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Let’s face it, we really trust science. In fact, studies suggest that the vast majority of people will murder another human being, if a guy in a lab coat tells them it’s OK.
But surely in their insatiable curiosity and desire to put knowledge above all things, science would never, say, inadvertently set off a chain of events that lead to some sort of disaster that ended the world. Right? Well, here’s five experiments that may prove us wrong.

Scientists are kind of pissed that they weren’t around when the Big Bang happened. Here we had an event that holds all of the secrets to reality, and we missed it because we were lazy enough not to evolve for another 13 billion years.
The solution, science says, is to make it happen again. They assure us that they can stage a new Big Bang if they smash some protons together really, really fucking hard. In fact, they can make a million of them per second, which is 999,999 more than God managed.

God, 1. Science, 999,999.
What Could Possibly Go Wrong?
Well, first imagine an apocalyptic nuclear holocaust. Multiply that by about one hundred and twenty thousand billion, and then multiply that by around the neighborhood of infinity. That equals around one eighth of the magnitude of the Big Bang. Nevertheless, scientists are pretty sure they can contain their Big Bang in an erlenmeyer flask, just so long as they remember to cork it.

So, Basically It’s Like…
Imagine you have a huge tanker truck parked outside a children’s hospital. You don’t know what’s inside it, but you’re fairly confident that it’s either a cure for cancer, or 20,000 gallons of explosive nitroglycerin. To find out which, you have to shoot at it with an AK-47.
How Long Have We Got?
Meet the Large Hadron Collider.

This is not only the largest particle accelerator ever built, it’s the largest anythingever built. Originally set to come online in 2005, then delayed until September 2008, the LHC will fire very small objects around its 17-mile circumference at close to the speed of light, before smashing the shit out of them and watching what comes out.
The problem, of course, is that even the eggheads don’t really know what’s going to happen, which is sort of why they’re doing it in the first place. That’s also why a lawsuit was filed to put a stop to it. Scientists on the LHC project insist there is no danger, and predict that the resulting observations could revolutionize science and send us into a golden age of knowledge, in the event that we actually survive.

Risk Level: 3
Experts assure us that based on everything we know about science, the chances of doom are fairly slim. Experts also say LHC will change everything we know about science. So there is a certain chance that one of the brand new things they learn about the LHC is that the LHC has the ability turn the entire planet into a fine cloud of particles.

For years, scientists have been scouring the cosmos for some kind of bizarre hypothetical anti-gravity bullshit they’re calling “dark energy”. And they’ve had some success with it … perhaps at the expense of our mortal souls.
To grossly simplify it, on a scale smaller than atoms, the quantum level, everything suddenly turns into a goddamn circus. Quantum physics is to regular everyday physics as a David Lynch film is to a mainstream blockbuster. We’re talking particles popping in and out of existence, being in two places at the same time, and generally acting like assholes.

Look at that particle. What an asshole.
No doubt the strangest part is the Quantum Zeno effect, which points out that simply observing and measuring particles changes them (specifically, changing the rate at which they decay). How? No one knows. It appears to be the closest science has ever come to proving black magic exists.
What Could Possibly Go Wrong?
One prominent scientist theorized that the changes caused by simply observing dark energy could cause it to collapse, taking the universe with it.

Scientists, eager to see if this is true, are furiously observing dark energy whenever they get the chance.
So, Basically It’s Like…
It’s like crossing the streams in Ghostbusters, apparently.
How Long Have We Got?
That scientist, Professor Lawrence Krauss, thinks it may already be underway. Apparently, in the late 90s, scientists were looking at a bunch of shit exploding in space when they caught their first glimpse of some dark energy. This may have put the universe into a state where it may or may not pop like a soap bubble at any given instant. Just because we looked at it. Holy balls.

This, but with our universe in it. And about to pop.
Risk Level: 3
This … this can’t be right, can it? Surely the guy’s just nuts. Then again, heappears to be one of the most prominent physicists in the country and has published a huge list of papers and books on the subject.
Then again, one of them was The Physics of Star Trek and, now that we think about it, we’re pretty sure he stole this whole scenario from an episode of The Next Generation.

As you’ve probably worked out by now, there’s some weird shit out there in the world of science. That’s because a whole lot of the fundamental theories about reality are based on mathematical equations rather than actual observation. So there are all sorts of things out there that seem to exist in theory, but we’ve never seen them. At least one scientist has suggested that if we ever saw them with our own eyes, it’s likely that we would start screaming and never stop. Well, it wasn’t so much a scientists as HP Lovecraft.
Anyway, Strange matter is one of these things. It’s a hypothetical material made up of quarks, which are one of the building blocks of reality, things so small that you can’t even possibly imagine. Seriously, don’t even try to think about it.

