Gregory
PoeticUniverse
So according to Cantor a segment has an uncountable infinity of points instead of a countable amount. So you could have always from eternity divided a segment and never in forever get to the end. — Gregory
This can make us feel large against the background of the massive universe. — Gregory
But the world, I've been told, doesn't exist as a single extended reality, but has levels of reality. — Gregory
How can we conceptualize how substance is different in the quantum realm? — Gregory
Gregory
PoeticUniverse
"Emergent" seems to mean the composition is greater than the smaller parts and so have more meaning. — Gregory
Aristotle's "potential infinity" seems to dovetail nicely with seeing the levels energy appears in — Gregory
PoeticUniverse
Nice. I don't think General Relativity will ever be reconciled with Quantum Physics. — Gregory
Terrapin Station
Gregory
Gregory
PoeticUniverse
If the classical is not entirely reduced to the "small", if for no other reason than emergent principles, then maybe scientific explanations of our sense organs don't represent the reality at the top (our experience of the world). What we think we see is really an image created in the brain, but.. is it? Is this not reductionism? — Gregory
PoeticUniverse
Classical physical biology give rise to our spiritual experiences of the world, and that is a structure that has legitimate selfness too. — Gregory
Gregory
alcontali
This can make us feel large against the background of the massive universe. But the world, I've been told, doesn't exist as a single extended reality, but has levels of reality. — Gregory
Gregory
ZhouBoTong
So according to Cantor a segment has an uncountable infinity of points instead of a countable amount. — Gregory
Philosophy is hard — Gregory
Gregory
alcontali
Well the infinite divisibility of a geometric object suggested to me that pure geometry doesn't apply to the world of phenomena we know — Gregory
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