I think I have. I know what space and time are, their basic constituents, the forces between them, the nature of dark matter and dark energy, etc. What more is there to know?) — EugeneW
Why favor it? Because I ultimately take the side of Plato and Nietzsche. — Xtrix
The goal isn't to make everything the same. — Xtrix
The goal is to optimize those differences. I think of basketball as an example -- many different roles of the team. — Xtrix
It takes into account all people, and gives all an opportunity to flourish in their own capacities. Thus, an "aristocracy" in the sense of a class of people -- in Plato's sense, the philosopher-kings -- devoted to the task of governing. But they don't have it easy. It is earned, and through a long period of training -- and through a rather ascetic lifestyle — Xtrix
All systems tend to oligarchy.... combined with.... noblesse oblige. — ChatteringMonkey
Now we nominally have democracy, but in practice power seems to be in the hands of a few capitalists anyway — ChatteringMonkey
So even though the system was supposed to be something else, we still ended up with some type of oligarchy.
The difference then is that now the oligarchy consists of nameless capitalists who have no public image or values to uphold, because 'technically' they aren't even in power — ChatteringMonkey
Aristocrats at least has a reputation and values to uphold by virtue of the official position they hold. — ChatteringMonkey
If we need to have an oligarchy, aristocracy would seem to be one of the better versions of that. — ChatteringMonkey
It says 'loosely based'. Rovelli certainly has the physics part down, but not having read his works, I don't know if he's explored the philosophical implications of his ontology, such as that of identity for example. — noAxioms
A rock can take a measurement and collapse the wave function of some non-rock system just fine, all without actually observing or knowing anything. — noAxioms
With that we seem to both agree. It implies that a wavefunction has a location (which I would not have intuitively suggested), and that a wavefunction of a distant system relative to 'here' is nevertheless 'here'. — noAxioms
I would not have said that spatially systems can 'interact' since I consider a system to be essentially an event and not say a worldline like Rovelli implies. We obviously differ on this point, but I can drive the worldline view to contradiction, a philosophical problem which seems not to concern Rovelli, being a physicist mostly interested in empirical consistency.
Two events cannot 'interact' since that would require each to be in the other's past light cone — noAxioms
Did I suggest anything along those lines? — noAxioms
Perhaps you can recommend some Rovelli vids, even though I don't usually get my science from videos. Then I can point out places where I might not agree with Rovelli. — noAxioms
They tend to favor aristocracy. So do I — but in the very long term. — Xtrix
How would adequate proof look like? — EugeneW
You seem to identify religion with powerful gods threatening people. — EugeneW
Maybe they created the universe accidentally. And just moved on after the accident, without caring for the ones involved in the accident. — EugeneW
The universe itself is proof. Dunno why they don't show themselves. Maybe they do but we don't see — EugeneW
How does one know there is no god behind a lightning strike? — EugeneW
I mean an artificial vessel. The Bolzmann universe encompasses infinite regression, which solves nothing.. It was invented by Bolzmann in relation to entropy. If the whole universe could exist as a fluctuation then in that fluctuation a thermal equilibrium would evolve which could result in a fluctuation of a universe, etcetera. Brains just involve a process leading to them and any attempt to create them must involve the whole universe. — EugeneW
Isn't it always better to bet they exist? What you gotta loose? — EugeneW
Hope nobody heard or saw this. Did Pascal gamble with his life regarding the existence of gods? How can you wager your life on that? If they don't exist, I will drop dead? If they do exist then the other might drop dead? How can you know who wins the wage? — EugeneW
But I know a brain can't be contained in a vessel, no matter what SF fantasies show. — EugeneW
It is claimed that robots and AI are the next step in evolution. — EugeneW
What is Pascal's wager? — EugeneW
In truth I suspect that everything is merely a creation of my imagination in an effort to keep me amused. There is nothing until I perceive it to exist, or to have existed, in order to enrich my experience of my imagined reality. Time is meaningless as there is no context in which it would be valid. There is only me.
Imaginationism — Book273
Maybe God will show up to transport us instantaneously.. — EugeneW
These are just fantasies, like gods are — EugeneW
Difference being that gods are real while these fantasies stay fantasies. — EugeneW
Are you serious? Don't get carried away by those ideas. The next step in evolution is not how we engineer it — EugeneW
Alcubierre's drive and wormholes don't work, even in theory. — EugeneW
A transhuman? Our follow up in evolution? — EugeneW
I'm not trying to convey Rovelli's views. I've not read the work you name. But the view is at least loosely based on his concept, but driven to its logical conclusion. — noAxioms
That's a poor representation of Rovelli's interpretation — noAxioms
I've not read the work you name — noAxioms
I have no idea what age they would be in relation to you at their point of return.
— universeness
If you travel at lightspeed through the galaxy for 8.673 years around the planetary system at near the speed of light and return on Earth, you will have aged about one week. So many passed Thursdays vs. one — EugeneW
I do think that I’m using the words in precisely the way you outlined. Meaning that I use the word “sweet” to say that the truth is the best thing. I don’t even know what feeling “sweet” would mean — Average
Maybe people are bitter but the truth is not — Average
But let me ask you this would you prefer to be blissfully ignorant or the opposite? — Average
I won’t criticize you or call you silly for believing that the truth can be bitter. — Average
The universe (as a whole) doesn't need an origin story, lacking anything that measures the universe. That would require an external observer. — noAxioms
By definition, there can be no such observer. Any such observer would be part of the universe.
I grant that similar to a simple quantum system in a thought experiment, the structure of the entire universe can be considered from 'outside', but that's different than measuring. No wave function collapse results from objective analysis of a wavefunction of some closed system. — noAxioms
That's a poor representation of Rovelli's interpretation. It makes it sound like humans or things that 'observe' make any difference, which couldn't be further from what he says — noAxioms
Exactly, except I'd not have used the word 'observer'. Measurer maybe. — noAxioms
The universe (as a whole) doesn't need an origin story, lacking anything that measures the universe. That would require an external observer. Internal interaction only results in self-consistent state.
Rovelli says no system can measure itself, which doesn't mean I can't see my arms, but it means the cat in the box cannot collapse its own wave function relative to the observer outside the box. The live cat cannot measure dead parts despite being in superposition of being dead and alive. — noAxioms
Does the term skeuomorphic ontology mean anything to you? Any sense can be applied to both of these words — Watchmaker
The truth is never bitter my friend. It is the sweetest thing there is — Average
Isn't it that we could slow the v to zero meters (or miles) per second. The result is still zero, but not because velocity is equal to light speed. Trying to understand this part — Caldwell
Nothing can be faster than speed of light. Hence, Star Trek — Caldwell
What organizations have you found to be working on these issues? — Xtrix
It's Thursdayism -- time dilation. — Caldwell
I take more of a relational view, like RQM (Rovelli). — noAxioms
X exists relative to Y iff Y measures X. But there is no meaning to X exists or Y exists since it isn't expressed as a relation. — noAxioms
