a singularity represents a transition point where our theories (or maybe just our current system of mathematics, or both) stop working and, as far as we can tell, no longer describe reality. — Jaded Scholar
Do you not think that we truly are, as Carl Sagan suggested, in the title of his first episode of the series COSMOS, 'on the shores of the cosmic ocean?' — universeness
What I'm talking about is better understood through principles of calculus. The "t=0" represents the limit, and the problem is in approaching the limit. — Metaphysician Undercover
There is a point in time, when it changes from being at rest, to being in motion. At this point in time, its rate of acceleration must be infinite. — Metaphysician Undercover
I believe the uncertainty is based in a time/frequency relation. — Metaphysician Undercover
...Some moreso than others.Exactly, our understanding of anything is incomplete, therefore deficient, lacking, — Metaphysician Undercover
Set theory in general, presupposes that numbers are objects, Platonic Idealism. — Metaphysician Undercover
But I do not think that it is sophistication which makes good math, I think the opposite. Good math is based in simple principles with universal applicability. — Metaphysician Undercover
The problem is that no one wants to fix them. The principles work in most situations, so they do not need fixing. Then for the places where they do not work, keep using them and add some more principles to make them sort of work. Look, thousands of years ago Pythagoras label pi and the diagonal of a square as "irrational". To me, this indicates that there is something fundamentally wrong with the dimensional representation of space. But who cares, the principles work, and when it turns out that real circles in the real world are not actually circular, but ellipses and things like that, we just adapt "the circle" and pi principles to make them work in the real world. — Metaphysician Undercover
But you cannot say that these problems haven't been labeled. — Metaphysician Undercover
What a lovely thing to say! Thank you! :DFor me, it's such a pleasant breeze of cool fresh air on a hot and sticky day, to read your posts. — universeness
To be honest, I needed to brush up on many things to answer your previous questions, and that article was one of the things I read for that, haha.Sabine's ... is ... not a long article, so it would be great if you could have a look at it and give your opinion on it. — universeness
I assumed some string or perhaps superstring states, were responsible for the actual (for want of a better term) 'fabric' of spacetime itself. I thought that's part of the reason why supersymmetric particles were so sought after at the LHC?
String theory/Mtheory was/is a possible t.o.e, is it not, and as such, does it not also suggest that spacetime is quantisable? If QFT is correct, is it not that string states, would be the same as field disturbances, rather than be free travelling particles/strings? Rather than the concept of a single electron (as such), we would have an electron as a string state/field disturbance?
I hope I am not frustrating you too much with my poor grasp of the details involved here. — universeness
I think this comment is accurate, but the language of the second sentence throws me a little. I really don't want to come off like I'm the grammar police (maybe something more like "the physical interpretation social worker"?) when I say that I don't really like the language here that LQG "includes" spacetime and string theory does not. I think it's a more useful interpretation to say that LQG constructs spacetime as an emergent property of its laws, whereas string theory is built upon the assumption of the pre-existence of spacetime, which makes it (almost) impossible to say anything about the fundamental nature of spacetime itself within that framework.So is the difference between String theory and LQG, your earlier point that in string theory, all proposed string states exist WITHIN spacetime. Spacetime would thus be a 'container,' for all string/superstring states, so, LQG includes spacetime and string/superstring theory does not? This seems to clash with my own (probably incorrect) interpretations of the Sabine Hossenfelder article. — universeness
The essential singularity of complex analysis would seem strange enough it might provide some clues about how math diverges from reality in a spectacular way and how our ideas of reality could shift. Particularly since the exponential function is fundamental in physics. — jgill
We are an infant species, when you consider the cosmic calendar scale.