What Could Possibly Go Wrong?
There are two hypotheses about strange matter. One is that the stuff will simply disappear a fraction of a second after it appears. The other is that it will stabilize and convert every atom it comes in contact with into more strange matter. It could go either way, really.
There’s a theory that there are entire stars out there in the universe that are made out of strange matter, just because a microscopic fragment of the stuff made contact once and then everything went to hell.
Now imagine, just theoretically, if some of this strange matter should appear on Earth. And, just theoretically, it should be stable enough to start a reaction with regular matter. Theoretically, we’d all be fucking dead.

Not Pictured: Life.
So, Basically It’s Like…
Imagine you’re like the fabled King Midas, and you have the power to convert matter with a single touch. Except that instead of gold, everything you touch turns into shit. And everything it touches turns to shit. Before you know it, the whole world is shit, and it’s all your fault.
How Long Have We Got?
Luckily for us, strange matter can only be created in high-energy particle collisions, and nothing like that ever happens here, right? Oh, wait.
Meet the Large Hadron Collider. Again.

That’s right, our friends at the LHC project expect a lot of weird things to pop up when they start smashing atoms together, and strange matter is one such possibility. That’s why scientists have written papers with boring titles such asWill Relativistic Heavy-ion Colliders Destroy Our Planet?, the rebuttals to which were basically, “Let’s turn them on and find out!”
At this point we’re kind of wondering whether there’s anything this machine can do that doesn’t involve killing you and everyone you care about.
Risk Level: 5
Scientists respond to the strange matter problem by saying if it was ever going to happen, it would have happened already (since these kind of reactions happen a zillion times a second in our atmosphere anyway). We like to call this piece of rhetoric the cop-out hypothesis, because they know damned well that if it turns out they’re wrong, there won’t be anyone left to sue them.

Hundreds of stories have been written on the subject of time travel, and just about every one of those stories involves some kind of catastrophic disaster, or at the very least, an unhappy ending.
Of course, a lot of physicists think that it’s not possible at all, and that the very existence of the universe proves it. Also, if they invent time travel in the future, where are the time travelers?
But there’s one lingering theory about the possibility of time travel that kind of makes a lot of sense, and that’s that it’s not possible until we actually build a working time machine. Maybe you can only travel back as far as the technology actually exists, and after that it’s all hovering skateboards and flying steam trains.

What Could Possibly Go Wrong?
Of course, there are plenty of ways in which the universe can fuck us for daring to violate that most fundamental of laws, cause and effect. We can’t even imagine them until we know the first thing about time travel, which we don’t. But some speculate that the very attempt to travel back in time could result in the world exploding, imploding, collapsing, shrinking into a singularity, or simply disappearing.

But because we strive to bring you only the weirdest of possibilities, so consider the chronological collapse scenario.
In the distant future, when the stars have burned out and the planets have wobbled out of their celestial orbits, the descendents of humanity will be staring extinction in the face, and if they have access to a goddamn time machine then it’s likely they’re going to say “fuck this shit” and just return to a more comfortable point in history.
A flood of refugees from the future might set up home in the present and flourish, until the world ends again and they decide to do what worked last time. And again. And again. Effectively, the moment we switch on our very first time machine, our universe is going to be home to approximately infinity refugees from the future. You do the math.
How Long Have We Got?
Meet the Large Goddamn Hadron Fucking Collider.

Again? What the fuck? Are they doing this on purpose?
OK, so there may be like a dozen ways the LHC can destroy the universe, but seriously, time travel?
Well, yes, according to some Russian scientists. Sure, there are no serious plans in motion to research into building time machines, but who says it has to be deliberate? The discovery of penicillin was a complete accident.

“Oh, shit. Honey, I think I just invented time travel.
The theory is that the LHC might open wormholes with its high-energy collisions that future generations can manipulate for time travelling purposes. Apparently it’s possible that those Swiss eggheads will switch on the machine only to find a naked Arnold Schwarzenegger asking for their clothes.
Risk Level: 7
You may be thinking, “If we get a time machine, and realize it will destroy the universe, then all we’d have to do is travel back in time and destroy the time machine! Easy!”
But then… if we destroyed the time machine, then we wouldn’t be able to go back in time… so the machine would remain intact, in which case we could use it to go back and… Look, we don’t know. Fuck science.

