Physics IS philosophy. — Joshs
Physics IS philosophy.
However, philosophy IS NOT physics (i.e. not theoretical, or does not explain any aspect of nature). — 180 Proof
But we throw the baby out with the bathwater if we make these rigid compartmentalizations. Better to break free of it. Life is messy — Xtrix
yet we don't possess a term for this idea — Agent Smith
Wittgenstein in a lecture once asked his audience to imagine coming across a man who is saying, ‘…5, 1, 4, 1, 3—finished!’, and, when asked what he has been doing, replies that he has just finished reciting the complete decimal expansion of pi backwards—something that he has been doing at a steady rate for all of past eternity. — Moore, A. W. 1990.The Infinite.
I think it is eternity - without beginning and without end.
Wittgenstein in a lecture once asked his audience to imagine coming across a man who is saying, ‘…5, 1, 4, 1, 3—finished!’, and, when asked what he has been doing, replies that he has just finished reciting the complete decimal expansion of pi backwards—something that he has been doing at a steady rate for all of past eternity.
— Moore, A. W. 1990.The Infinite. — Cuthbert
Most interesting! — Ms. Marple
Maybe that "eternity" is the dimensionless point (nunc stans).What was the point he was trying to make? — Agent Smith
If we take eternity to mean not infinite temporal duration but timelessness, then eternal life belongs to those who live in the present. — Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus
Unbounded — 180 Proof
What about just beginninglessness?
As for Wittgenstein's quaint gedanken experiment, in what context did it appear? What was the point he was trying to make? — Agent Smith
The first antinomy concerns the finitude or infinitude of the spatio-temporal world. The thesis argument seeks to show that the world in space and time is finite, i.e., has a beginning in time and a limit in space. The antithesis counters that it is infinite with regard to both space and time. — Stanford
incoherent — Cuthbert
Perhaps the reason we don't have a term for 'without a beginning, but with an end' is that it is incoherent. If a process had no beginning then it would be already infinite. But if it's going on now then it might come to end at any moment - and it is therefore finite. So it would be both finite and infinite. That's the antinomy. — Cuthbert
I think the example is relevant to Kant's first antinomy:
The first antinomy concerns the finitude or infinitude of the spatio-temporal world. The thesis argument seeks to show that the world in space and time is finite, i.e., has a beginning in time and a limit in space. The antithesis counters that it is infinite with regard to both space and time.
— Stanford — Cuthbert
I guess you don't understand my post. — 180 Proof
↪Joshs I'm with Witty: philosophy describes discursive features and usages while leaving "everything as it is". On the hand, physics endeavors to explain how transformations of states-of-affairs into other states-of-affairs are possible with high-precision models that are experimentally testable. Philosophical elucidations are used in constructing physical models the way grammars are used in novels and histories; they do not explain anything but rather make explicit, or describe, as you say "interconnections, correlations and coherences" implicit in concepts or discourses such as physics. To the degree physicists find 'philosophical contributions' add to the efficacy of their theoretical and research practices, they deliberately use philosophy; otherwise it – speculation for speculation's sake – is mostly (again, efficaciously) ignored. — 180 Proof
Leibniz was, to my understanding, the first to struggle with the main question that we face in trying to make a quantum theory of gravity-how to make a background independent description of a closed universe that contains both all its causes and all its observers. — Joshs
↪Jackson
You might find my thread on CCC (the Penrose bounce) interesting as a candidate for 'before the big bang — universeness
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