Do you not think that we truly are, as Carl Sagan suggested, in the title of his first episode of the series COSMOS, 'on the shores of the cosmic ocean?' — universeness
Of course, I'm probably wasting my time by spelling out the problems with your approach. All of the arguments you have doubled down on by basically just repeating yourself and ignoring my refutations (and any other easily accessible information on them) are a series of data points suggesting that you don't actually care about the truth or falsehood of the arguments you are summoning and, for some reason, are primarily motivated by a desire to disagree, and not remotely motivated by any desire to seek out actual truths. — Jaded Scholar
The first example being the AdS/CFT conjecture, a theoretical spacetime configuration which achieves the limiting case where strings do not affect the shape of spacetime, so you can have both strings and LQG without one conflicting with the other — Jaded Scholar
are two example of the paths I am referring to.However, this spacetime is not the spacetime we experience. Gravitons distort everything's interaction with the underlying spacetime, and produce gravitational dynamics that match the dynamics of relativistic spacetime. — Jaded Scholar
So, just to clarify the implication here, without supersymmetry, the ground state (or lowest energy state) of every string would have to have a 'faster than light speed' potential (or actual?).Relatedly, I also did not understand the specific need for supersymmetry, which this paper helped me most with: https://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0410049
Horowitz plainly notes one big instantiation of the problems that arise in string theory without supersymmetry is that, in that case, the ground state of every string becomes a tachyon. — Jaded Scholar
I read many of the exchanges on the physics stack exchange. One of the TPF members @noAxioms is/was a moderator on a physics site, but I can't remember if it was the physics stack exchange.I've read several more articles (from both arXiv and the good folks over at physics.stackexchange.com), and I think I've got the gist. — Jaded Scholar
Oh, man, you have just hit on something that has been rattling around my head for a few months now, and I have to rant about it to you. It'd probably be more appropriate to start a new thread for a tangent this tangential, but whatever. — Jaded Scholar
I would like to hear them sometimes! For me, I am content with even the thought that 'someone has to be first,' so why not us, as unlikely as that seems in such a vast universe. I love this quote from Carl Sagan's film Contact:I'll resist the urge to talk about the answers to the Fermi paradox that I find most plausible — Jaded Scholar
:clap: :clap: This is part of why I say to the doomsters, the nihilists and the pessimists, that despite their very justified complaints about our bloody history, our very poor stewardship of this planet, that we had better reverse or be made extinct, and our current horrifically bad record of disunity and inhumanity towards our own and other species, they must also realise, that we have only been around for the last couple of seconds in the cosmic calendar scale, SO GIVE US A F****** CHANCE!!!!!!!!!It makes me feel a little better about human civilisation acting like a bunch of idiot babies, compared to what (I think/hope) we're capable of. On a cosmological scale, we ARE babies. And what's more, we're the very first ones, with no earlier pioneers we can possibly look to for guidance as we figure out our baby steps on our own — Jaded Scholar
Moreover, one of the reasons for modern mathematics no longer being merged with the field of physics is that - as I also mentioned previously - assumptions and value judgements about physicality or "reality" are outside the field of mathematics, which is now primarily directed with finding and fleshing out any and every mathematical system we can think of — Jaded Scholar
I've given myself permission to be quite rude in this comment, which I'm hesitant to do in a forum where I'm pretty new, but the points you are holding fast to are so flawed that they're almost actively anti-intellectual. And that's the main reason I'm responding at all. — Jaded Scholar
But your last comment has clarified things for me: you obviously just don't understand anything about modern or classical physics and are just parroting random critiques of physics and maths from throughout the ages, which were all valid at the time, but have been turned into jibberish by your comprehensive ignorance of the actual contexts they apply to. — Jaded Scholar
I literally just detailed in my last response that you are describing a problem that existed in pre-Newtonian classical physics which was solved by Newtonian physics. — Jaded Scholar
Yeah, thanks for (again) confirming that you don't know what you're talking about. Within Fourier transforms, there is intrinsic uncertainty within first-order terms between time and frequency for the exact same reason that any other integral transformation has an intrinsic uncertainty between conjugate variables, be it time/frequency, position/momentum, gravitational potential/mass density, voltage/charge, etc. There is nothing remotely unique to time itself in this line of argument. — Jaded Scholar
I don't agree with your definition of "sophistication", which seems to be equivalent to "complexity". My meaning of it in this context was more like "advanced"/"accurate"/etc. — Jaded Scholar
What you are saying is a collection of truth-adjacent things, which you have combined into something that is just not true. And you could easily have avoided asserting something this ridiculous if you were interested enough in what you're talking about to spend 30 seconds looking it up online. — Jaded Scholar
