We left wing milk and water liberal political correctness fanatics do not need to agree with the arseholes whose human rights we defend. — unenlightened
If all the laws of physics can be computed, then doesn't that presuppose that logic is at least synonymous or at least as important as physics is. Or rather that physics relies on the laws of logic? — Question
No, if something is computable (doesn't encounter the Halting problem), then it is real in some sense. If something can't be computed then that is indicative of a gap in understanding or that there are some things that are unintelligible. — Question
I made a post about this issue over at physics forum. — Question
For the lazy: stoning to death is the punishment. — Emptyheady
So, then how can we know for certain that the MWI is actual/real/valid/.../true if the only practical means of verifying it is via trying to simulate the universe via the Church-Turing-Deutsch Principle? — Question
I'm going to try and simplify my question to a more simple one pertaining as to whether Godel's Incompleteness Theorems negates the possibility of constructing a universal Turing machine that would be capable of computing all known physical laws. — Question
Or am I running in circles in trying to state that all physical laws can be proven to be true (computable or replicable?). — Question
So, the Church-Turing-Deutsch Principle can never be known to be true. Thus, we don't know if we can simulate Everittian QM and know it is deterministic at the same time. — Question
And there are dragons at the edge of the world and the Krampus will get you if you're alone in the woods at Christmas. Provide actual evidence for these allegations, and I mean actual court proceedings not hate filled propaganda from right wing newspapers! — Barry Etheridge
UKIP hasn't made it books public where it has gotten money, just like well, Trump hasn't given his tax records. Yet here it should be noticed that parties like UKIP or the National Front aren't parties invented by Moscow and directly lead by Moscow as the historical Komintern. Still, obviously there is a link. When a politician praises a dictator like Putin, there usually is a reason... like money.
For example, Sweden Democrats (if I am correct) are a party that indeed does have it's Neo-nazi roots and has it admirers of Putin, yet it isn't linked to Russia as some other far right wing parties are. And actually it voted in favour of the new treaty between Sweden and NATO, which Russia was totally against. — ssu
This is an issue because given any sufficiently sophisticated universal computing device there will be "truths" or what can be called manifest physical laws (through mathematics, e.g in Hilbert Space) that can't be proven to be true. — Question
This is essentially putting a thorn via Godel's Incompleteness Theorems into the validity of the Church-Turing-Deutsch Principle. I don't know if you see the link there yet or if I haven't made the causal link sufficiently clear. — Question
If you want to take this line of reasoning as far as possible, then this conundrum extends all the way to ANY physical law, in that we can never be certain of it being true in all circumstances. — Question
So how you do we should change the Muslims? — WiseMoron
Unless you're going to offer me an extensive bibliography, from people having done some actual research or having real life experience in these Muslim societies, on which you've based your assumptions and conclusions, I'm just going to assume you don't know what you're talking about. — Benkei
Well, the Quran may have some bad things in it, but so do other religious texts from other religions such as the Christian Bible, which I pointed out in my post. — WiseMoron
Muslims aren't going to be willing to change the Quran, — WiseMoron
Please enlighten me how changing or burning some foul book will change a group of people permanently. Or would it be much easier to just kill the Muslims for being delusional? — WiseMoron
What I mean exactly is that the problem isn’t the religious book called the Quran, — WiseMoron
Yet with supporting clandestinely Trump, giving loans to the French National Front and having connections to far-right and anti-immigration / anti-EU parties, Russia now has hit a populist streak that likely it didn't think would be possible. — ssu
Now the reason why I can't be for Putin is that he wants to subjugate Europe. — Agustino
I want Europe to become a regional superpower. Europe must live up to its great heritage, — Agustino
So Brexit may have been inevitable. From a physics perspective, it's just a matter of time before the right kind and amount of stress comes along and the EU will basically be gone. — Mongrel
But whereas a statement is what it is in virtue of expressing a propositional content which, in turn, is what it is in virtue of being inferentially related to other such contents, DNA is not. — Theorem
Statements (as signs) are essentially conceptual/inferential in nature, whereas DNA (even if it be a sign in some sense) is not. — Theorem
Well if physics is mathematics manifest in nature, then a computer modeling such a mathematical construct would have to face with Godel's Incompleteness Theorem also? That's at least how I understand the issue. — Question
Yes I do, mostly because I subscribe to the notion that statements are sign relations that require one or more minds as fundament in order to be instantiated. — Theorem
Let me elaborate my reasoning. Let's say that some sufficiently complex computer of whatever origin is designed to simulate all the physical laws of the universe. Now, keeping Godels Incompleteness Theorem in mind we have a problem of affirming that every outcome of such a computer is determinate. How does a computer of such sort prove its own consistency in modeling deterministic behavior? — Question
It won't make any difference. The point that always comes up is the fact that Everett's metaphysic implies that the universe 'splits', that each separate outcome is real, that there really are 'many worlds'. Sometimes you will deny it, sometimes you will agree - even spelling the Worlds with a capital W. And this will never end, it the only topic of interest to you, everything you write ends up being about this, David Deutch, the Turing whatever it is, artificial intelligence, the quantum computer which will basically be like God. I don't think you show the least interest in, or knowledge of, the subject of philosophy as such, except insofar as it is related to this subject. So I won't be bothering you again, it's clear that nothing anyone says here is going to make the least difference to your belief system. — Wayfarer
Or, Everett got it wrong because the 'wave collapse' actually occurs. — Wayfarer
The apple sitting on the table is the same apple that I pick up and take a bite out of a few seconds later. That is what is meant by identity. — Andrew M
There is one way to answer this pertinent question. If every physical law is computable, then we can recreate reality (on a much smaller scale) here on earth... — Question
And Godel's Incompleteness Theorem certainly comes into play here. — Question
Thank you, I think I understand now. One last question that is on my mind. Does Everettian QM obey causality? And if not what determines the evolution of the wavefunction? — Question
The first quote gives me the impression that this one wavefunction is representative of all interactions between objects in space, which seems to go against quote 3. — Question
Now, I'm having trouble understanding how quote 2 and 3 can coexist. All physical interactions are treated exactly the same relative to what? — Question
Sounds like something you say in a cult. Never mind me, I never got past understanding how one defines an 'observer' in QM. — Question
I find it solipsistic and incomprehensible to view every entity existing in a multiplicity of states in the multiverse. Doesn't one wavefunction entail another or do these wavefunctions exist/evolve independently? — Question
Does anyone think the MWI, leads to notions of solipsism for any particular observer? — Question