So you shit on both sides of this divide? What intellectually does meet with your full approval? — apokrisis
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chernobyl_Nuclear_Power_Plant_sarcophagus
The Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant sarcophagus or Shelter Structure (Ukrainian: Об'єкт "Укриття") is a massive steel and concrete structure covering the nuclear reactor number 4 building of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant. The sarcophagus resides inside the New Safe Confinement structure.
People have used this sort of idea to create computational and communications based theories of causation, which are pretty neat. Past states of a system end up entailing future states (or a range of them). This seems right in line with the idea of cosmic Logos in some respects. It's also a version of causation that seems to deal with some of Hume's "challenges." — Count Timothy von Icarus
So, physicists want a "grand unified" pattern instead. Physicists seem to view this effort as essential. — Tarskian
Do you mean how does causality as imagined by physics relate to causality as imagined by logic? Do they share the same root or are they antithetic? — apokrisis
My point was simply that I think 'Physics' as a discipline has still a 'raison d'etre' if 'a theory of everything' is impossible to achieve. I myself worked briefly in condensed matter physics, a branch of physics that is quite independent to the search of a 'theory of everything'. To some physicists might be essential, maybe even famous ones, but this does not mean that physics becomes vain if a 'theory of everything' is impossible. There still much to be discovered about physical phenomena that can be 'modeled' with current theories. — boundless
Is this chicken or egg? Physics came first in a non-anthropological manner. QED? — Shawn
Yes, well may I ask whether there are things that cannot be modeled in a computer? — Shawn
I'm also trying to understand your argument about logic being transcendental. Do you mean to say logic is foundational to every state of change within a system, as logic seems necessary to produce change or "cause and effect" between objects that may have a relation as defined by physical laws through logic or the transcendental logic you mention. — Shawn
But I am not sure why you think that it would show that if that is the case then physics would have a precedence over logic. After all, computer operations too follow logical principles. — boundless
Sure, I would like to highlight your uncertainty as stemming from not knowing how logical space can exist. Is it true in how I'm framing the ambiguity? — Shawn
there anything standing in the way of a direct relationship between logic and physics? — Shawn
If physics is to be descriptive of logic, then, a "cause" would be defined by how the system of laws governing physics works, and from there to deduce what logic would be required to explain those laws in terms of decidability in logical space. — Shawn
And I believe that the criteria according to which an explanation is deemed 'coherent' cannot be based on something that is or might be contingent. — boundless
IMO, the problem I see here is that when you try to describe the laws you might infer from your observations, you already use logic and mathematics (to make them coherent and give quantitative predictions). So, I guess I can say that in order to 'ground' logic in physics, you are already assuming that logic is fundamental.
What do you think about this last paragraph? Do you think I am wrong in detecting a circuarity here? If so, why? — boundless
Additionally, as apokrisis main question, is there anything standing in the way of a direct relationship between logic and physics? — Shawn
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