A physical constant, sometimes fundamental physical constant or universal constant, is a physical quantity that is generally believed to be both universal in nature and have constant value in time. It is contrasted with a mathematical constant, which has a fixed numerical value, but does not directly involve any physical measurement. — Wikipedia
Pythagoreans discovered that the diagonal of a square is incommensurable with its side, or in modern language, that the square root of two is irrational. Little is known with certainty about the time or circumstances of this discovery, but the name of Hippasus of Metapontum is often mentioned. For a while, the Pythagoreans treated as an official secret the discovery that the square root of two is irrational, and, according to legend, Hippasus was murdered for divulging it. — Wikipedia
That strange fact does suggest something mysterious about a Real world with transcendental numbers. They do imply, not just the logical-geometric foundations of the physical world, but that abstract (metaphysical) geometry is not limited to the space-time boundaries that we take for granted. For example, the transcendental numbers, such as "Pi" and "e" are never-ending, Such fractured integers just keep on going long after our finite minds give up.All physical constants are irrational numbers — TheMadFool
Yes. I typically refer to Mathematics as Meta-Physical, because it is not physically real, but a logical abstraction from Reality. So, since this is a philosophical forum, you'd think Metaphysical topics would be routine. But I get a lot of negative feedback whenever my arguments veer from Empirical Physics into Non-empirical, hence debatable topics. That's why I thought the notion of Irrational and Transcendental mathematics would encounter some friction from those insecure posters with Physics Envy. :smile:All this math stuff exists in the mind only. All math stuff has acounterpart in physical reality — GraveItty
When I said I don't take irrational & infinite concepts in Mathematics "too seriously", I meant they don't bother me, as they did the ancient Greeks. But, they do intrigue me, in the sense that many scientific & mathematical discoveries have resulted from anomalies that evoked a "huh? that's strange" response.Most of us don't either. — jgill
They are the cutting points of a continuum, the irrational lies in the point where you tear it up. Tearing up is irrational. Unless you apply the scissor to a well rationally determined way. Which is impossible. You can't hit the continuum at a rational point. Eventhough it contains an infinity of them. You will always be slightly irrational. Rational are an idealization. Though for buying 3/2 kilograms of ice-cream they suffice. The dark torn apart. Amaranthine, as I learned above! The are the consequence of irrationally tearing apart. — GraveItty
To suggest that the universe is geometric would assume that there are geometries outside of our universe?
Otherwise where does this geometry fit?
Can something be discordant without some sort of nominal instrument? — Varde
Update
There seems something physical (messy) about geometry and something nonphysical (crystal clear) about arithmetic.
Immanuel Kant, likely for profound reasons, associated space with geometry and time with arithmetic. — TheMadFool
In my personal Information thesis, Geometry is indeed more "physical" than abstract math, in the sense that it measures relationships between real things, instead of relationships between abstract concepts. But, it's still the metaphysical (mental) relationship (inter-connection) that makes the meaningful difference (qualia), not the physical object (quanta) itself. :nerd:Geometry seems, in a certain sense, more physical than arithmetic. I'm not as certain about this as I'd like to be. — TheMadFool
Perhaps, for similar profound reasons, Einstein associated Space with physical Matter (Objects), and Time with metaphysical Energy (Change). Maybe not in so many words, but implicitly in his Relativity theory. :smile:Immanuel Kant, likely for profound reasons, associated space with geometry and time with arithmetic. — TheMadFool
I didn't realize this until now of course but I think we need to dig deeper into irrational numbers. What are they? Does it have to do with the continuous as opposed to discrete nature of reality? Geometry seems, in a certain sense, more physical than arithmetic. I'm not as certain about this as I'd like to be. — TheMadFool
As a minor point, geometry and algebra are dual descriptions of nature as Michael Atiyah argues across a number of addresses. — apokrisis
As a minor point, geometry and algebra are dual descriptions of nature as Michael Atiyah argues across a number of addresses. — apokrisis
So one way to arrive at a constant in a dynamic world is perfect symmetry. And that will produce a simple rational value. With quantum spin, the values are 1, 0 or -1. Or when it comes to the electromagnetic charge of quarks with their more complex rotational symmetry, rational fractions like 1/3 and 2/3. — apokrisis
