↪Pop Might have missed a lot. Like in school I missed subtraction using the Venn diagram method. — Mark Nyquist
Put it this way, is there any information-talk in physics that can't be (shouldn't be) replaced perfectly well with entropy-talk? — bongo fury
An impressed force is an action exerted upon a body, in order to change its state, either of rest, or of moving uniformly forward in a right line. These definitions gave rise to the famous three laws: known as Newton's laws of motion.
https://www.iitg.ac.in/physics/fac/saurabh/ph101/Lecture3.pdf
Unless tatologies make sense. You just cant take a force and impress it. The impression *is* the force. — Prishon
Lex II. Mutationem motus proportionalem esse vi motrici impressae,
& fieri secundum lineam rectam qua vis illa imprimitur.
Thanks, but I would prefer your opinion, what do you think/believe and why.It is the belief of phenomenology, and the philosophical zombie argument. — Pop
that — apokrisis
You either impress or force. — Prishon
Like Aristotle, Newton in the Principia, refers to two kinds of forces: Vis insita, inertial forces which are seen as inherent to bodies and vis impressa, forces exerted on a body, such as pressure and impact forces.
https://spark.iop.org/history-force-concept
between — apokrisis
Information can be simply defined as the opposite of a blank sheet of paper minus the writing on it[/b]
So: ( paper - writing )opposite = information. or Paper + writing = information — Pop
It is the belief of phenomenology, and the philosophical zombie argument.
— Pop
Thanks, but I would prefer your opinion, what do you think/believe and why. — Alkis Piskas
Information (brain states) is encoded to paper and ink (because it's cheap and relatively stable) and decoded by yourself or others (by convention) - an attempt to transfer brain states. — Mark Nyquist
Maximum information is useless. Nothing interesting going on. The chaos is maximal. The same holds for total order. Both can be described in one single line. Interesting things happen in-between. You can write books full about that "state" of intermediate order. — Prishon
entropy is the _number_ of microstates available to explore. — Kenosha Kid
The actual microstate occupied by a system would be the totality of its information, — Kenosha Kid
and is not specified by the system's entropy. — Kenosha Kid
information contained in a physical system = the number of yes/no questions you need to get answered to fully specify the system. — Mark Nyquist
the aspect I say is being overplayed by you is how the individual point of view becomes a justification for the reheated romanticism that animates PoMo pluralism and anti-structuralism. — apokrisis
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