Any thoughts? — Manuel
Our instruments detect what we can't detect though our senses, although not yet dark matter. — PoeticUniverse
With that in mind I think the question is this: why would anything that is in God’s consciousness be off limits to ours? — AJJ
We transform colourless, soundless phenomena and turn them automatically into the blue of the ocean and a symphony respectively. — Manuel
there is the world we experience, what science says about it and whatever else we simply cannot assimilate or register in any way, which happens to be quite important. — Manuel
I suppose on an atheist view any things that we or any other being can’t be even indirectly conscious off may as well not exist, so they don’t matter. — AJJ
It flatters the physicist if ordinary life is 'really' made of mathematical abstractions. But doesn't that lead to a mess? Mathematical abstractions are (we'd be tempted to say) 'mental.' And code, in the matrix example, is a human convention that we build in to hardware in the first place. — Zugzwang
That sounds right, and this could be framed as us being likely to keep finding more useful patterns in experience (or rather inventing, projecting, and learning to trust such patterns.) — Zugzwang
And on each view I expect there’d remain things we can only experience indirectly, like electrons. — AJJ
But in that case I think there would have to remain things that can only be experienced indirectly by any being — AJJ
But physics is discovered via math. And I literally don't know something less "realistic" (mind-independent) than mathematics. — Manuel
Patterns which by necessity have to leave stuff out. Usually "noise" in the data, though not always. — Manuel
An idea that illustrates what I have in mind would be that an Intelligent Alien can, for example, perceive how quantum indeterminacy happens in an intuitive matter. Much the way we intuit how the Sun goes around the Earth. — Manuel
t would be nice to be able to ask. — Manuel
I have no way to prove this, but wanted to get a few reactions.
Any thoughts? — Manuel
I personally don't know about the observer effect in QM. I know Wayfarer argues that it is important, highlighting some of the people who think observation is important. — Manuel
I was referring more to the work of people like Evan Thompson and Michel Bitbol and the fabled 'blind spot' or observer problem - we seem not to see that the scientific worldview itself is a human perspective, not an objective one. Reality is only that which we are able to identify from a human perspective. — Tom Storm
I'd like to read a physicalist response. — Tom Storm
I personally find myself staring Stove's Gem fairly often. — Tom Storm
we only detect photons, — Manuel
I am very astonished that the scientific picture of the real world around me is deficient. It gives a lot of factual information, puts all our experience in a magnificently consistent order, but it is ghastly silent about all and sundry that is really near to our heart, that really matters to us. It cannot tell us a word about red and blue, bitter and sweet, physical pain and physical delight; it knows nothing of beautiful and ugly, good or bad, God and eternity. Science sometimes pretends to answer questions in these domains, but the answers are very often so silly that we are not inclined to take them seriously. — Schrodinger, Nature and the Greeks
Actually, photon-detectors detect photons. They're specialised bits of equipment to do just that. The idea that photons (and atoms) are what is 'really there' was really being called into question already by the time of Arthur Eddington's book, Nature of the Physical World, between the Wars. — Wayfarer
But his 'stove's Gem' invective is not against Kant per se, but against cultural relativism and post-modernism - 'perspectivism' in the vulgar sense. Jim Franklin, who was also around the Uni at that time and who is now a UNSW academic, has ventured this analysis. I don't think much of it, myself. (Franklin also has written some very interesting things on Aristotelian philosophy of maths. — Wayfarer
I'd like to read a physicalist response. — Tom Storm
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