She is the one. Her only paper that I read is Decoupling emergence and reduction in physics, but it has been extremely enlightening. I've mentioned her a few times in this older thread where I had been discussing Weinberg's reductionism. — Pierre-Normand
By the way, StreetlightX also had referenced the excellent paper The Theory of Everything by R. B. Laughlin and David Pines. This paper pursued some of Anderson's earlier insights and developed a view a emergence that struck me as having many commonalities with Crowther's own. — Pierre-Normand
I doubt there would be much interest (beyond yours). — frank
Sorry I missed your comment. I think Anderson is assuming some relationship which is in principle knowable.So, if there are emergent laws, that are new to X, how do those laws relate to the laws of Y? Anderson doesn't say. — Pierre-Normand
Well... I'm talking about your standard type question. Matters of fact. Is the capital of France Bucharest? Are neutrons and protons made up of smaller particles? Did the universe begin with the big bang? — T Clark
Could you give an example of a question about the "underpinnings of reason"? I sense that we have travelled over this before, but please humour me. I think having one specific example of such a question in front of us will be very helpful. — PossibleAaran
This is what really helped me in the Anderson paper - the discussion of reductionist vs. constructionist views. — T Clark
I'm talking about your standard type question. Matters of fact. Is the capital of France Bucharest? Are neutrons and protons made up of smaller particles? Did the universe begin with the big bang? — T Clark
You keep overlooking the so-called ‘fact-value’ dichotomy, specifically, that judgements about what is amenable to measurement are of a different order to judgements about what one ought to do or believe. It is not a smooth continuum awaiting only the revelation of further facts. — Wayfarer
You can think of a bee honeycomb. To squish a whole lot of wax tubes together, they must become hexagons. Maybe they could be all sorts of flattened shapes in principle. Triangular, octagonal, some kind of irregular never repeated lattice like your Mayan stone wall. But through the principle of least action, the regularity of a hexagonal pattern is the simplest way to tile that space.
And hexagonal patterns are what we see emerging in the classic examples of self organising chaos, or dissipative structure, like the hexagonal convection currents of Benard cells -https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rayleigh–Bénard_convection — apokrisis
Columnar basalt — T Clark
Columnar basalt — T Clark
Metaphysics constitutes the following . .
Intrusive thoughts suffering from constipation
The Vietnam War writing movie reviews
Press conferences becoming scientists
Different religions taking turns to laugh at the same nation
Gravity visiting Buckingham Palace — Thomas H Cullen
The free-will question quite often degenerates into a semantic debate about how to use the word "free-will". I don't read much in that area because of this, so I'll leave this one aside. — PossibleAaran
We just decide whether to think about morality as absolute or not, but there is no truth to be had. I am not sure why you think this. Perhaps it has something to do with what can be "rationally established"? I remember previously you had said that whether or not there is an absolute morality cannot be verified by sense perception. — PossibleAaran
The question about objective reality is serious tangle. When you say that there is a fact of the matter about whether neutrons are made of particles, this claim itself seems to already presuppose that there is an objective reality. After all, what is a 'fact of the matter' if it isn't an objective truth? And so the positive answer, "yes" is something which you presuppose in even stating your distinction. It all depends what you mean by "objective" when you ask your question. What do you mean? — PossibleAaran
In my heart, I don't feel as if there is a fixed reality — T Clark
Do you just find it useful to believe that there is no fixed reality, or is it a fact that there is no fixed reality? — PossibleAaran
Isn't it objectively true that there are mountains on earth? Isn't it objectively true that you exist? That I exist? Aren't these 'fixed realities'? — PossibleAaran
And no, it's not a matter of fact. It's an understanding I've chosen, that chose me. For me, it is very useful. — T Clark
The distinction you made earlier between facts and useful perspectives has vanished. The "fact of the matter" side has collapsed into the useful perspectives side. Even something like "there are mountains" or " I exist" is just a useful perspective among others. Thinking of things as "facts" itself turns out to be a merely useful perspective. But then your distinction is between things its useful to believe and things its useful to believe. No distinction at all! — PossibleAaran
I'm not sure if this is really coherent. Isn't it an objective fact that "believing X is useful"? And if something is useful to believe, isn't there an objective fact about who its useful for? — PossibleAaran
And these facts cannot just be more useful beliefs. Well, I suppose they could be, just like the earth could rest on a turtle on a turtle on a turtle on a turtle...etc. — PossibleAaran
I am not sure why you made the comparison to Descartes. Maybe you could elaborate. — PossibleAaran
I disagree with your short assessment of the project Descartes takes up. I also disagree that "everything is based on opinions" if this is to mean that we cannot have any good reason to believe anything. An honest reading of Descartes also shows that he never thought his doubts had to be answered before you can "live your life" and "make decisions". He thought his project was important, but not because somehow life has to be on stand still until you solve it. He says this repeatedly both in the Meditations and in the Discourse — PossibleAaran
odder than what Descartes said. — T Clark
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