option of explanatory nihilism – the claim that there is no explanation for statements of that high level of generality: fine-tunings are brute facts. In this paper, we consider the fourth option which, at least in principle, is available to us: co-evolution of the universe and obsevers. Although conceptual ro…Read more
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111Astrophysical Fine Tuning, Naturalism, and the Contemporary Design ArgumentInternational Studies in the Philosophy of Science 20 (3): 285-307. 2006.Evidence for instances of astrophysical ‘fine tuning’ (or ‘coincidences’) is thought by some to lend support to the design argument (i.e. the argument that our universe has been designed by some deity). We assess some of the relevant empirical and conceptual issues. We argue that astrophysical fine tuning calls for some explanation, but this explanation need not appeal to the design argument. A clear and strict separation of the issue of anthropic fine tuning on one hand and any form of Eddingto…Read more
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76Who's really afraid of AI?: Anthropocentric bias and postbiological evolutionBelgrade Philosophical Annual 35 17-29. 2022.The advent of artificial intelligence (AI) systems has provoked a lot of discussions in both epistemological, bioethical and risk-analytic terms, much of it rather paranoid in nature. Unless one takes an extreme anthropocentric and chronocentric stance, this process can be safely regarded as part and parcel of the sciences of the origin. In this contribution, I would like to suggest that at least four different classes of arguments could be brought forth against the proposition that AI - either …Read more
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94Physics versus Semantics: A Puzzling Case of the Missing Quantum Theory (review)Foundations of Physics 35 (5): 817-838. 2005.A case for the project of excising of confusion and obfuscation in the contemporary quantum theory initiated and promoted by David Deutsch has been made. It has been argued that at least some theoretical entities which are conventionally labelled as “interpretations” of quantum mechanics are in fact full-blooded physical theories in their own right, and as such are falsifiable, at least in principle. The most pertinent case is the one of the so-called “Many-Worlds Interpretation” (MWI) of Everet…Read more
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136Anthropic arguments outside of cosmology and string theoryBelgrade Philosophical Annual 29 91-114. 2016.Anthropic reasoning has lately been strongly associated with the string theory landscape and some theories of particle cosmology, such as cosmological inflation. The association is not, contrary to multiple statements by physicists and philosophers alike, necessary. On the contrary, there are clear reasons and instances in which the anthropic reasoning is useful in a diverse range of fields such as planetary sciences, geophysics, future studies, risk analysis, origin of life studies, evolutionar…Read more
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339The Thermodynamical Arrow of Time: Reinterpreting the Boltzmann–Schuetz Argument (review)Foundations of Physics 33 (3): 467-490. 2002.The recent surge of interest in the origin of the temporal asymmetry of thermodynamical systems (including the accessible part of the universe itself) has put forward two possible explanatory approaches to this age-old problem. Hereby we show that there is a third possible alternative, based on the generalization of the classical (“Boltzmann–Schuetz”) anthropic fluctuation picture of the origin of the perceived entropy gradient. This alternative (which we dub the Acausal-Anthropic approach) is b…Read more
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211Forecast for the Next Eon: Applied Cosmology and the Long-Term Fate of Intelligent Beings (review)Foundations of Physics 34 (2): 239-261. 2004.Cosmology seems extremely remote from everyday human practice and experience. It is usually taken for granted that cosmological data cannot rationally influence our beliefs about the fate of humanity—and possible other intelligent species—except perhaps in the extremely distant future, when the issue of “heat death” (in an ever-expanding universe) becomes actual. Here, an attempt is made to show that it may become a practical question much sooner, if an intelligent community wishes to maximize i…Read more
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85Symmetry-based explanations using symmetry breaking as the key explanatory tool have complemented and replaced traditional causal explanations in various domains of physics. The process of spontaneous SB is now a mainstay of contemporary explanatory accounts of large chunks of condensed-matter physics, quantum field theory, nonlinear dynamics, cosmology, and other disciplines. A wide range of empirical research into various phenomena related to symmetries and SB across biological scales has accu…Read more
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Is Many Likelier than Few? A Critical Assessment of the Self-indication AssumptionEpistemologia 27 (2): 265-298. 2004.
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347Is quantum suicide painless? On an apparent violation of the principal principleFoundations of Science 11 (3): 287-296. 2004.The experimental setup of the self-referential quantum measurement, jovially known as the ‘quantum suicide’ or the ‘quantum Russian roulette’ is analyzed from the point of view of the Principal Principle of David Lewis. It is shown that the apparent violation of this principle – relating objective probabilities and subjective chance – in this type of thought experiment is just an illusion due to the usage of some terms and concepts ill-defined in the quantum context. We conclude that even in the…Read more
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142Counterfactuals and unphysical ceteris paribus: An explanatory fallacyFilozofija I Društvo 24 (4): 143-160. 2013.I reconsider a type of counterfactual argument often used in historical sciences on a recent widely discussed example of the so-called “rare Earth” hypothesis in planetary sciences and astrobiology. The argument is based on the alleged “rarity” of some crucial ingredient for the planetary habitability, which is, in Earth’s case, provided by contingent evolutionary development. For instance, the claim that a contingent fact of history which has created planet Jupiter enables shielding of Earth fr…Read more
Milan Cirkovic
Astronomical Observatory of Belgrade
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Astronomical Observatory of BelgradeProfessor
Areas of Specialization
| Natural Sciences |