 Streetlight
Streetlight         
         if only because consistency of behavior between invariant structures begs the question of an organizing principle. — Pneumenon
 Pneumenon
Pneumenon         
          Streetlight
Streetlight         
         The individual bonds are not indifferent to their context at all — Pneumenon
 Pneumenon
Pneumenon         
         And there's nothing about the laws of physics which the primacy of flux denies: indeed, what do the 'laws of physics' bear upon? Chage. — StreetlightX
Constancy is just ordered flux, the invariant in variation. I'll only add: both are perfectly real, only that the one furnishes the sufficient reason for the other. — StreetlightX
 Streetlight
Streetlight         
         the vital thing is to show how e.g. the individual molecules provide sufficient reason for the laws of physics. — Pneumenon
 Pneumenon
Pneumenon         
         No, no. It's about the 'individual molecules'. Individual molecules are not 'change' (what would that even mean?) It's about the relations between them, the minimisation of forces between molecules. In other words: regulated change. Not relata but relations are primary. — StreetlightX
 Streetlight
Streetlight         
          Streetlight
Streetlight         
         The Second Law of Thermodynamics would appear to be permanent, for example. — Pneumenon
 SophistiCat
SophistiCat         
         Think Heraclitus and Parmenides. — Pneumenon
 Zelebg
Zelebg         
         1. Reality is fundamentally flux, and permanency is constructed
2. Reality fundamentally is, and change is an illusion
Reality is fundamentally flux
 Pneumenon
Pneumenon         
         But this is not the only or even most perspicacious way of looking at it. The other, inverse, way of understanding it is as the expression of a positive fact about nature (and not just a negative limitation upon it): energy differentials are productive of order. That is, the second law attests to the fact that every form of organisation (structure, identity) requires the maintenance of difference without which it would collapse into nothingness.
...
The 2nd law, interpreted negatively, is derivative of this primary fact of nature, which, again, attests to the primacy of flux. The 2nd law is 'permanent', but it's permanence is parasitic upon the permanence of - you guessed it - change. — StreetlightX
Constancy is just ordered flux, the invariant in variation. I'll only add: both are perfectly real, only that the one furnishes the sufficient reason for the other.
 Streetlight
Streetlight         
         It is a positive fact about nature that organized systems require difference. But this is no less juridical than the negative interpretation. — Pneumenon
Why does the flux have this positive property, and not another? — Pneumenon
 Pneumenon
Pneumenon         
         I said the flux provides the sufficent reason for structure, not that the flux (I really dislike this word btw!) is accountable for in terms of sufficient reason (confusion of expalnanda with explanandum here). — StreetlightX
 Luke
Luke         
         My question is, what is it in flux, or change, that provides sufficient reason for the permanence (or apparent permanence) of general laws, e.g. the laws of physics? The Second Law of Thermodynamics would appear to be permanent, for example. I grant you that the Second Law bears on change, but this does not locate the suffient reason for that law in change. — Pneumenon
 Streetlight
Streetlight         
         Why in the world would you appeal to a principle of sufficient reason, if change is not accountable for in terms of sufficient reason? — Pneumenon
 Pneumenon
Pneumenon         
         I think part of the confusion here stems from working with an inadequate vocabulary ('change' is possibly even worse than 'flux' insofar as change implies a *thing* that changes, subordinating difference once more to identity!) — StreetlightX
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