I mean you literally would find that in a physics book. That's a pretty standard idea in physics - the nonvariance of physical laws despite huge spatial distances. But maybe we're not reading the same books. Which 'physics books' are you referencing? — csalisbury
Not will. Newton attributed it to God. I don't know what modern physicists attribute it to. What do the physics books you've read say? — csalisbury
We need to be careful here. Are physics books mediums of knowledge or are they signifiers, like magic cards, we can lay down for this or that argument. Again, I ask, what physics books are you thinking of? — csalisbury
The general basics of physics don't purport to give an explanation of their cause though, so why would you bring them up as though they do? — csalisbury
Not the description. It wouldn't attribute that to "Will", surely? — S
I don't know. The way you ask that question makes me think you'd shut down Augustine and Heidegger as well. Yet Carlo Rovelli, no scientific lightweight, cites both favorably. It seems that well-trained physicists are able to see different tacks as approaching similar phenomena. In short, real scientists don't fetishize science. — csalisbury
Good. Don't fetishize anything. Rovelli didn't and that's why, if he were a poster, and other posters were discussing, say, the Mahabharata, he wouldn't jump into say -- 'yet I won't find that in any physics book.' Instead he integrated it wonderfully.You're suggesting that I'm "fetishising" science, just because I'm questioning why you'd turn to Schopenhauer over matters which seem to pertain to physics? Clearly I value philosophy, too, but not to an unreasonable extent. I don't fetishise philosophy. — S
Good. Don't fetishize anything. Rovelli didn't and that's why, if he were a poster, and other posters were discussing, say, the Mahabharata, he wouldn't jump into say -- 'yet I won't find that in any physics book.' Instead he integrated it wonderfully. — csalisbury
No it's a kind of joke. It's not 'will' but 'force,', as S did, is just exchanging one word for another. — csalisbury
Go on then, what's the Mahabharata supposed to be? The capacity for doing work, which exists in potential, kinetic, thermal, electrical, chemical, nuclear, or other various forms?
And the Ding an sich, let me guess. That's how fast an object is moving, a vector quantity that indicates distance per time and direction? — S
I don't know, I guess you'd have to ask the guy who cites it. I couldn't say if he's knowledgable enough to list all those types of work, that's hard-sci, but maybe het gets close. — csalisbury
Fair, but what is 'nature'? — csalisbury
To me, logic is the expression of the laws which govern activity in nature. Here, nature being interactive reality and thus the relative aspect or designation of reality. — BrianW
I believe everything is within the purview of nature (reality's mode of operation), otherwise we wouldn't be able to recognise them. Also, if logic is adhered to, nothing should be beyond nature, just beyond our understanding or appreciation of it... — BrianW
Also, I don't believe in randomness/chance because I believe reality works in intelligent mechanisms. For me, intelligence is definite and therefore negates randomness/chance. Also, if this were a random universe, it would lack the constancy of the laws of nature. — BrianW
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