1. Tenure-Chasing Supplants Substantive Contributions — Art48
In the math profession one achieves favorable results through a convergent sequence of mistakes — jgill
Converging in what sense? From what I understand is converging on the correct answer by process of elimination (series of errors). I feel this is not just applicable to maths but across the board. Probability underlies most of not all interactions/processes right? — Benj96
'The sage' as a philosophical archetype, one who'sees things as they truly are' not in the narrow sense required by the precise sciences, but as a general grasp or insight into the imperfection of our sensory knowledge — Wayfarer
We are human, mistakes are both inevitable and necessary - to learn from — Benj96
My question would then be, why is the government and military so untrustworthy that civilians feel that gun ownership is a requirement to feel safe/protected? — Benj96
that the enemy, finally seen, turns out to be us — green flag
Stay away from this guy. Throw yourself into adventure. — jgill
Zapffe was a climber ! — green flag
This is a tragic break in nature, as Zapffe clearly laid out — schopenhauer1
That story could have turned out very differently! It makes me wonder about what happened leading up to the story that brought together a fourteen year old, a mafioso, and a frequently fired stolen gun — Fooloso4
I know and confess that I'm caught in this game of playing the hero, and that's how I play the hero. — green flag
The majority of people favor gun control. — Fooloso4
Well, if jgill cant help . . . — universeness
He is arguing against the ultimate reality of objects in spacetime — Art48
This reminded me of a discussion that apokrisis participated in — T Clark
In Wikipedia Mark A. Bedau observes:
Although strong emergence is logically possible, it is uncomfortably like magic. How does an irreducible but supervenient downward causal power arise, since by definition it cannot be due to the aggregation of the micro-level potentialities?
Downward causation does not occur by direct causal effects from higher to lower levels of system organisation. Instead, downward causation occurs indirectly because the mechanisms at higher levels of organisation fail to accomplish the tasks dictated by the lower levels of organisation. As a result, inputs from the environment signal to the mechanisms at lower levels of organisation that something is wrong and therefore, to act.
What I'm arguing is that there is no existence without mind and that the nature of the universe outside any mind is unintelligible and unknowable. That's why I keep referring to the book Mind and the Cosmic Order, which is not a philosophy book, but a book about neural modelling — Wayfarer
Suppose, instead, that there is a measurement at the slits — Andrew M
Time, therefore, elides the multi-forms of creation into a universal oneness of blissful wholeness. — ucarr
The wave function in quantum mechanics evolves deterministically according to the Schrödinger equation as a linear superposition of different states. However, actual measurements always find the physical system in a definite state. Any future evolution of the wave function is based on the state the system was discovered to be in when the measurement was made, meaning that the measurement "did something" to the system that is not obviously a consequence of Schrödinger evolution — ”Wiki: Measurement problem
I apologize for the muddled message. It was not intended as a formal mathematical definition, but more like a poetic metaphor of mirrored universes — Gnomon
Is scientific Cosmology trespassing in the domain of Theology, when it tries to explain the implicit existence of a mathematical point-of-convergence (zero point singularity) between Space-Time and Infinity-Eternity? — Gnomon
If humanity were to vanish and the potential of rational beings extinguished, so would go the potentials of mathematics - or not? — jgill
Any rational sentient beings would presumably make some of the same discoveries. That’s the meaning of ‘true in all possible worlds.’ — Wayfarer
Can't have one without the other though. — Wayfarer
I think it's useful since we are observers. At any rate, since our understanding of quantum mechanics is incomplete, there's going to be differences of opinion on the best way to talk about it. — Andrew M
If you do lose your quantum car keys, you can just call your local quantum mechanic. — Andrew M
Who could be anywhere :lol: — Wayfarer
Measurement results a physical fact (in interpretations with physical collapse), and observation results in knowledge of that fact. — noAxioms
Except maybe the measurement dials! — Andrew M
The US followed an insidious path to a now intractable problem. — Banno
So it's likely that the huge numbers of guns in circulation in the US and the extraordinary number of gunshot deaths, becomes, as I said, a vicious circle — Wayfarer
I don't know wtf I'm talking about, jgill, but somebody with real QM chops is bound to come along who can talk mathematical physics to a mathematician. :sweat: — 180 Proof
In more recent years, a sort of cowboy fascist gun, don't tread on me, anti-government, etc. culture has developed in various parts of the country--mostly rural areas. A lot of these yokels are anti-urban. — BC
Particle physicists refer to worldlines (or many-worlds branchings) and statistical mechanics refer to entropy gradients — 180 Proof