God does not play dice with the universe. — Albert Einstein
Archaeological digs of settlements dating back to Neolithic times have revealed a disproportionately high density of heel bones of sheep or other animals among the shattered pottery and flints that are usually found in sites that humans once inhabited. These bones are in fact ancestors of my casino dice. When thrown, these bones naturally land on one of four sides. Often there are letters or numbers carved into the bones. Rather than gambling, these early dice are thought to have been used for divination. And this connection between the outcome of a roll of a dice and the will of the gods is one that has persisted for centuries. Knowledge of how the dice would land was believed to be something that transcended human understanding. It's outcome was in the lap of gods. — Marcus du Sautoy (What We Cannot Know)
g/G is the dice — 180 Proof
'Order' is in the eye of the beholder, that is, an aspect of disorder (chaos) we happen to be 'mapping' – like 'seeing' faces in clouds – just as a 'whirlpool' is an emergent aspect of a storming sea. — 180 Proof
So there is nothing but models of models of models ad infinitum>? — Yohan
Reality is the standard by which we measure if something is consistent or not.
What ever is consistent with reality, is true. Whatever is not, is false. — Yohan
Does anything ever repeat? I doubt it. However, I suspect core principles, and reality itself at its core, don't change.What do you mean by consistent? Because if you mean repeatable then I’m afraid there are myriad examples of phenomenon and things in the universe that can never be repeated more than once. That doesn’t make them false just exceedingly rare or “unique”. — Benj96
Are you saying we have a model of reality, and then theories about the model? And the model is constructed based on experience and interpretation, and experience is something internal and cannot be know-ably of external origin?Then the models can be tentatively presumed to correspond to what is now labelled reality. — magritte
Are you saying we have a model of reality — Yohan
What do we observe? Order. Ergo, it's got to be either God or Chance. Here's where it gets interesting. Our observation of order in the universe can't distinguish between God and Chance. — TheMadFool
That means, God is just another name for Chance and the converse is true as well, Chance is God's alias. Atheism and Theism are one and the same thing!
That reasoning does not work. — Cuthbert
All this is very nice and I found a lot of good arguments. However, the subject of order vs. randomity in the universe seems quite debatable, as well as how someone perceives one or the other. So I am not going to get involved in it, but only remind us that Einstein has also stated that "God Plays Dice with the Universe" in a letter regading his issues with quantum theory. The context and conditions in which these statements were made were different, of course. But they show the debatability of the subject — Alkis Piskas
Whether Einstein, eh, I mean God, plays dice or not! :grin:What exactly is it that you find "debatable" about chaos and order? — TheMadFool
Whether Einstein, eh, I mean God, plays dice or not! :grin: — Alkis Piskas
Note: Maybe physicists know better? I am not good in Physics ... so I can't take part in the debate! — Alkis Piskas
First of all, I said that jokingly. (Didn't you see the laughing emoji?) Second, it's not that irrelevant as you say, since we are talking about order vs disorder. I remind you that your question was"What exactly is it that you find "debatable" about chaos and order?" Besides, it is you who brought up the concept of "God" in real terms (literally), based on Einstein's statement, altghough, as I mentioned, he used "God" metaphorically.Whether Einstein, eh, I mean God, plays dice or not! :grin:
— Alkis Piskas
Irrelevant! — TheMadFool
Well, it's my turn now: "Irrelevant!"Physics is (becoming) a branch of mathematics. — TheMadFool
"Irrelevant!"
(Really, how does this statement relate to anything else in here? Who has said anything about mathematics?) — Alkis Piskas
First of all, I said that jokingly. (Didn't you see the laughing emoji?) Second, it's not that irrelevant as you say, since we are talking about order vs disorder. I remind you that your question was"What exactly is it that you find "debatable" about chaos and order?" Besides, it is you who brought up the concept of "God" in real terms (literally), based on Einstein's statement, altghough, as I mentioned, he used "God" metaphorically. — Alkis Piskas
Anyway, whether God is involved in the order of the universe or not, we have to bring in physics, and in particullar, quantum physics. So, regarding always my "debatable", here is something interesting from Prof. Alan Tennant, who has won the Europhysics Prize:
"Prof. Tennant remarks on the perfect harmony found in quantum uncertainty instead of disorder. ‘Such discoveries are leading physicists to speculate that the quantum, atomic scale world may have its own underlying order. Similar surprises may await researchers in other materials in the quantum critical state.'"
"If there’s an underlying order in the quantum world, that would be a rather significant philosophical shift. So I’m guessing this meaning of this result is going to be rather highly debated."
(https://entangledstates.org/2010/01/09/golden-ratio-observed-in-quantum-states/):
Do you see now what debate I am talking about? However, I can't go further than this, because as I already told you, I have little knowledge of physics. — Alkis Piskas
Physics is (becoming) a branch of mathematics.
