You need an interpreter in there to provide differentiation. So you could say the universe is determined by the very loose requirements of meaning. — Count Timothy von Icarus
From a practical standpoint, I highly doubt we will approach anything like a "Grand Theory of Everything." — Count Timothy von Icarus
No, but I find Many Worlds the most philosophically interesting. — Count Timothy von Icarus
You need differentiation to have meaning. It's a pretty redundant statement, but I think it gets to an essential point about the basis of what has to exist for anything to be said to exist. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Regarding what is 'made' - there's a fundamental idea in pre-modern philosophy, which seems to have been lost in the transition to modernity. That is the concept - if a concept it is - of 'the uncreated' or 'unmade'. It is found in e.g. neo-platonic philosophy, in the form of Plotinus'to hen, but is also found in Buddhism. The general drift is the distinction between the fabricated, compound, created and the unfabricated, simple and uncreated. — Wayfarer
So I wonder if modernity has lost sight of the question of what is made — Wayfarer
Maybe it's time it made a comeback then, since we know now that we can create matter from photons. — Paul S
It's interesting that quantum mechanics throws such conundrums that you are kind of stuck between a rock and a hard place if you just want the universe as conventional as Science once imagined it to be. — Paul S
Somewhere in all the possible worlds you’re skipping about in a luxury yacht, while I’m chained, terrified, to the bow, gasping through mouthfuls of seawater. Somewhere your band of riders burned my village to the ground, and you’re drinking a toast to the gods from my jewel-encrusted skull. You can want all of this, and there’s no need to feel guilty: it could happen, so it happened; that’s all. — Sam Kriss
'The uncreated' is not necessarily any kind of particle or object. But as we're so used to construing everything in terms of particles and objects, we don't know how else to think about it. — Wayfarer
That is the problem in a nutshell. — Wayfarer
It's intuitively conformable with sci fi memes. — Wayfarer
Everytime you make an argument about how things are for everyone, even if they disagree with you, and provide reasons for those arguements you are supporting the idea of determinism.
— Harry Hindu
That's not what determinism at all, is as I understand it. — Paul S
Reasons are causes. Conclusions are events. Conclusions are determined by your reasons. Seems like it fits perfectly with how you understand determinism.Determinism is the philosophical view that all events are determined completely by previously existing causes. — Paul S
Some knowledgeable in physics propose Everett's Many World hypothesis, there is determination, as the collapse happens in other universes. — Manuel
Why? Because we have, to some extent, free will. — Manuel
Yeah ok. I'm sorry, particles, atoms and anything else found in the subatomic world play no role in freedom: clearly new complexity emerges. — Manuel
Can anyone begin to outline how light waves manifest themselves as colours in the world? — Manuel
In any case, I think we don't have the capacity to know any clear answer to this question. — Manuel
No. Insanity has befallen on you as you have exhibited a tendency to be intellectually dishonest and inconsistent in your venture to prove determinism to be false.To be fair insanity has befallen on those working heavily in fields on the question of determinism, quantum mechanics and infinity. The latter has certainly driven some mathematicians stark raving mad. — Paul S
I don't know how to quote properly here yet. — Manuel
[quote]Just highlight it or select the text you want, a little small quote button will appear, click on it. [quote]
Since I don't know about the other me's, nor can they influence me (if I understand Sean Carroll's version), how am I not free? — Manuel
We can say these things about manifest objects, but not particles. — Manuel
Yeah, pretty much, but the color is arbitrary. We may have evolved our visual system to integrate into this world. In that case, factors like the luminosity and spectrum given off by the sun might have played a role in our evolution deciding that the the very thin slice of visible light we perceive is all we needed. Gamma rays are not as ever present in our lives so perhaps we didn't need to evolve to detect them .We evolved a a sense of physical touch and perceive temperature from nervous system already, so perhaps we didn't need to evolve to see infrared, i.e. there wa not need for us to evolve to see infrared light or visualize heat sources.Colours are produced by frequencies of light interacting with our mind/brains, and maybe other things we aren't cognizant of — Manuel
But if you tend to side with eliminitavists like Dennett or the Churchlands, that's a whole different story. — Manuel