Technology is all about making things smaller, and to that end, right now they’re working on making the smallest things possible. Nanotechnology is the science of making robots that aren’t much bigger than a molecule, and there are lots of reasons for doing it, the biggest being because we fucking can.
Imagine sending a million microscopic machines into a person’s bloodstream programmed to attack a tumor, or shoot the AIDS virus with tiny little phasers. Imagine swarms of little cleaning droids mopping up the pollution in our rivers, or tiny manufacturing droids that can build anything we want, in seconds, molecule-by-molecule.
The big problem is, of course, how you actually build trillions of these little bastards. Simple: you teach them to replicate like cells, using materials from the environment.

Just think about, like, a million of these little fuckers!
What Could Possibly Go Wrong?
K. Eric Drexler, one of the founding fathers of the whole nanotechnology concept, came up with a number of spine-chillingly plausible doomsday scenarios. The problem is our nanobots would be like cellular terminators, much more advanced than any of the pansy-ass creations nature invented. They could out-compete organic life overnight, obliterating it in a frenzy of Darwinism.

A million of these little fuckers!!
Taken to its extreme, we have the scenario affectionately known as the gray goo problem, which speculates the machines would simply start replicating out of control until everything in existence is just a mass of tiny, scuttling robots, which scientists imagine would look like a pile of gray slop floating through the void.
So, Basically It’s Like…
Imagine you meet a magical leprechaun. For a bargain price, he offers to fix up the your house and add an extra room. So you take him home, and he proceeds to eat your house and shit out a hundred and forty more leprechans, which promptly murder you.