— TheMadFool
Well, it's my turn now: "Irrelevant!"
(Really, how does this statement relate to anything else in here? Who has said anything about mathematics?) — Alkis Piskas
->
— TheMadFool
What's that? — Banno
What do we observe? Order. Ergo, it's got to be either God or Chance. — TheMadFool
The early founders of the Scientific Revolution in the seventeenth century — such as Galileo, Boyle, Descartes and Newton — were deeply religious men, for whom the belief in the wise and benign Creator was the premise behind their investigations into lawfulness of nature. However, while they remained loyal to the theistic premises of Christian faith, the drift of their thought severely attenuated the organic connection between the divine and the natural order, a connection so central to the premodern world view. They retained God only as the remote Creator and law-giver of Nature and sanctioned moral values as the expression of the Divine Will, the laws decreed for man by his Maker. In their thought a sharp dualism emerged between the transcendent sphere and the empirical world. The realm of "hard facts" ultimately consisted of units of senseless matter governed by mechanical laws, while ethics, values and ideals were removed from the realm of facts and assigned to the sphere of an interior subjectivity.
It was only a matter of time until, in the trail of the so-called Enlightenment, a wave of thinkers appeared who overturned the dualistic thesis central to this world view in favor of the straightforward materialism. This development was not a following through of the reductionistic methodology to its final logical consequences. Once sense perception was hailed as the key to knowledge and quantification came to be regarded as the criterion of actuality, the logical next step was to suspend entirely the belief in a supernatural order and all it implied. Hence finally an uncompromising version of mechanistic materialism prevailed, whose axioms became the pillars of the new world view. Matter is now the only ultimate reality, and divine principle of any sort dismissed as sheer imagination. — Bhikkhu Bodhi
'Order' is in the eye of the beholder, that is, an aspect of disorder (chaos) we happen to be 'mapping' – like 'seeing' faces in clouds – just as a 'whirlpool' is an emergent aspect of a storming sea — 180 Proof
Buddhists don't worship a creator God, but they have no trouble acknowledging there's an order to nature. They also believe there is karma, the results of intentional actions, which in their view is a natural moral law that has consequences beyond the individual's current existence. But there's no God in their belief system required to underwrite that. — Wayfarer
Je n'avais pas besoin de cette hypothèse-là. ("I had no need of that hypothesis). — Pierre-Simon Laplace
[...]divine principle of any sort dismissed as sheer imagination.
— Bhikkhu Bodhi — Wayfarer
However, there is/has to be difference between answering the question, "whence this order?" with chance and simply refusing to answer the question (Noble Silence, the Buddha). — TheMadFool
karma being moral cause and effect. Rather, or for some, too scientific don't you think? — TheMadFool
A video on youtube reports that the solar system is unstable - the earth is drifting, only by a few centimeters every million years or so, away from the sun and our dear ol' moon is doing the same, inching away from the earth. — TheMadFool
Fundamental constants are finely tuned for life. A remarkable fact about our universe is that physical constants values needed to allow for complex structures, including living things. Steven Weinberg, Martin Rees, Leonard Susskind contend that an exotic multiverse provides a tidy explanation for this apparent coincidence: if all possible value enough collection of universes, then viable ones for life will surely be found somewhere. — George Ellis, Does the Multiverse Exist? Scientific American Aug 2011
To my knowledge, the question of whether the Universe was ordered was never put to the Buddha. It was not one of questions he declined to answer, because he wasn't asked it. — Wayfarer
But really I think it's a specious comparison, I don't think it's a scientific principle in the modern sense. — Wayfarer
exotic multiverse — George Ellis, Does the Multiverse Exist? Scientific American Aug 2011
Tell me what the definition of identical means. — TheMadFool
Take a walk outside the philosophy studio for a minute. — Cuthbert
I am not the same as my brother. Now go back inside. Whatever account of identity we come up with it has to be consistent with that. If we come up with a meaning for 'the same as' in which I'm the same as my brother, we've gone obviously wrong. And not going obviously wrong can often be as good as it gets in philosophy. Sometimes even that it out of reach. — Cuthbert
Please, be a jolly chap again! It's much mor fun! :grin:Sorry, I'm bad at humor. I used to be a jolly chap until I discoverd fate had other plans for me. — TheMadFool
OK, I admit I disregarded this. My bad!Order insofar as my argument is concerned is only a representative of the category of evidence that makes theists go, God! — TheMadFool
It may well be so! (And I see you got your humor back!)Ergo, you're barking up the wrong tree :grin: — TheMadFool
I am not enamored with physics. On the contrary, I generally dislike physics (school trauma!).You seem to be enamored of physics as if physicists are privy to information mathematicians are not — TheMadFool
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