Laws prescribe what should occur in the future. — Art48
I have some ideas about objective moral values but that would be the topic of another thread.When it comes to God, God is plausibly required for there to be certain sorts of prescriptive law, the most obvious being moral laws. Moral laws prescribe, they do not describe. Thus there needs to be a prescriber. And plausibly that prescriber will turn out to be God. — Bartricks
What I meant specifically is that laws of physics are conceptual creations that may come to be seen eventually as a relic of a certain era of physics. — Joshs
see what you mean. But think of the combined gas law. It works. What's the concept behind it? It has to do with kinetic vs potential energy. Maybe that will change, and maybe as it does our prediction skills will improve. But the CGL is already predictive as hell. — Tate
Is this what they used to use to attempt to describe smoke and cloud patterns? When chaos theory was introduced it brought order and predictability to the modeling of such phenomena that the previous concepts could not. One has to be careful when one claims that a model is predictive as hell to take into account the extent to which it consigns aspects of the world to chance and randomness — Joshs
"Physical laws" are features of physical models and not the universe itself. [ ... ] If in current scientific terms new observations indicate that aspects of the universe have changed, then, in order to account for such changes, we will have to reformulate our current (or conjecture new) physical models which might entail changes to current (or wholly different) "physical laws". E.g. Aristotlean teleology —> Newtonian gravity —> Einsteinian relativity. — 180 Proof
from Old Norse *lagu "law," collective plural of lag "layer, measure, stroke," literally "something laid down, that which is fixed or set." — Etymology online
Two approaches of understanding laws are explained by the regularity theory as well as the necessitarian theory. The regularity theory states that laws describe the way certain things and objects behave. Whereas, the necessitarian approach describes laws as more than summaries of behaviors, but rather how such things and objects must behave. Do either of these approaches to the laws of nature allow for laws to be both true and explanatory? Nancy Cartwright believes this to be impossible.
And isn't equating the description of a fact with a fact the same as confusing map and territory? — Wayfarer
Laws prescribe what should occur in the future. ... Habits derive from what occurred in the past; a habit is a descriptive account of past trends.
...When we trade “laws of the universe” for “habits of the universe”, we dispense with the eternal, exterior law-giver and recognize that, as far as we can tell, the universe determines its own behavior. The universe doesn’t obey the laws of physics; it merely does what it does. — Art48
It's not just description, it's also explanations. — Tate
You can't describe the future... — Tate
I haven't seen your liver; but I could describe it. So that doesn't look right....because you haven't seen it — Tate
It's not just description, it's also explanations.
— Tate
Ok, so set out the detail this distinction. — Banno
You can't describe the future...
— Tate
Yes, I can. I will eat my lunch in a few hours. Are you claiming that this is not a description? — Banno
...because you haven't seen it
— Tate
I haven't seen your liver; but I could describe it. So that doesn't look right. — Banno
A description is knowledge. — Tate
How many ounces of fat are in my liver? — Tate
A description is knowledge.
— Tate
Really? Always? What could that mean? A description is always a justified true belief? — Banno
How does it know how fast to fall? — Art48
I knew what I was supposed to do, but I didn't. — Agent Smith :cool:
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