I think you've stated my case for me very well, flannel. "Approximate" with respect to a representation means near, or close to what is actually the case. This does not imply truth, but the contrary, it implies a lack, or deficiency of truth. So the fact of the matter is that we just do not have an accurate, precise, or truthful representation of what acceleration actually is. And that is exactly the deficiency which I've been claiming. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you choose to reject all evidence you could see, then you will of course always have that deficiency. — flannel jesus
And this would be you, MU, — tim wood
Perhaps you imagine your truths in carved adamantine mounted on polished-granite Doric columns in a Platonic space somewhere, and being thus inaccessible, dismiss truth as not having any world-function value, being itself Platonic. And so this is not a horse, that is not a chair, nor that a tree, but all these, and all else, just poor imitations such that no truth appertains to them. Well guess what, you're just plain wrong and wrong-headed, and the proof and evidence is all the world's work that gets done using all kinds of truths. If you disagree, then how does all the world's work get done if absent truth? — tim wood
I don't see how this is relevant. I am not rejecting any visible evidence — Metaphysician Undercover
I get it. No two things are ever the same. Nothing is ever measured exactly, nor can it be. But if I want to buy a pallet of 8' 2x4s per spec., I will get them, "rigorous and exact" per specification. And will it then be true to say they are 8' 2x4s, and will they truly be 8' 2x4s? Of course they will. And you may come in and say, "Oh no, they're not the same and there is no way to tell if they're even 8' 2x4s: this one is three one-millionths of an inch longer than that one, and that one,...& etc." — tim wood
And you will insist that you are correct, and I hold there are three responses to you. First, that you're wrong. By the applicable criteria, they are 8' 2x4s, period. Second, that you are in a very narrow sense correct, but uselessly so. With the lumber, for example, your argument is just a pig-in-the-parlor, the wrong animal in the wrong place at the wrong time. Third you are vacuously correct, in that if you insist on one inappropriate standard, then all are equally valid. Then you are headfirst down a rabbit-hole trying to say something, anything, intelligible and correct, but you have made that either empty or impossible. — tim wood
You sure are, and you seem proud of it. That's your right, of course. Science doesn't speak to you, and you don't speak to it. I would say it's unfortunate that you would just remove all scientific knowledge from being a viable part of your own knowledge, but you seem happy enough with the decision. — flannel jesus
That approximation becomes a significant problem under specific circumstances. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, that's what Ive been arguing, we really do not know the true physical properties of objects. I — Metaphysician Undercover
No, it really doesn't. If you know the location of something at 1s, and the location of the same thing at 2s, you made the logical leap of assuming that means it had a constant speed over that duration, rather than the much more carefully thought out concept that you have the AVERAGE speed over that duration. You're making careless logical leaps and then acting as if you've disproven physics. — flannel jesus
It doesn't matter what problem you think there is with the example, if the measurements are real measurements that real people really obtained. These are, in fact, the sort of realistic measurements one could make to verify how the speed of a falling ball changes over time — flannel jesus
I'd only be interested in examining the implications with you on the condition that you accept the measurements as real raw data. — flannel jesus
This is not the Correspondence Theory of Truth - you have introduced the metaphysical concept of truth into the mix. If you and I are traveling in a car together and the digital display shows that the car is going 60 mph and I utter the statement "The car is going 60 mph according to the speedometer". then that is a true statement. And if you are in the back seat looking over my shoulder and say "The speedometer shows that the car is going 60 mph". then we have a mutual shared understanding and agree.
Whether the speedometer is accurate or not is irrelevant to whether the statement is true or false. — EricH
So the real question is, are you ready to accept the flaws which I have pointed out. — Metaphysician Undercover
Well, look what you have shown me. Between .9s and and 1.1s the object was moving at a constant speed. Then it accelerated between 1.1s and 1.9s. Then between 1.9s and 2.2s it moved at a constant speed again. — Metaphysician Undercover
we'll say this
"The digital readout on the speedometer shows 60 mph" — EricH
You haven't pointed out any logical flaws. You've made careless logical leaps that I've pointed out, and you haven't accepted the logical flaws in what you said .
