Simple. The intent lies within the cause of the equation themselves - Schrödinger. Why else would you call it the Schrödinger equation if not for the intent of Schrödinger himself when coming up with the equation. Wherever you find a statement, or law, you will find intent, for as far as I know, only people write statements and laws. Did Schrödinger design the universe to behave a certain way, or did he just write some equation that represents the way the universe behaves in a certain way? — Harry Hindu
Okay, so you mean something else with the second use of the term, "law", than you mean with the first use. Like I said, I dislike the use of the term, "law" when referring to the way things are. There is no underlying code, or rules for the way things are. There is simply the way things are and our representation of the way things are with language and math (laws). — Harry Hindu
"And no, the principle of demarcation isn't physical law". — Michael Ossipoff
You are not a serious person. Thanks for clearing that up. — tom
Metaphysics is defined by the Principle of Demarcation, so yes Metaphysics is defined precisely by physical law.
There is no direct way to use or test a principle. — tom
.I don't think reincarnation or resurrection…
Reincarnation is incompatible with Materialism because within the beliefs of Materialists, there’s no way that it would or could happen.…, for that matter, are logically incompatible with materialism.
..
But they are both incompatible with present human understanding of the physical
.; there is no conceivable mechanism by which they could be actualities.
.So, I don't say that it is definitive that they are not actualities, or that there could not possibly be an immaterial soul or non-physical mental tendencies…
.all I am saying is that I cannot see any reliable evidence that would compel me to believe in such things.
.I don't believe in a soul separate from the body. But I've amply described how the person, unconscious at some stage of death-shutdown, but still retaining his/her subconscious wants, needs, predispositions and attributes, thereby remains someone who is the protagonist of a life-experience possibility-story. There is a life-experience possibility-story about that person.
.
Another thing that s/he retains is an orientation toward the future and life.
.
If that sounds fantastic, I remind you that it's also fantastic that you're in a life now. Why are you? Why did it start?
.What you are describing just sounds like somewhat wildly imaginative speculation to me. I haven't seen you provide any evidence to support it.
.From the fact that it might be "fantastic" that I'm "in a life" now, it does not seem to follow that some other fantastic story is therefore true.
.I wouldn't put it that way, in any case' I would say that life is mysterious because we don't know how it originated. It's also possible that it will remain a mystery.
.When faced with that mystery we can be drawn to religious faith or we can sustain a hopeful faith that science will one day explain it all.
.I tend more towards the former;
.but for me faith is more of a feeling for the indeterminate than a set of determinate fundamentalistic…
.propositions which take forms like 'we are reincarnated' or 'we are resurrected'
.…or 'we repeat the same life over and over' (some form of "eternal recurrence" with or without variations) and so on.
You don't know? Then it isn't justified to draw convinced-conclusion about it.
.
Then is it so implausible that, if the reason why it started remains at the end of this life, then the same reason will have the same result?
.
As I've said, I don't have proof of reincarnation. I doubt that proof is possible. But it is implied or predicted from a plausible, reasonable explanation for this life, and by an uncontroversial metaphysics.
.
.There doesn't have to be a "reason why it started"
., that demand may just reflect a human need to project beyond its relevant ambit a requirement for the kinds of explanations we need to navigate the empirical domain.
.I haven't seen anything that convinces me that reincarnation is "implied or predicted from a plausible, reasonable explanation for this life"
.and I don't believe there is any "uncontroversial metaphysics"
., because all metaphysics start from unfounded assumptions
., and the best they can hope for is to be consistent with those assumptions, and thus remain exactly as sound as those assumptions are.
.In the final analysis metaphysics is a matter of taste
.and any who claim that they do not start from their own (usually but perhaps not always culturally instilled) prejudices
but for me faith is more of a feeling for the indeterminate than a set of determinate fundamentalistic…
You said that Conservation of Energy is a principle, not a law.
But there are ways to directly test Conservation of Energy.
Hint: Determine whether the energy of an (effectively) isolated system can be observed to change.. — Michael Ossipoff
There is no direct way to use or test a principle. — tom
But there are ways to directly test Conservation of Energy.
Hint: Determine whether the energy of an (effectively) isolated system can be observed to change..
Hint: That's WHY conservation of energy is a Principle. — tom
but you don't seem to be saying anything that I can get hold of sufficiently to respond to. — Janus
???! :D — Michael Ossipoff
No, I don't find any of what you say compelling enough to either agree or disagree with. Can't we just leave it at that? — Janus
How does the Principle of Conservation of Energy help you in measuring the energy of an isolated system? — tom
Measuring for change in the energy of an isolated system tests Conservation of Energy. — Michael Ossipoff
Your two abovequoted statements, together, say that Conservation of Energy can't be tested. — Michael Ossipoff
Conservation of energy can be tested by observing whether an isolated system is ever observed to experience a change in its energy. — Michael Ossipoff
Physicists call Conservation of Energy a law. — Michael Ossipoff
.Measuring for change in the energy of an isolated system tests Conservation of Energy. — Michael Ossipoff
.So, how are you going to do that, using the Conservation of Energy alone. Go ahead, give it a try!