No. Insanity has befallen on you as you have exhibited a tendency to be intellectually dishonest and inconsistent in your venture to prove determinism to be false. — Harry Hindu
In effect, indeterminism is a paradox. — Harry Hindu
We can say exactly that about these objects. If a particle behaves deterministically, we do not say it has no free will. We say it behaves deterministically - the result of its actions are predetermined the moment its makes an action. — Paul S
Yeah, pretty much, but the color is arbitrary. — Paul S
I don't side with any one Philosopher on all things, but I will say from what I know of eliminitavism, they are right on that I think. Abstract thought is just that - the creative fabrication of abstraction. It is not true reality. — Paul S
Reality is an honorific word. We don't say that's the real deal or the real truth meaning that there are two kinds of deals or two kinds of truth, we are just using the word "real" to emphasize something. — Manuel
But I don't think it's too controversial to say that this arbitrary aspect of color is the most important things for people, it's part of what makes our experience of the world rich, irrespective of how
they are instantiated in nature. — Manuel
But is it not right and humble to honor reality? Without instruments we, whether by design or evolution, only perceive a thin slice of the reality around us, not a mind those things beyond our ability to yet perceive, or those things that may forever be beyond our horizon. We are only human. We can deceive ourselves by thinking we are beyond reality, when the contrary may be more accurate. — Paul S
But in truth, there are no colors. We abstract them as a part of the full visible spectrum. We quantize them when, strangely enough they may not even be truly quantizable. — Paul S
I exhibited no such thing. You exhibited a misunderstanding of what I was saying. So I had to show you that my explanation fit your definition of determinism - a definition that I agree with. You didn't respond to that - hence your intellectual dishonesty.You had exhibited that you didn't understand what it meant in the first place, which was a bit intellectually lazy of you.
You seem to be upset that I called you out on not knowing what you were talking about. — Paul S
What is the indeterministic argument for QM? Again, if a theory is providing reasons for some observation, then the theory is deterministic.I'm not saying I'm comfortable about the indeterministic argument for quantum mechanics. It is what is is I guess. — Paul S
I exhibited no such thing. — Harry Hindu
Your definition, as I recall it, was fallacious, but I don't want to over dwell on it. I'm not that pedanticYou exhibited a misunderstanding of what I was saying. — Harry Hindu
What is the indeterministic argument for QM? Again, if a theory is providing reasons for some observation, then the theory is deterministic. — Harry Hindu
Your definition, as I recall it, was fallacious, but I don't want to over dwell on it. I'm not that pedantic
I don't think so! — Paul S
I do.Indeterminism can be composed of partly deterministic parts. I don't see a logical fallacy in that. — Paul S
If any of it is indeterministic then it all is, right? There would be no deterministic parts if any of it was indeterministic.We have not proven whether the universe is fundamentally deterministic or not.But if any of it is indeterministic then it all is, if you get me, because if you have a chain of events in a system that is deterministic but for one part, then the overall outcome is indeterministic. That's what I'm trying to get at. — Paul S
Indeterminism can be composed of partly deterministic parts. I don't see a logical fallacy in that.
— Paul S
I do. — Harry Hindu
All you have done here is show that each instance in time is unique, yet similar to other instances in time. Each state-of-affairs is determined by prior states-of-affairs, its just that each state-of-affairs is unique and not the same as other states-of-affairs, yet they can be similar enough to be predictable, depending on what we are focusing our attention on.Ok,
Well let's say (sorry I had a toke) I stack a big group of deterministic tiles (let's just say I conceded and that's what they are) and I know that for this deterministic tile, it will hit the next deterministic tile and it will fall etc. I can put just one non deterministic tile in the group of tiles, that may or may not fall, and if you replay knocking these tiles down as dominoes over many times, you will have a very non deterministic outcome overall!, when you add up all these different results. — Paul S
It's not that the world is non-deterministic. It is deterministic as each state-of-affairs is determined by prior states. — Harry Hindu
Indeterminism isn't some real aspect of reality. It is only an idea in the minds of humans that has no reality beyond the minds of humans. It is an idea that stems from our ignorant view of reality. — Harry Hindu
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