If the world were, however, made of things, what would these things be? The atoms, which we have discovered to be made up in turn of smaller particles? The elementary particles, which, as we have discovered, are nothing other than the ephemeral agitations of a field? The quantum fields, which we have found to be little more than codes of language with which to speak of interactions and events? We cannot think of the physical world as if it were made of things, of entities. It simply doesn’t work.
What works instead is thinking about the world as a network of events. Simple events, and more complex events that can be disassembled into combinations of simpler ones. A few examples: a war is not a thing, it’s a sequence of events. A storm is not a thing, it’s a collection of occurrences. A cloud above a mountain is not a thing, it is the condensation of humidity in the air that the wind blows over the mountain. A wave is not a thing, it is a movement of water, and the water that forms it is always different. A family is not a thing, it is a collection of relations, occurrences, feelings. And a human being? Of course it’s not a thing; like the cloud above the mountain, it’s a complex process which food, information, light, words and so on enter and exit...a knot of knots in a network of social relations, in a network of chemical processes, in a network of emotions exchanged with its own kind. — Carlo Rovelli
"Things" require thingers to thing them !
The apparent persistence and independence of 'things' is promoted by the abstract persistence and independence of the words we use to conceptualise aspects of what we call 'the world'. — fresco
I agree with your general thrust. However, the interaction of things does not in and of itself define whether they are "independent." And that is especially true when one contrasts independent with dependent. I may well interact with my television remote, but that does not make me dependent upon my television remote. And I could choose to never interact with it be independent of it. — Arne
"Independent" doesn't imply "incorrigibly isolated and not capable of interaction." — Terrapin Station
Dictionary definition of independent: "not influenced or controlled in any way by other people, events, or things" — leo
So then it appears that the very concept of independent thing is flawed. — leo
"independent" isn't referring to "not influenced or controlled in any way" per the laws of physics, for example, because then there would obviously not be any independent thing. — Terrapin Station
nothing interacts with nothing, rather a thing interacts with other things which themselves interact with other things and so on, — leo
And who claims that anything interacts with nothing? — Terrapin Station
You're reading it Aspie-like so that it's suggesting that to you. That's not the idea. — Terrapin Station
You are not independent from it if you see it, or if you think about it, interaction doesn't reduce to the feeling of touch. What about a remote that you've never seen and never thought about? People somewhere designed it, others built it, others use it, which influences what they do, what they think about, which influences what others do and think about, which influences the world, which ends up having an influence on you. — leo
I didn't claim someone did. Relevant quote: — leo
If no one is claiming that there's anything that interacts with nothing, then why would we not only point out that it's not the case that there isn't anything that interacts with nothing, but essentially start a thread arguing against the idea?' — Terrapin Station
You misunderstand my point. People don't claim that anything interacts with nothing, they claim that there are things that do not interact with some other things, that's what I'm arguing against.
If we say that two things exist independently, we're saying that one can exist without the other, in other words they do not necessarily interact. I disagree that such independence exists. — leo
If we say that two things exist independently, we're saying that one can exist without the other, in other words they do not necessarily interact. I disagree that such independence exists. — leo
if one thing stops existing it has an influence on everything else — leo
Which is why I say that everything is interdependent, if you remove something from the whole everything changes, the whole is not the sum of its parts, because these parts all influence one another. — leo
So then it appears that the very concept of independent thing is flawed. There is not independent thing A and independent thing B interacting with one another, rather "thing A and thing B" is a thing in itself, but even that thing is not independent because it interacts with other things, and then it appears that everything is interdependent, including ourselves with everything else, it's all an interacting whole, and if we abstract things out from that whole then we're artificially introducing a separation in our minds, we're separating the whole from its essence, if we cut the whole into independent things and we amalgamate these things we're not getting the whole back, we're getting something else. — leo
So you think that everything interacts with everything else.
Call it however you want, my point is nothing interacts with nothing, rather a thing interacts with other things which themselves interact with other things and so on, so there is an interacting whole, and so if instead of considering the whole we single out a thing, and model how it appears to interact with some other things, and then say that the whole is governed by these interactions, then we're not actually modeling the whole, we're modeling a world we made up that matches the whole in some limited ways but not at all in some other ways, we're missing essential parts of the whole, and that's the issue I'm pointing out, fundamental physics does not model our world, it models a world physicists made up. — leo
So you think that everything interacts with everything else.
Does a pencil on someone's desk in Japan necessarily interact with a glass in my cupboard in New York? — Terrapin Station
So the assumption of a 'whole" is just the disguised assumption of an independent thing, which is what you were trying to get away from in the first place. Dismissing "independent thing" for "whole" does nothing for you because a whole is necessarily an independent thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
The whole is the interdependent things, there is no sense in saying that these interdependent things are independent, independent from what? — leo
"Independent" doesn't imply "incorrigibly isolated and not capable of interaction."... — Terrapin Station
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