Do you accept that leaping to "constant speed" was a careless logical flaw? — flannel jesus
So we find out that in that 0.2s time frame, it travelled about 1.96m, which means it was going about 9.8m/s. — flannel jesus
Sure. "constant speed" was a bad use of terms — Metaphysician Undercover
But "approximate", and "average" do not imply that the speed was anything other than constant. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now you insist that "constant} is not a proper representation of the object's speed during that time, but you have provided no representation of a non-constant motion. — Metaphysician Undercover
But all you have is "it was going about 9.8m/s" during that time period:. This indicates one speed during that entire time period, and we agree that "constant speed" is an inadequate representation. Do you not also agree with me, that "going about 9.8m/s" is a completely inadequate representation of what is actually going on in that time period? — Metaphysician Undercover
Sure. "constant speed" was a bad use of terms, But "approximate", and "average" do not imply that the speed was anything other than constant. You have provided no representation of the movement of the object during that time period. — Metaphysician Undercover
This says nothing about the problem we're discussing. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, that's what I've been arguing, we really do not know the true physical properties of objects. — Metaphysician Undercover
Inadequate compared to what? — flannel jesus
I don't see why it's inadequate, it achieved the exact goal that I wanted it for. I now have the average speed for the .2 seconds timeframe around the 1 second mark, the 2 seconds mark, etc. That's what I wanted, that's what I got. It's perfectly adequate for achieving the goal I was hoping to achieve. — flannel jesus
Everyone else who has been involved in this discussions understands that the ball is accelerating continuously in the scenario under consideration. — wonderer1
One step at a time. Do you acknowledge that "The readout on my speedometer shows 60 mph" is a true statement per the CToT? — EricH
MU apparently disqualifies naming. We cannot name anything because we do not know what it is. — tim wood
Third, if MU is right, nothing can be said about anything - and MU, if he had any intellectual integrity, would content himself with just pointing, and otherwise remain silent. — tim wood
Indeed we can and do. And there is a truth function to all of this. If (as a competent judge) someone says the car is traveling at 60 mph, then it is. How fast is it traveling exactly? No one knows or will ever know. Thus to cavil and argue that the car is not traveling at 60 mph, and therefore it is wrong, or cannot be truly said that that it is, is to engage in disruptive absurdities. After all, near the equator the car would be moving at about 25,000 mph. Add in planetary, system, and galactic motion, and who knows.After naming the thing we can say whatever we want about it, compare it to other things that have also been named, and so on. — Metaphysician Undercover
It's inadequate as a representation of what is actually going on. — Metaphysician Undercover
How do you think that a determination of an average speed is at all useful toward representing acceleration? — Metaphysician Undercover
It's a measurement of its position at two points in time, and a calculation of it's average velocity between those two points in time. Of course it's inadequate for a job it's not meant for, and a job it's not doing. — flannel jesus
If you determine an average speed around one second and an average speed around another second, you can ascertain how much it accelerated or decelerated between those seconds, which is what I did. — flannel jesus
If at second one it was going X m/s, on average given the surrounding .2s, and at second two it was going Y m/s, on average given the surrounding .2s, then between 1s and 2s it must have accelerated or decelerated a certain amount. And we could even verify that by looking at some .2s intervals between 1s and 2s. We have the data from the high speed camera, we can just look you know. 1.1s - 1.3s, what was the average velocity? 1.3-1.5, 1.5-1.7, 1.7-1.9. We can just do the same process and look. — flannel jesus
You're trying to go too fast. You can go slow. We have the data from a high speed camera, we can take our time analysing it. You don't need to have a "perfect representation of everything immediately", which is what you seem to want. Just take it slow. — flannel jesus
I took it slow and just built up a couple facts. — flannel jesus
That requires the assumption of "constant" acceleration — Metaphysician Undercover
Sure, if that's what's there on the screen, then I agree, that's a true representation. The issue is one of interpretation though. Your claim was that this readout means that according to the speedometer the car is going 60mph. But that is not what that readout actually means, it's a faulty interpretation of what the readout means. — Metaphysician Undercover
So far in my analysis, I've just looked at a couple slices in time and calculated the average velocity for that slice. — flannel jesus
It seems like you have a philosophical problem with measuring things and coming to any conclusion at all based on those measurements. That's not a problem for me. Perhaps this is why science doesn't speak to you, and you don't speak to science.
Science is a little messy. Measurements are a little messy. I don't have a problem with that. That's just the reality we have to deal with. If you struggle with that, perhaps that's why your idea of physics is centuries behind everyone else. — flannel jesus
Well you can't rule it out, but it is reasonable to say that all 10 million can't be broken in exactly the same way. — EricH
However, per the CToT there is a true statement here:
"Within the accuracy of our measuring apparatus the car is moving 60 mph relative to it's outside environment". — EricH
I was not any good at calculus, but I think calculus is what you are talking about. So question to you, MU: do you buy calculus? Or is that flawed and misleading?Furthermore, since any such averaging requires a duration in time, and any duration can be broken down into shorter time periods, this problem inheres within the nature of that technique. — Metaphysician Undercover
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.