I believe that what is the case is that there is always an incommensurability between two dimensions. This is demonstrated by the irrationality of the square root of two, and of pi. What it indicates, is that as dimensions, is a faulty way of representing space. Space being represented by distinct dimensions is a convenient fiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
Does that relationship between Symmetry and physical Constants, imply that the Big Bang Singularity was also perfectly symmetrical and unchanging (e.g. eternal), until some perturbation (outside force) broke the symmetry, resulting in our dynamic and evolving world? I ask that strange question because I just wrote a review of a book that reaches Anthropic conclusions from the : "unique “initial conditions” and “fine-tuned constants” that seemed arbitrarily selected to produce a world with living & thinking creatures."So one way to arrive at a constant in a dynamic world is perfect symmetry. — apokrisis
If the ancient Greeks were left doing only arithmetic they would've never encounterd irrationals — TheMadFool
It isn't too much of a stretch then to posit there's something geometric about the irrationals. Helium - Sunnish; Irrationals - Geometric. — TheMadFool
No matter what you plug into that equation as the value of x, you will always miss out some points (incommensurable/noncomputable/transcendental numbers) i.e. the line will actually be discontinuous. — TheMadFool
So symmetry produces neat rational constants in your opinion? However, I maybe wrong of course, these values (spin and the other one whatever it is) don't show up as physical constants in Wikipedia. — TheMadFool
The rational numbers stand far enough back from the fray that it seems quite easy to treat a continuous line as an ordered series of points. As an object, it can paradoxically be the two things at once. But then as mathematicians go deeper, they have to keep expanding the notion of continuity to come up with a transcendent hierarchy of infinities. Likewise, the ability to cut the number line ever finer leads to a hierarchy of divisions. We encounter the infinite decimal expansions of the irrationals. — apokrisis
Well, 1/3 is rational and has an infinite decimal expansion. Thinking about it, it is questionable if the idea of the number line is even justified: A line is a spatial object as opposed to a number (i.e. a "count of things"). Writing the "1" somewhere on the line tries to synthesize two very different things and "flaws" the pure space with the pitfalls of "counting". — Heiko
But one point of quantum mechanics is that nature does not seem to be that continuous. — Heiko
Does that relationship between Symmetry and physical Constants, imply that the Big Bang Singularity was also perfectly symmetrical and unchanging (e.g. eternal), until some perturbation (outside force) broke the symmetry, resulting in our dynamic and evolving world? I ask that strange question because I just wrote a review of a book that reaches Anthropic conclusions from the : "unique “initial conditions” and “fine-tuned constants” that seemed arbitrarily selected to produce a world with living & thinking creatures." — Gnomon
Well, 1/3 is rational and has an infinite decimal expansion. — Heiko
Thinking about it, it is questionable if the idea of the number line is even justified: A line is a spatial object as opposed to a number (i.e. a "count of things"). Writing the "1" somewhere on the line tries to synthesize two very different things and "flaws" the pure space with the pitfalls of "counting". — Heiko
Wow!! I didn't expect such an expanded & erudite response to my open-ended question. Since my brain is also a "dissipative structure", it may take me a while to digest all that "Piercean vagueness". A lot of it goes right over my pointy little head. So, I'll have to get back to you. :wink:I really like Wheeler as a bold and holistic thinker. The anthropic principle is also an obviously powerful argument when it comes to the cosmological problem. And I even agree - as Peirce argued - that the cosmos arose from unbound possibility as the inevitable growth of a rationalising structure. Wheeler also got that right with his geometrodynamics. — apokrisis
Unbound = eternal?? . . . . rationalizing structure = Logos??- that the cosmos arose from unbound possibility as the inevitable growth of a rationalising structure
Arbitrary = Random Chance? Order & Constrain = Natural Selection? Natural laws?arbitrariness, or vagueness, must always exist in the system as Platonic order exists only to suppress or constrain it . . .
locked-in = natural laws? . . . . Heat Death = born to die?been fully locked in at the Big Bang, and the long-run destiny is for it to become a generalised Heat Death
Dissipation & Entropy seem to be necessary adjuncts to Integration & Energy in the program of Evolution.this story of an eternally cooling~expanding dissipative structure
Necessity = esssential to the design or program?Anthropically, if these higher levels of dissipative structure could happen, they had to happen.
