The "unreasonable" effectiveness of mathematics is a strong indication that within the "laws of nature" there is an inherent regularity. — RussellA
What point are you making? — universeness
as science does not know what energy is — universeness
If universal concepts were not created by thought, then the universal concepts of love and hate could be discovered in a mind-independent world. — RussellA
Conceptually distinguishable (rationalism) but perceptually not (empiricism). — Agent Smith
What if we are AI? — Agent Smith
Measurement doesn't affect anything in the past. — Andrew M
the extraordinary, trans-neurotic, self-aware, lucid, or transcendent, or Self.
Thoughts? — ZzzoneiroCosm
If you lived a hundred years ago you couldn't even imagine such a discovery — Wayfarer
If you don't see the point of Wigner's essay, there's not a lot of purpose me trying to explain it again. — Wayfarer
As soon as there are ANY differences in the world, you have a structure describable by mathematics — litewave
Why Wigner says it is 'unreasonable' is because of the sense in which mathematical conjectures sometimes produce completely unforseeen predictions which turn out to be true — Wayfarer
Never heard of it before you. — Jackson