I do slightly object to the value label of "good" maths systems being those which are better tools for modelling our specific reality, but then again, that's the whole point of maths, so it's probably not worth quibbling about here. — Jaded Scholar
But in keeping with the theme of my rebuttals, both maths itself and our scientific culture have changed a bit since then! — Jaded Scholar
Moreover, one of the reasons for modern mathematics no longer being merged with the field of physics is that - as I also mentioned previously - assumptions and value judgements about physicality or "reality" are outside the field of mathematics, which is now primarily directed with finding and fleshing out any and every mathematical system we can think of. This is closest to an actual reason for the abundance of complexity and axioms that you lament: the field is not defined by or limited by an attempt to describe our perceived reality. It seeks to describe all possible mathematical systems. Each of which require axioms to define. — Jaded Scholar
If you feel the need to reply again, then I challenge you to point out one such problem that has been labelled, and is not something that modern mathematicians want solved (or have already solved). — Jaded Scholar
if we could label them, we could have fixed them by now. — Jaded Scholar
I think mathematics and science are not perfect tools for modelling the real world. And nailing down the exact nature of their problems is both important and difficult. And I think it does a great disservice to these very valuable pursuits if we pretend that the long-solved problems of their forebears are some kind of inescapable black mark upon them. It can be highly useful to learn from the problems of the past, but the most instructive part of that kind of analysis is how they were solved - another reason it's counterproductive to ignore the fact that those solutions exist. — Jaded Scholar
It's like pretending that all criticisms of horse-drawn carriages are equally valid criticisms of cars. You're not accomplishing anything worthwhile when you muddy the debate by saying that cars are good, but all of the horse dung is a real problem. That's the problem with you doubling down on arguments like "Oh, the problems are clear - they just can't get over [method of thinking they got over a millennia ago]." — Jaded Scholar
Of course, I'm probably wasting my time by spelling out the problems with your approach. All of the arguments you have doubled down on by basically just repeating yourself and ignoring my refutations (and any other easily accessible information on them) are a series of data points suggesting that you don't actually care about the truth or falsehood of the arguments you are summoning and, for some reason, are primarily motivated by a desire to disagree, and not remotely motivated by any desire to seek out actual truths. — Jaded Scholar
When I started writing this response, I was intending to liken your responses to that of a LLM like Chat GPT-4 - nominally referencing a rich variety of information sources, but demonstrating no contextual understanding of any of them - but after a more thorough read of your commentary, I'm quite confident of your humanity. LLMs haven't yet got the exact register we see in humans with nothing to say and a determination to say it as loudly as possible. — Jaded Scholar
But when you approach these problems, Zeno's paradoxes for example, and the irrationality of pi and the square root of 2, with the attitude that these problems have already been solved, you do not look at them as real problems — Metaphysician Undercover
You have confirmed what is seen frequently here that when one turns philosophical on an issue one goes back in time to see what the Greeks had to say, and to join them across the ages in their despair. — jgill
Out of curiosity, are you an old guy like me, middle aged, or a "youngster"? — jgill
But when you approach these problems, Zeno's paradoxes for example, and the irrationality of pi and the square root of 2, with the attitude that these problems have already been solved, you do not look at them as real problems — Metaphysician Undercover
I continue to dabble in the complex plane where the world is two dimensional — jgill
I don't know if you can accurately say that is "the world". Isn't it more like two distinct perpendicular worlds, the world of real numbers and the world of imaginary numbers? — Metaphysician Undercover
Here is what I think is a very good way to look at these two planes — Metaphysician Undercover
But we are looking at two lines, not planes. — jgill
Unfortunately, string theory can't give us an answer, at least not yet. The trouble is that string theory isn't done — we only have various approximation methods that we hope get close to the real thing, but right now we have no idea how right we are. So we have no mathematical technology for following the chain, from specific manifold to specific string vibration to the physics of the universe. — universeness
So mathematically, you can create an nth dimensional array, and such an array would exist in reality, but cannot be geometrically displayed in 3D — universeness
If pushed, would a mathematician be willing to say something such as 'well you could think of the 'imaginary number line,' as in a sense, 'wrapped around' every coordinate in a standard 3D coordinate system, such as (x,y,z), or (x,y,z,t), t being time — universeness
Some physicists, like Smolin would say that string theory is done — Metaphysician Undercover
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