.Your two abovequoted statements, together, say that Conservation of Energy can't be tested. — Michael Ossipoff
.None of the principles of physics can be directly tested, only their subsidiary theories can.
.Conservation of energy can be tested by observing whether an isolated system is ever observed to experience a change in its energy. — Michael Ossipoff
.How?
Physicists call Conservation of Energy a law. — Michael Ossipoff
.And I'm certain that many physicists think it can be tested, because they haven't thought about it. Once they appreciate it can't, which they will discover very quickly, they will better appreciate the distinction between the Principles and Laws of physics.
.Anyway, you were going to provide a method of testing CofE, weren't you.
See above. — Michael Ossipoff
— tom
Let's break it down to the simplest possible system. Consider a particle of mass m moving with a velocity v in the positive x direction.
Now your job is to devise a test for the Principle of Conservation of Energy on that system. If you use any subsidiary theory, you have lost the argument, whether you realise it or not.
We are probably getting a bit ahead of ourselves
By the way, velocity is a vector, and so direction of motion is part of what a velocity specifies. Speed is the scalar magnitude of velocity, but some people confuse velocity with speed. — Michael Ossipoff
Maybe a single particle in motion isn't the most feasible system for successive measurements of the energy of an effectively-isolated system. — Michael Ossipoff
There are ample effectively-isolated systems whose energy can be measured at successive times. — Michael Ossipoff
You think? :D — Michael Ossipoff
Why do some people here feel a psychological need to expound on physics? — Michael Ossipoff
Maybe it would be better for you to leave physics to physicists. — Michael Ossipoff
Didn't Wittgenstein say something about remaining silent on things that you're clueless about? — Michael Ossipoff
My PhD was in Computational Quantum Mechanics. — tom
Didn't Wittgenstein say something about remaining silent on things that you're clueless about? —
I think he was referring to you.
There are ample effectively-isolated systems whose energy can be measured at successive times.
Choose one of these systems, and describe how measurements of the total energy might be made.
I don't think reincarnation or resurrection, for that matter, are logically incompatible with materialism. But they are both incompatible with present human understanding of the physical; there is no conceivable mechanism by which they could be actualities. — Janus
there is no conceivable mechanism by which they could be actualities.
Certainly reincarnation is incompatible with your present human understanding of the physical, if you believe that the physical world comprises all of Reality. — Michael Ossipoff
But, as I said before, reincarnation is implied by an inevitable, uncontroversial metaphysics--the one that I've been proposing. — Michael Ossipoff
.I don't believe there is any "uncontroversial metaphysics", because all metaphysics start from unfounded assumptions.
.Certainly reincarnation is incompatible with your present human understanding of the physical, if you believe that the physical world comprises all of Reality.
— Michael Ossipoff
.It's not a question of whether the physical "comprises all of reality"; different answers to that question will be given depending on different interpretations of the terms. It is really a more or less meaningless question. In any case reincarnation is incompatible with any testable understanding of the 'how' of the actual world; the world we find ourselves in, the world we sense, feel and attempt to explain.
.It is also incompatible with my own personal experience
., as I have no sense whatsoever that I have lived prior to this life.
.If someone remembers, or believes they remember, a past life, then obviously they will not feel or think reincarnation to be incompatible with their experience.
.
I don't believe this kind of experience is common, though; although I don't doubt quite a few people may mistake their fantasies for experiences that actually indicate something about reality; humans can be gullible.
.In any case, if you reincarnate but don't remember your previous lives; then I can't see what relevance it could have to you, now, in this life.
. — Michael Ossipoff.
"But, as I said before, reincarnation is implied by an inevitable, uncontroversial metaphysics--the one that I've been proposing
.You may think the metaphysics you propose is "inevitable and uncontroversial", but I don't share that assessment
.; and I doubt many others would, since belief in reincarnation, at least in the modern West, is very much a minority viewpoint; and would seem to be extremely rare among philosophers.
.Time for a reality check, dude
If you prefer to continue with your evasive self-justificatory bullshit — Janus
rather than offering up for assessment and critique just one central statement from your purportedly uncontroversial metaphysics
they are both [reincarnation and ??] incompatible with present human understanding of the physical; there is no conceivable mechanism by which they could be actualities. — Janus
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