180 Proof
:up:It is not a material substance, but the matter-energy equivalence has been demonstrated in Einstein’s famous equation e=mc2. Ghosts are in no way measurable or observable whatever. So the comparison is fatuous. — Wayfarer
:up:All due respect, I don’t think you
[@Gnomon] demonstrate understanding of the sources you’re quoting.
Gnomon
My point is not that potential EnFormAction (EFA) is thermodynamic Energy, but that Energy is merely one form of Universal Causation*1. which is an abstract concept : an idea. You seem to be taking my analogies literally. But the Map is not the Terrain. So, pardon the riposte, but your physicalist interpretation of EFA is "fatuous". I would expect that from 180poopoo, but not from you.The point remains that energy is an abstract but universal, constant, and predictable property of matter - precisely measurable to minute degrees of accuracy. It is not a material substance, but the matter-energy equivalence has been demonstrated in Einstein’s famous equation e=mc2. Ghosts are in no way measurable or observable whatever. So the comparison is fatuous. — Wayfarer
180 Proof
:lol:180poopoo — Gnomon
:sparkle: woo-of-the-gaps supernaturalia :sweat:Ghosts are in no way measurable or observable whatever. So the comparison is fatuous.
— Wayfarer
I compared Energy to ghosts ... measurable effects of spirits (e.g. ectoplasm) despite their being invisible & intangible & immaterial ... I do believe that the mental concept of Souls, havingdemonstrable[subjective, hallucinatory] effects on bodies ...
Gnomon
"Scientific facts change because science is a dynamic process of discovery, not a static collection of absolute truths"The point being that Energy is an Idea (mental inference), not a real thing (physical observation) — Gnomon
This is simply mistaken. Drop that phrase into Google Gemini and see what comes back. No amount of verbalisation is going to alter the facts. — Wayfarer
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.