I dont see a cardinality though in the grains of sand. Unless the set of all grains of sand (green and blue) has a higher cardinality than the set of green grains? — Punshhh
I think this is as far as I can go in abstract mathematics, my interest is more in the direction of maths in the real world or where it is to be found, or relevant in/to existence. — Punshhh
Yes, but numbers are ideas, so susceptible to human frailty. An alien, or a monkey, can count the grains of sand and can only come to the same conclusion, because they are not ideas. — Punshhh
Let's say there is an infinite amount of grains of green sand and there is also an infinite amount of grains of blue sand, both exist. We know that if we theoretically count them as one group infinity + infinity and that we will then have an infinite amount of grains of sand, which we know are green and blue, but which are still seperate, because we are only imagining them as grouped together. Now let's imagine we mix them up so that they are all randomly mixed in together, a set of an infinite amount of grains of sand, of undefined colours. Now we could theoretically sort through this set and put all the green ones in one place and all the blue in another until we are back were we started. So we have subtracted an infinite quantity from an infinite quantity. — Punshhh
According to the Wikipedia article above: — Wayfarer
Oddly enough perhaps, if we consider a world comprised of just 1 thing (whatever that may be, and assuming that makes any sense), then only "0" and "1" exist in such a world. — jorndoe
General relativity didn't predict the big bang, that idea was first developed by Georges Lemaître in a paper called 'The primeval atom'. — Wayfarer
But nevertheless, it was George leMaitre who first introduced the concept of the Big Bang, it wasn't introduced by Einstein. According to Wikipedia, the gap between LeMaitre's original paper, and the paper that introduced the Big Bang theory was actually 3 years (1927 and 1930), not thirty. (It's also interesting that Einstein is said to have exclaimed after one of LeMaitre's presentations that '"This is the most beautiful and satisfactory explanation of creation to which I have ever listened', although the provenance of the quote is contested.) — Wayfarer
What I said was that it is impossible to 'wind the clock back' to the singularity, because at that point, there were no actual laws, nor time and space. That, I believe, is a fact. — Wayfarer
General relativity didn't predict the big bang, that idea was first developed by Georges Lemaître in a paper called 'The primeval atom'. When it was first floated, Einstein and many others resisted the idea. — Wayfarer
According to the theory of relativity
Science doesn't 'describe reality', it describes phenomena and their causes — Wayfarer
The point I'm making simply is that science doesn't explain scientific law — Wayfarer
So if you're looking for a 'first cause' in the sense postulated by what science means by 'cause', then you're never going to find one, because to find a cause, in the scientific sense, means that the causal relations of which 'a law' is an instance, already exist. — Wayfarer
n the scientific sense, means that the causal relations of which 'a law' is an instance, already exist. That is why, as I understand it, physics can 'rewind the tape' of the Big Bang to within an infinitesmal of the singularity, but never to it - even in principle. — Wayfarer
Right! That is related to the point at issue. Science (or natural philosophy) assumes 'lawful regularity' as the basis of its explanations. Discovering those regularities and making predictions on that basis, is a very large part of what science does. But science doesn't explain those regularities, although it might speculate about their origin - which is what we're doing here. So the kind of cause that science is concerned with is a cause in terms of combinations of factors and antecedents - what are called in Aristotelean terms 'efficient causes'. Whereas this kind of question concerns formal causes, which I don't think has a counterpart in much scientific thinking. — Wayfarer
Not true, because causation 'as we know it', if scientific causation is the yardstick, which it appears to be, based on your definition, this doesn't recognize formal and final causes. What, for example, causes the laws of motion to have the values they do, and not have some other values, is not a scientific question. — Wayfarer
Actually initial conditions of the past cannot be determined with any current models. — m-theory
And I refer you again to Hanson's experiments from last year which demonstrate, according to his testimony, non-locality.
Also, there's this: Non-locality in Quantum Field Theory due to General Relativity
The simple fact is that, contrary to your claim, experiments have supported nonlocality and sane physicists do reject locality. — Michael
What about Anton Zeilinger's 2010 experiment? — Michael
He's right that MW is local, but he's wrong about the rest, so I think my point stands. — Michael
Hanson's experiment rules out local hidden variable theories but not local realism. — Andrew M
In particular, it doesn't rule out Many-Worlds since Many-Worlds doesn't involve any action or communication between entangled particles. — Andrew M
I don't know how, but that's that the scientist in charge said it did. — Michael
What about last year's loophole-free Bell test that apparently supports quantum nonlocality? — Michael
Yes it is confusing because Bell's theorem isn't a theory but rather a statement of incompatibility between a set of assumptions. Physicists who endorse the empirical and theoretical validity of QM seldom endorse assumptions (3) and (4) in Tom's table. — Pierre-Normand
So I'm right to be confused with the claim that these are axioms of the theory? — Michael
Bell's theorem just is the statement that the statistical predictions of QM are inconsistent with all local hidden variable theories. — Pierre-Normand
Intuitively, space is the nearest physical concept I have. — bert1
You state that as a fact which it is not. The weight of modern scholarship is very much against you on this point. — Barry Etheridge
From my panpsychist point of view it is reality-as-continuum (as opposed to reality as plurality of discrete bits) that is the experiencer. — bert1
You are misunderstanding Bell's statement. Bell's theorem is derived from the assumption of local hidden variables — Pierre-Normand
I have never heard of any axiom of free will in quantum mechanics. — m-theory
There is a way to escape the inference of superluminal speeds and spooky action at a distance. But it involves absolute determinism in the universe, the complete absence of free will. Suppose the world is super-deterministic, with not just inanimate nature running on behind-the-scenes clockwork, but with our behavior, including our belief that we are free to choose to do one experiment rather than another, absolutely predetermined, including the “decision” by the experimenter to carry out one set of measurements rather than another, the difficulty disappears. There is no need for a faster than light signal to tell particle A what measurement has been carried out on particle B, because the universe, including particle A, already “knows” what that measurement, and its outcome, will be.
I think it is important to point out that no classical or modern theory gives us a good account of initial conditions of the past.
Not GR or the standard model.
If they did, then sure you could claim they were deterministic. — m-theory
But GR and the standard model do not predict the past initial conditions, we still cannot claim to know nor do we have a complete account of the initial conditions. — m-theory
Then it should be very easy for you to write a valid deduction that demonstrates that. Yet despite repeated requests, you have not done that.
I assume you are aware that 'Well then show me how P could be true!' is not a deduction of not-P. If it were, Goldbach's conjecture and most other unsolved conjectures of mathematics would be solved. — andrewk
Well, if we accept the free will theorem, and if free will requires consciousness, then it seems that panpsychism is consistent with the laws of physics. — Michael
But anyways, it does seem like a logical conclusion once you acknowledge that qualia simply has to be fundamental and cannot be an emergent phenomenon. — Weeknd
Except that is exactly what happens in one of the most famous optical illusions. We simply do not see an exact map of the photons received at the retina. — Barry Etheridge