The Woozy Theory
Quite recently the Institute of Fuzzy Science has announced
the discovery of several bold new theories, providing a unified
explanation, or at least excuse, for a broad range of natural
phenomena. These theories are both extremely ambitious in their
scope and modest in their assumptions. Their main trait is that
they deduce a great deal from practically nothing.
The creation of Crank Unified Theories is an old and honorable
tradition, dating back to prehistoric times, when our ancient
ancestors looked around them and asked "How the heck did this all
get here?"
The process was lent considerable prestige by such luminaries
as Aristotle and Ptolemy, in the classical age, and continues up to
this day. One recent idea by a worker outside the Institute was
Photon Mechanics, which postulated that all fundamental particles
were composed of photons. In an attempt to prove this, he tried to
synthesize a meal from gamma rays. Unfortunately, the food
immediately propagated away at 299,000 kilometers per second,
leaving critics of the light lunch unsatisfied.
"Terrible," one physicist commented. "Much too bland."
Others seemed to agree.
The CUTs produced at the Institute of Fuzzy Science are
notable in that they all contradict each other, and sometimes
themselves. Thus, few would argue that all, or even most, are
correct. The most successful theory to date is that of Dr. Isaac
M. Woozy, commonly known as Woozy Theory. Woozy Theory has proven
capable of predicting practically anything you put to it.
What is Woozy Theory? In its simplest outlines, it is an
attempt to describe nature by unifying three separate realms of
observation: General Relativity, Quantum Mechanics, and Scrabble.
By adopting a three pronged approach the theory is able to resolve
the apparent contradictions between each of the sub-theories.
"I believe that the problems of earlier researchers," stated
Dr. Woozy, "arose from treating the subjects piecemeal. A unified
approach is required." He cites difficulties with the Superstring
Theory, Quantum Scrabble, and Scrabble in Curved Spacetime. In
each case, he maintains, difficulties arose from neglecting a broad
class of other phenomena. "My discovery was serendipitous," he
recalls. "I'd been wrestling with various theories for weeks
without getting anywhere. Finally, in my office, I picked up
Merzbacher's Quantum Mechanics in one hand and Misner, Thorne and
Wheeler's Gravitation in the other -- well, I touched it, anyway,
it's too heavy to lift. Just as I was staring at both of them, my
Scrabble set fell from the top shelf and hit me on the head."
With the blow came illumination. If one merely assumes that
Scrabble must exist, the rest of nature follows. Gravity, for
example, is necessary to keep the pieces on the board.
Electromagnetism provides light, to see the letters with. One
critic pointed out the possibility of magnetized pieces; Woozy
pondered for hours until he had resolved the conflict to his
satisfaction.
"One not only needs gravity to keep the pieces on the board,"
he explained, "but also to provide an atmosphere, so the players
can breathe." When the critic began to suggest pressure suits and
space colonies, Woozy silenced him with a skillfully thrown
paperweight.
"I take my work seriously," he declared.
Most exciting of all, Woozy theory provides the first coherent
explanation for the universe as a whole. If Scrabble is necessary,
then so are players, and a universe to play in. Woozy calls this
the "Really Strong" or "Scrabble" Anthropic Principle. Humans (or
at least intelligent beings) are necessary, providing an order to
biological evolution which has been lacking since the failure of
the Chain of Being. This also suggests that if aliens exist, they
may well play Scrabble.
"That doesn't mean that they will speak English, necessarily,"
Woozy added cautiously. "There are foreign language versions,
after all. And the point values may differ, somewhat." He
suggested to SETI that they listen for very long range Play By Mail
games. At present, his suggestion has not been acted on. "They're
just miffed that they didn't think of it," Woozy sniffed.
Rival theories include unifying QFT and GR with chess or
checkers, or even tic-tac-toe. While the originators of these
theories remain hopeful, Woozy is pessimistic.
"Those games are extremely difficult to unify with Quantum
Mechanics," Woozy explained, "since they lack an element of chance.
And tic-tac-toe doesn't even have pieces, so gravity is pretty
shaky as well. Plus it's a drawn game (no pun intended). Who'd
want to live in a universe that boring?" Woozy also recalled an
early game of quantum chess: "After about thirty moves, black was
both mated and not mated. It made for terrible arguments."
Are these, or similar theories, the answer to the riddle of
the universe? Most observers doubt it. Still, as Dr. Woozy
himself points out, "What the heck, it keeps us off the streets."