Semiotics seems to imply that Meaning is inherent to the system of evolution. The question is : meaningful to whom?why semiotics is then itself an inevitable organising informational arrangement. . . . negentropy to be dissipated
By "gloss over" you mean "allow" or "permit" such details as the temporary exceptions to thermodynamics that we call living organisms?laws only work because of the way they can gloss over the detail.
That's what I call "freedom within determinism"Local spontaneity is built into the model along with the global necessity.
That "structure" may be what I call the constructive power of EnFormAction.information as the structure of constraints that limit the arbitrary. . . . information vs entropy
But "order" is the essence of "meaning". So the fact that Reality contains creatures capable of semiotics and extraction of meaning would seem to deny the "essential meaningless of reality"a metaphysics of order out of chaos - an information theoretic framework. But entropy descriptions are still ones that presume an essential meaningless of reality,
So there just is no singularity, as there is instead just a vagueness that becomes a somethingness as soon as it starts to become a structure of relations. . . . Apeiron - an unbounded and formless "sea"
Perfect Symmetry = eternal & infinite, but still, pool of Potentialis a perfect symmetry. Any and everything can be happening. It is also the definition of unchanging
So, that infinite Potential couldn't be bottled-up forever? Something Actual must come out of it. But what Cause triggered that phase change from Voltage to Amperage, from Ideal to Real?something had to happen
That's what Design does : it constrains disorder into order; it organizes (pattern) that which is disorganized (randomness).where disorder learns to constrain itself.
The evolutionary process comes full-circle from the nothingness of Potential, to fullness of Actual, and back to zero again. From Eternity to Timelessness.same number at there at the Big Bang as they are at the Heat Death.
I propose that the emptiness of Shannon's Information as container, be supplanted by []Enformation[/i] as carrier of content.But an even more general metric looks called for.
So geometry then injects just enough physical reality into the mathematical abstraction to raise the problem? — apokrisis
Zeno's paradoxes were another route into the same issue. As an object of the mathematical imagination, the number line claims to be both continuous yet also infinitely divided. That is a useful quality for modelling/measuring the world, but what way is it realistic? — apokrisis
I'm with Peirce and those who argue that reality is at root vague — apokrisis
Unbound = eternal?? . . . . — Gnomon
rationalizing structure = Logos?? — Gnomon
Dissipation & Entropy seem to be necessary adjuncts to Integration & Energy in the program of Evolution. — Gnomon
Semiotics seems to imply that Meaning is inherent to the system of evolution. The question is : meaningful to whom? — Gnomon
Negentropy is what Aristotle called "entelechy" and what I call "enformy" in my Enformationsim thesis. — Gnomon
So the fact that Reality contains creatures capable of semiotics and extraction of meaning would seem to deny the "essential meaningless of reality" — Gnomon
What you call "Apeiron" is similar to what I call "Enfernity" : the unbounded realm of Eternity and Infinity, which is an unformed ocean of Possibility. Which I also call BEING, the eternal power to be, the essence of existence. — Gnomon
Agreed.It is unbound possibility. So not about an actualised duration. — apokrisis
Yes. Ironically, in thermodynamics, far-from-equilibrium is not necessarily disorder, but can be self-organizing.A vortex is a dissipative structure - the emergence of order in the service of disordering. — apokrisis
Reductionism tends to focus on the local chaos, and to ignore the stable global order.And dissipative structure is the order out of chaos story. — apokrisis
In my Enformationism thesis, I was repeatedly linking Eternity & Infinity, so for brevity I simply coined a contraction to "Enfernity" to describe the opposite concept from Einstein's "Space-Time".Why invent another jargon to describe something that already has so many names? — apokrisis
I think your thinking is seeing only one side of a two-sided coin. My model is both Mechanical (scientific) and Organic (philosophical). :cool:So I would say your thinking goes in the wrong direction here. It re-embraces the mechanical model of reality that an organic conception is intent on rejecting. — apokrisis
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