Perhaps rather than just causing a black hole, it causes a tear in space-time that expands at the speed of light. By the time you see it, you’re already dead.
Of course, there’s still the fact that early worlds would be weighted much more heavily, so this is probably about the first instant that you exist. And there’s the fact that, if that’s true, the LHC wouldn’t decrease the expected lifetime of the world by a noticeable amount.
Perhaps rather than just causing a black hole, it causes a tear in space-time that expands at the speed of light. By the time you see it, you’re already dead.
I feel vaguely disapproving of anthropic reasoning when it rewards elaborate and contrived scenarios over simpler ones with similar characteristics.
Perhaps rather than just causing a black hole, it causes a tear in space-time that expands at the speed of light. By the time you see it, you’re already dead.
Of course, there’s still the fact that early worlds would be weighted much more heavily, so this is probably about the first instant that you exist. And there’s the fact that, if that’s true, the LHC wouldn’t decrease the expected lifetime of the world by a noticeable amount.
I feel vaguely disapproving of anthropic reasoning when it rewards elaborate and contrived scenarios over simpler ones with similar characteristics.