QM can predict the activity of something that is a millionth of a millimeter in size with the accuracy of someone guessing the distance from Paris to Rome within the precision of a single hair. — Gregory
considering their pragmatic consequences — Raul
So, because QM is quite possibly wrong, and because relativity is too complicated for practical use, I vote no. — counterpunch
But such precision is useless for making sense of the behavior of phenomena that require different accounts , such as biological and psychological entities. — Joshs
Ask about one or the other - but both? What's the supposed relationship between the two, — counterpunch
So saying that they are both the best descriptions of reality we have is incoherent. — counterpunch
so there's a built-in phenomenological limit. — Kenosha Kid
It could be a scientific certification that ontologically reality is undetermined. — Raul
You do not conceive reality as being probabilistic? It could be a scientific certification that ontologically reality is undetermined. Science saying reality is not deterministic! ... isn't this breaking stereotypes of the "materialist reductive" science many think...
Naturalism is the way! — Raul
can assume that any undetermined reality is merely a result of the state of being confined to finitude. — emancipate
There is no theory underlying probabilistic mechanisms: one moves discontinuously from a deterministic description to a statistical, phenomenological one. — Kenosha Kid
Yes, there is, formulas in QM are probabilistic in the base but can become deterministic depending on the value of the factors. — Raul
I think QM is phenomenal :grin: ... but phenomenological :roll: ... does it even matter? It is maybe phenomenological for you, so what? — Raul
It may be thought that the neglect of such a distinction constitutes a
serious shortcoming in Greek philosophy of the classical period. But it was
precisely this indiscriminate use of einai and to on which permitted the metaphysicians
to state the problem of truth and reality in its most general form, to
treat matters of fact and existence concerning the physical world as only a
part of the problem (or as one of the possible answers), and to ask the
ontological question itself: What is Being? that is, What is the object of
true knowledge, the basis for true speech? If this is a question worth asking,
then the ontological vocabulary of the Greeks, which permitted and encouraged
them to ask it, must be regarded as a distinct philosophical asset.
No, that's not correct. The wave equations are completely deterministic. Probabilism enters via the Born rule. — Kenosha Kid
What I mean is that a robust answer to a question like "What is a photon?" is "A click in a photon detector." QM doesn't justify a firmer position than this. — Kenosha Kid
If this is a question worth asking,
then the ontological vocabulary of the Greeks, which permitted and encouraged
them to ask it, must be regarded as a distinct philosophical asset.
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