Robin Hanson, <rhanson@gmu.edu>, writes:
> The 11/99 Scientific American has an article on "The Fate
> of Life in the Universe", by L. Krauss and G. Starkman.
>
> Abstract: "Billions of years ago the universe was too hot for
> life to exist. Countless eons hence, it will become so cold
> and emplty that life, no matter how ingenious, will perish."
>
> They cite their preprint: http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/astro-ph/9902189
Lawrence Krauss BTW is the author of the best seller, The Physics of Star Trek.
They also mention that perhaps wormholes and basement universes could offer life some new avenues of escape, but Tipler claims to have closed those off as well.
Their abstract and some of the statements in their paper can be read to suggest that they are claiming life is ultimately limited in all universe geometries, but I exchanged email with Krauss and he clarified that they are only talking about permanently-expanding universes.
Krauss said that he was "generally aware" of Tipler's work, but he was skeptical of Tipler's idea that a Big Crunch could provide an infinite amount of computation in a finite time.
Hal