How Long Have We Got?
Scientists excitedly assure us that we will have a fully operational murderous death-swarm within twenty years, maybe even as soon as 2010. Right now they’re trying to build something called a fabricator, which from our reading is some kind of indestructible robot swarm-queen built out of diamond, who will give birth to trillions of nanomachines and command them to consume all in their path.
Risk Level: 10
Basically the only thing that will save us from getting transformed into globulets of grey goo in a few years will be if the Large Hadron Collider kills us first.
The 5 Scientific Experiments Most Likely to End the World | Rhetorical Device said on Saturday, March 14, 2009, 21:28
[...] See original here: The 5 Scientific Experiments Most Likely to End the World [...]
There is absolutely nothing to worry about: for at least two reasons (maybe three) 1) Each generation IS a time machine pushing itself into the future. 2) We all live in bodies that can only exist in an atomic universe: Our thoughts live in a hyper-dimensional universe (I call it a Dynamic Information Universe) which means that there is a good possibility our thoughts transcend the atomic universe at the death of our physical bodies; (the reader can try to find me for a full explanation). 3) Due to a corrupt political, economic, religious, social and cultural world system, who cares if everything ceases to exist in this food chain called “The Atomic Universe”? –jws
By the way, “The 5 Scientific Experiments Most Likely to End the World” was a great article. –jws
This was a great article.
Post Hadron firing folk here! They fired it, it worked? we are now here in the mirror Universe, and some of us don’t even realize the difference!
But They BRoke It! And then they went dead silent! Can’t get a word out of them since they unplugged it.
Um, Dan….”Cracked” is cited at the end of the article, therefore, it is not a rip-off.
Great article, even if you did rip it off of Cracked. Lol.
Actually, I know another one that almost ended the human race. A certain biotech company, which shall for legal reasons remain nameless, was experimenting with HIV. One of the things they decided to do was to take the DNA out of the virus, and put it into the shell of bacteria, basically to see what would happen. What they would get would basicly be a bacteria that could give you AIDS. The bright idea? Using the E. Coli bacteria. This bacteria extists in vast numbers in the human gut, and we basically have very little resistance to it, and communicate it back and forth through simple contact.
Fortunately, one of the scientists was discussing the project with a mate at the pub, and was asked the no-brainer “umm…what happens if it gets out of the lab somehow?” The project was shelved, pending the scientists working out an answer that doesn’t involve the anihilation of 99.99% of the human race.
A great article but you need to lose the profanities….
Wow! I have never been so absolutely puzzled in my life. It was as if the author had read the relevant data and research on these topics with the mentality of a Neanderthal. It’s clear that the author can not see beyond his own twisted views of reality, and feels that he must scare people into believing that science is evil. I am ashamed to call this person a fellow human being. I do hope that the author will wake up from the nightmare of what he/she calls thoughts, and actually delve further into the topics in which he/she was writing about. The author may find these topics actually interesting and good for the human race.
I swear, if one more dumb shit passes along his ill-informed rantings about the LHC, I think I will have to hunt them down and kill them. If a single one bothered to actually investigate the crap they keep pushing, maybe they could spare themselves the embarrassment.
Okay, let me explain the difference between the Big Bang, and the LHC. The Big Bang involved (wait for it) EVERY particle in the known universe. The LHC is trying to colide 2 protons – not even entire atoms. (And they haven’t been able to do that yet).
People are so stupid….it’s sad really.
I have it on good source that the LHC actually destroyed our supposedly ‘one and only’ divine universe and instantaneously transmitted our oppositely radiating strings to the apparently adjacent and theoretically semi-real eleventh dimensional universe, in which we are actually shrinking within a given space rather than space expanding away from us, resulting in the death of God and the inevitable isolation of every spirit in its infinitesimal irrelevance. Has anything changed?
That article is hilarious. The swearing made it even more funny. I loved the swearing, that was the best part. More teachers should swear, then maybe kids would listen. Breaking it down for the plebes, albeit from a somewhat fearful standpoint. I understand. I am afraid too. Too often, we seem to just blindly trust in science, when we should be questioning. It is no better to blindly put our faith in science, than it is to blindly put our faith in religions. We should always be questioning. Scientific study is extremely important and useful, but I disagree with the LHC on the grounds that is too wasteful of materials and that we should focus instead our resources primarily on finding solutions to the exponentially growing human population, the current mass extinction of 50% of the world’s species, and our penchant for destroying the planet we rely on in trade for economic gain, while in addition, working to find a more sustainable and workable system for our commerce, a system which is currently causing us to use more resources than nessessary for the sake of profit, and is contributing to the destruction of our ecosphere, our one and only home. Don’t expect science to save us if we destroy and damage the life systems (air, water, earth, plants, animals) on this planet. Although maybe some species will be left, similar to at the end of the pleistocene (90% species extinction), mammals are probably not making it through, especially not upper food chain ones like us. While historically, mass extinctions have taken place over a long period of time, our current extinction is happening at a rate 100 to 1000 times the rate in the fossil record. So, anyway, unless we pretty much forgo our current economic system in favour of something more collaborative that acknowledges the finite nature of the life-sustaining resources on our planet and the fact that we need more than just humans for humans to thrive and survive in our complex ecosystem and interconnected web of life we can pretty much can kiss human life goodbye, Hadron Collider or not, because we are so far “advanced” down the path of destruction. And what with the combined illuminati takeover/control of the masses versus seemingly abundant mass human ignorance and selfishness, I’m not so sure about an ideal worldview coming to fruition. Perhaps. Maybe 10-1 odds. Anyway, I cling on to my hopeless ideals coupled with the pain and misery of existing in a world doomed to die with people too stupid to care, and I get sad, but I also hope that we get our shit together, all EVOLVE at once, and realize what we are doing wrong and what we need to do to change. I think that is the best thing we can do. Fuck the LHC, but if it, or one of these other inventions lead to our destruction, know that it was imminent anyway, and it probably just did us a favour by putting us all out of our misery sooner, thus completing the cycle of life to start anew. Anyway, thanks for your column. It was funny and helped me out of the paranoid daydream that is reality for one minute. Thanks for everything, you’ve been great.
Regarding the last comment…
“Blindly put our faith in science”. If you do that, it isn’t science.
It’s hard to take you seriously if you don’t understand what the word science means, and then go on a convoluted rant. Isn’t there some kind of character limit to stop people like this from doing just that?
Sam, what’s your point?
My point is that if you put your faith in science, then you have the wrong idea of what science is.
You forgot the black hole LHC can also create.
Maybe God himself had to break LHC because it was not consistent with His plans?
Time travel into the past will enter into a universe in which it is/was possible. Since the multiverse is an infinite set of possible universes, time travel to the past will be to this possible universe, identical in all ways to the present universe except that time travel occurred. This likewise eliminates the problem of a “paradox”. At least, that’s what I read. Otherwise, I say fuk it…
Brainiac, the LHC can’t create a black hole. Go study. Am I on Candid Camera or are you really this stupid? No, really, do you know what a black hole is?
Oh, and pariah, you’re a piece of work. Did you just jumble up a bunch of science words and phrases together and write your post? Do you have ANY ideas you’re trying to convey, because you just sound like you’ve smoked too much dope. Seriously, I know people who sound like that, and it’s all because of their pot habits. (I’m not trying to be funny, although it might seem like it).
Seriously, you guys can’t understand that the article was written to be humorous?
Are you that entranced by WOW?