Actually general relativity has been demonstrated to be extremely limited. It is not applicable at the very small scale, quantum level, and it is not applicable at the very large scale where the existence of dark matter is called for. It has a very narrow range of applicability which is closely limited to the human sphere of spatial-temporal activity. Since we are human beings, living in that very narrow spatial-temporal zone of activity, the theory is very useful to us. But since the applicability of the theory is limited to this very narrow range, we can be sure that it does not provide a true representation. — Metaphysician Undercover
Anyway, in my view, the notion of causality is an outmoded physicalist way of modeling the universe that simply refers to repeatable sequences of events that are actually computed instead of caused in any physical mechanistic sense. At this point I'll probably turn my attention to another thread. Thanks guys for the interesting discussion! — Edgar L Owen
Another intractable problem with determinism is it implies a block time/block universe theory in which everything is predetermined in advance of it happening. How, pray tell, is a causally determined universe created prior to the actual causality that creates it? See the problem? — Edgar L Owen
In reality objective existence is not viewd on, has no perspective, no focus, is without POV, without an angle.
— Haglund
But that statement certainly is. Namely, a sophomoric, silly perspective. Which happens to be complete nonsense. — Xtrix
But there wasn't ever nothing. There was a god, if you claim that one of these properties of god is being eternal, but if not then how did god come from nothing? How does something come from nothing? You see, this is what happens every time I engage with the religious. Nothing but mental gymnastics that end up collapsing in on themselves without having said anything constructive, reasonable or understandable. — Harry Hindu
How is it different? — Harry Hindu
Then you are claiming to know the mind of god? You seem to be afflicted by delusions of grandeur. — Harry Hindu
Is the universe a teleological effect or a scientific effect of this teleological cause? — Harry Hindu
In order to find a loophole in the experiment, the hidden variable must include the experimenter. — PhilosophyRunner
Gods would be the cause of a universe in which life develops. — Harry Hindu
You didn't make a distinction between your reasons and the reasons. Now that you have you are basically admitting that the reasons are subjective, therefore no one can ever be wrong about the reason for which they believe. — Harry Hindu
The observation of the universe is simply evidence that the universe exists, not what caused it to exist. What caused it to exist and where would we find the evidence of its cause? What would the evidence look like? — Harry Hindu
Good observation, but the whole question of whether such relations can be described as 'logical' is what is at issue in this thread. — Wayfarer
You can’t have culture without existing. Rocks exist too— they have no culture. — Xtrix
The spin orientation of both particles are not locally determined when the particles are created. That is the whole point of the Bell tests. The particle does not locally "know" what its spin is at creation. We have good experimental data to support this. — PhilosophyRunner
Pure gibberish. — 180 Proof
There is no 'faster than light' signal between particles. In the spin orientation example the spin orientations of both particles are determined when the particles are created. Must be for the spin orientation of the two particles to be conserved — Edgar L Owen
Elementary particles contain the complete data of what they are. — Edgar L Owen
Then we will understand why the god posit was wrong. — universeness
So yes, machines, for instance, "have perspectives" (e.g. CCTV, neural net facial recognition systrm, radar array, JWST, etc). — 180 Proof
Determinism is perhaps the most useless philosophy. Does not mean it is wrong, but useless. — PhilosophyRunner
Note there are NO physical variables for any notion of causation in any scientific equation. — Edgar L Owen
We can see this in modern physics and cosmology with the general relativity theory. At the very small, local scale, quantum mechanics, the theory fails. Also, at the very large scale, it produces anomalies when dealing with cosmological spatial expansion. The anomalies are dealt with by positing things like dark matter and dark energy. (The dragon accounts for the failings in the predictions, because it has a mind of its own and doesn't follow the law every single time, exceptions to the rule). The desire to hang on to the theory, despite its failings produces the trickery. — Metaphysician Undercover
Indeed what causes this distinction, (quantum vs. classic) is a mystery in physics. — Josh Alfred
Everything is a mental construction. Everything subjective. There’s no such thing as truth. Nothing exists. Everything changes— but change isn’t a thing. — Xtrix
And what’s the argument, exactly? That nothing exists, that everything is a mental construction, or that any proposition or truth is impossible? — Xtrix