Aridas
Crazy Little Green Dragon
Trivial, yes. Irrelevant, no.
Irrelevant, yes. That trivial truth was already inherently accounted for and had nothing even potentially relevant to do with the point actually being made.
Edited by Agatha:Edited to remove moderated content and response to same.
Not intended as an insult, for the record, merely as part of an explanation for why what happened, happened.
This is not actually a separate way from the first. It is, rather, a follow-up to it.
The electron must have both position and velocity. If that position and-slash-or velocity cannot be known, ever, no matter how fine the measurements taken, then by definition it does not have them
*sigh* This is you doing it again, despite it already being explicitly explained to you. OF COURSE it has a position and velocity. The trouble comes when we try to obtain that information, because the very act of measuring with the methods that we even can use changes them.
(because, if we can't detect the electron in any way, there is no electron).
Your only options for backing that up are by invoking reality breaking magic to get around the potential reasons why an electron couldn't be detected or by saying that the objective is dependent on the subjective. You really can't win going either route. This is a worthless distraction, though, as I made no attempt to claim that electrons are undetectable, taking in account the tools at our disposal.
And no, the observer effect (by which you probably meant the uncertainty principle, but whatever)
I meant the observer effect. I could have used the uncertainty principle, yes, but I deemed that the point being made was served a little better with the observer effect.
does not actually change this. Position and velocity are difficult to measure simultaneously at such small scales because one is a measure of a change in the other over time. It is not that such values do not exist; it is that their means of measurement are incompatible, as one relies on taking a measurement at one instant and another over time.
...Not quite. The very act of measuring, given the actual tools that we can use, alters the velocity, which makes the position less certain. Otherwise, all we would need to do is find the velocity and we could calculate the position from there, provided interference could be removed, or at least made negligible, which we pretty much can do.
Demonstrable (or, again, at least demonstrable in theory) is very much part of the requirements for existing, at the trivial level and every other.
Empty assertion, but let's look at the rest for more on that. Also, demonstrable in what theory? The kind of theory where you invoke impossible magic to hand wave away all the problems with it?
All things that are demonstrable exist;
This is a trivial truth, given that the existence of whatever is being demonstrated is an inherent requirement for it to actually be demonstrated.
all things that exist are demonstrable.
This, on the other hand, is false assertion. Existence is indeed required for something to be demonstrable, but that in no way implies that for something to exist, it must be demonstrable. As it stands, for something to be demonstrable, there are a number of other conditions that must be met beyond merely "existing" for it to reasonably be able to be demonstrated.
If they are not demonstrable, then they have no effect on the rest of the universe
And no. Lack of demonstrability does not, in fact, equate with no effect. You're really trying to conflate distinct qualities here, yet again.
It really isn't.
There is no meaningful definition of the word "real" which allows things with no actual effect on the universe to exist. As a result of this, things which exist are necessarily detectable. If they are not, there is no difference between saying that they exist and that they don't - which means they don't.
This goes right back to you claiming to have knowledge that you cannot have, even in principle. Also, you're doing a disservice to science by trying to reinterpret its nature to something quite trivial in comparison.
If it can't be shown to be true, it is false.
That is what false means.
Hardly. True and false are a dichotomy, yes. A dichotomy of states of being. Showing that one is the case is an action, though, not a state of being, and a very good reason why that action might not be able to be done has been pointed out to you repeatedly. Beyond that, you're trying to make a dichotomy out of an action and a state of being, which would never be acceptable, anyways.
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