I think the closest thing that people can understand is BHP, break horse power (with motors) or simply horse power. They can imagine a horse pulling a cart. And that's it.Richard Muller, physics professor emeritus at UC Berkeley, states that energy is the most difficult concept to understand in the basic physics curriculum. It will be interesting to see what people say. — jgill
As per my high school physics sutra, energy is the capacity to do work. — Agent Smith
Around the period of major advances in technology such as radio, the automobile, the electric light bulb in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, do you think there was a change in how the Western world thought about energy and energy transfer? Like from the eighteenth century onward, there seemed to be this conception that energy represented something an object possessed – as a person possesses physical energy, or a ball has energy when airborne – and at some point when theory about light, electricity, time, and space, began to predominate over simple mechanics it seemed that a transition took place from energy being thought of as a property of an object into it being thought of as an abstract entity itself that could be part of a wave or motion between atoms; something that could be harnessed and stored. — kudos
The concept of "potential enrgy" really doesn't make any sense logically, but the use of it is what gives rise to the issue↪kudos points us toward, where energy is seen as an entity in itself, rather than the property of an active object. When a thing has potential energy, that energy can only be understood as the property of something else. But it's easier just to ignore the requirement of something else, allowing the energy to exist as an abstract entity. — Metaphysician Undercover
What part of my post is this responding to? I'm not asking this dickishly, but I don't see how that responded to it, but it could have, but I just don't see it. — Hanover
You said the potential energy is in the spring (or at least you seemed to.). Strictly speaking, potential energy doesn't have a location. You could think of it as a sophisticated prediction. — frank
I don't understand this. If it exists nowhere, it doesn't exist. — Hanover
Now consider the difference between kinetic energy and potential energy. The former would be actually having the capacity to do work, and the latter would be having the potential to have the capacity to do work. The concept of "potential enrgy" really doesn't make any sense logically, but the use of it is what gives rise to the issue↪kudos points us toward, where energy is seen as an entity in itself, rather than the property of an active object. When a thing has potential energy, that energy can only be understood as the property of something else. But it's easier just to ignore the requirement of something else, allowing the energy to exist as an abstract entity. — Metaphysician Undercover
You said the potential energy is in the spring (or at least you seemed to.). Strictly speaking, potential energy doesn't have a location. You could think of it as a sophisticated prediction.
— frank
I don't understand this. If it exists nowhere, it doesn't exist.
A battery has stored energy and you can move it from one thing to the next. I get that the total energy equals the potential energy plus the kinetic energy and the amount of energy that is demanded will increase based upon the resistance, but I don't see how we can suggest the energy is being expressed or being held in a potential state at some location away from the event.
That is, when I drop a penny, the energy event isn't occurring down the street. — Hanover
Aristotle's differentiation between Potential & Actual, as two different ways to exist, may help you to understand the same distinction in Physics. You could say that Potential is universal and non-local, while Actual is specific and local. For example, a AA battery is said to have the Potential for 1.5 volt-amps of current, even when no current (kinetic energy) is flowing. In a sense, the potential is stored in what physicists now call a "Field" (the universe as a whole).You said the potential energy is in the spring (or at least you seemed to.). Strictly speaking, potential energy doesn't have a location. You could think of it as a sophisticated prediction. — frank
I don't understand this.If it exists nowhere, it doesn't exist. — Hanover
I don't know if I agree with this. If I had a mechanical clock with a spring windup mechanism and it was fully wound, I would say the potential energy was within the clock, and in particular, within the wound spring. I wouldn't suggest it was floating within the clock or that it was somehow extractable from the spring so that it could exist separate and apart from the spring. — Hanover
Like from the eighteenth century onward, there seemed to be this conception that energy represented something an object possessed – as a person possesses physical energy, or a ball has energy when airborne – and at some point when theory about light, electricity, time, and space, began to predominate over simple mechanics it seemed that a transition took place from energy being thought of as a property of an object into it being thought of as an abstract entity itself that could be part of a wave or motion between atoms; something that could be harnessed and stored.
I find it interesting from the point of view of how the conceptual landscape has changed along with this change. What kind of ways has the same shape been observed in other forms of everyday life in Western culture? Do you think there were any ways in which this may have influenced our way of thinking? — kudos
Potential energy is simply stored energy we can tap. The word "potential" isn't to be understood philosophically, as antipodal to actual (vide Aristotle). What sayest thou? Just a poor choice of words, a misnomer, or a clue that something's not quite right? — Agent Smith
Usually the concept of work relates to a change of energy, kinetic or potential. When an object follows a path through a force field, if that field is conservative, the path the object takes from point A to point B is immaterial regarding work; all such paths produce the same work. This idea aligns with Cauchy's Theorem in complex analysis. — jgill
Potential energy is energy relative to a thing's position. Kinetic energy is energy relative to a thing's activity. Clearly there is a very substantial difference between kinetic energy and potential energy. — Metaphysician Undercover
The beauty, if I could call it that, is this: if the potential energy of a rock is 6 Joules, what it does/can do is fully accounted for by these 6 Joules it reportedly possesses. — Agent Smith
As I said, there is no equivalence, due to entropy, which is the supposed "energy" which is unavailable, neither potential nor kinetic. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes. The key distinction between Potential Energy and Actual Energy is Inter-action. I think of Energy as a form of Information. In its statistical state, light Energy does not exist physically, hence is invisible. But when it interacts with Matter, Energy causes a change of form. Invisible mathematical Potential becomes visible Actual, a real state of matter in motion (Kinetic Energy). That's why massless light energy can travel through dark empty space imperceptibly & unchanged until it meets a physical object, and is reflected into a visual receptor.↪Gnomon
And yet, something like visible light can 'travel' several hundreds of thousands of miles through a vacuum as a potential, never touching matter as we know it, finally reaching our retinas or photographic equipment only to affect us with the sights and images we call reality. I find that challenging to grasp with the classical intuition. There seems to be a new and different type of intuition being formed there. A physical effect emerging from the self-reflexive nature attributed to the potential. I think it really breaks down the divide there a lot. For instance, is kinetic energy something that exists in the sense of being 'out there,' when we look more deeply into it and find there are a number of potentials being fulfilled and unfulfilled based on how it is being observed? It's almost like the physical world is affected by a sort of creativity. — kudos
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