dlorde
Philosopher
- Joined
- Apr 20, 2007
- Messages
- 6,864
That late, great visualiser and communicator of physics, Richard Feynman, said that one of the great difficulties of explaining physics to the public was that the underlying concepts were mathematical and that there are no useful analogies to familiar everyday concepts with which to explain them. Without maths it is possible to get a rough, broad-brush overview of physics, but not a detailed knowledge & understanding.Can you only discuss these ideas through maths?
However, ISTM a rough, broad-brush overview is adequate for the physics we're talking about here. That's all I have at present, and I don't yet feel out of my depth here...