PixyMisa
Persnickety Insect
Anthropic principle.
An event indicates a physical situation or occurrence, located at a specific point in space and time, so any 'expression of time' is implicit. What your multiple 'atomic forms' are supposed to be escapes me. I'd ask you to explain, but I doubt I'd get a sensible answer - care to try?By finite I means a space time event consisting of more than one constituent part.
ie more than one "atom"/indivisible form (atom may not be a precise enough term) involving any expression of time.
What do you mean by a 'strictly physical infinity'? Such as?I am refering to a strictly physical infinity, treating space and time as integral (two sides of the same coin).
What do you mean by that - the 'fractal nature of reality' or something equally vague?.. The effect of which is an infinite complexity of form.
String Theory is not a definition of anything - the clue is in the name.The only suitable definition I have found for universe in a cursory look at scientific definitions would be string theory.
QUOTE=dlorde;6900540]An event indicates a physical situation or occurrence, located at a specific point in space and time, so any 'expression of time' is implicit. What your multiple 'atomic forms' are supposed to be escapes me. I'd ask you to explain, but I doubt I'd get a sensible answer - care to try?
.What do you mean by a 'strictly physical infinity'? Such as?
Btw space and time are 'integral' under relativity - a continuum, i.e. spacetime
String Theory is not a definition of anything - the clue is in the name.

Anthropic principle.
Why do you cling to those ideas ? We've already told you they don't make sense. No matter how many times you repeat them and your questions, the cosmos will not bend and become the way you think it is. Isn't it more productive to learn how the universe works and go with that ?
I take your point, I was finding it difficult to distinguish between science and materialism. I think materialism is shrinking out of all recognition at the moment.
It does occur to me though that string theory does involve speculation.
Shessh, matter is energy. Period. Full stop.Sorry,
I have to blame wiki for that, I have trouble seeing the wood for the trees, with all these categories.
I would be interested in how quantum theory is usefull in materialism?
MaybeMy point may be mute now, I will state it as you ask.
Simply I would point out that there may be factors/conditions in the material world which are "shaped" or determined by the presence of infinity in existence.
That is your idiom again, not string theoryIndeed the whole "house of cards" of physical existence may only stand on a foundation of some infinite prerequisite. Like the strings animating a puppet.
I have evidence in the big bang theory of the physical universe being created in some mysterious way out of a singularity(perhaps infinite in some sense).
It exists.I already know that something exists, I have not been given an explanation for this.
The universe is.I would find it much easier to understand existence(or not) if nothing existed(or not as the case may be), as all would be consistent and logical. The laws of physics, maths etc would all be there as usual, however just "invisible".
Materialsim describes what can be observed.I'm rapidly coming round to Belz's position as a account of this state of affairs as would be stated by a "materialist".
I don't include Robin, as we are managing to discuss something I hope.
I read it the first time, no explanation.
I hate to say this and I am not meaning to be offensive, but you are using a strawman of materialism. The current naturalism, is not the universe constructed by Democritus, it is not the strawman constructed by Berkley and others. It is not the strawman erected by scores of posters here, who don't ask us materialists what we think but cram us into straw boxes.
The universe appears to be energy, it is governed by quantum mechanics, everything is energy waveforms all the time. There are no properties of matter that are not an expression of these energy wave forms, period, full stop.
Matter is merely a classical set of conventions that implies certain aspects of the wave forms, some are better modeled than others:
Lack of interpenetration: the fact that you can sit in a chair and rest a book on the table is the result of the EM forces of the electrons the atomic shells around atoms.
Transfer of momentum in collisions: same as above
Mass, as in falling: this is an effect of gravity, still not an established model in QM, with some good start
Mass as in inertia: perhaps one of the greatest lack of a models we have. Objects in motion tend to stay in motion, objects at rest tend to stay at rest. the models of inertia are still very tentative.
Chemistry: all explained very well by the wave forms of QM
Materialism has not evaporated under QM, it has transformed, the people who are materialists here will all tell you that matter is energy.
It is the philosophers who keep characterizing the materialists by the ideas of Democritus and Aristotle.
I already know that something exists, I have not been given an explanation for this.
I would find it much easier to understand existence(or not) if nothing existed(or not as the case may be), as all would be consistent and logical.
The laws of physics, maths etc would all be there as usual, however just "invisible".
I doubt I has successfully imparted an idea yet.
Geometry left Euclid a while back as well Non-Euclidean_geometryWPThankyou, that is most informative.
I too regard all as energy and I have left behind many of the more usual or traditional physical models. However my thinking and language is more theologically based and I do not have the scientific language to discuss these things easily with scientists and materialists.
This is why I keep talking about infinity as a universal concept in an attempt to discuss ideas freed from the 3 dimensional classical euclidian thought structures.
For example my theology is almost entirely based on concepts dealing directly with "infinity". The Judao christian God plays no part in my thinking.
I will take a longer look string theory and hope to discuss this new naturalism at some point once I have familiarised myself with it.
Can you offer any links to this?
Punshhh, read this carefully:
That we don't actually KNOW why/how there's something doesn't give you a lisence to make up the explanation.
What if "nothing" was impossible ? I already mentioned this but you ignored it.
No. The laws of physics wouldn't exist.
What?Ok I do accept that "nothing" may not exist and the laws of physics may not not exist in any form if that were the case.
I have noted all your posts in this thread, I have no argument with your position, I just disagree.
Ok I do accept that "nothing" may not exist and the laws of physics may not not exist in any form if that were the case. Would this also apply to mathematics? in such a scenario.
No (depending on the thing and the boundaries). For example, many people think the universe may be finite but unbounded. This is a simple topological description; a consequence would be that following a geodesic across the universe would eventually bring you back to where you started, much like following a great circle around the Earth will bring you back to your departure point - the Earth's surface is finite but unbounded....Yes "does something finite necessarily have boundaries?", this is closer.
If it is finite in space/time, how can it extend infinitely in space/time? Of course, you can run around infinitely far/long in a padded cell, but that would be interminableIf something finite has no "boundaries" perhaps it extends infinitely?
What?
You will have to explain how you get from ' "nothing" may not exist' to 'the laws of physics may not exist in any form'
The second does not seem to even remotely follow from the first.
OK. He made it sound like there would be no law of physics if "nothing" was impossible.He's trying to reword what I said, namely that "nothing" my not be possible, and that obviously, if nothing at all existed, there would be no such thing as "laws of physics".
In fact Materialism is in more robust shape now than it has ever been. You would be hard pressed to find a Materialist philosopher in the 100 years preceding the advent of QM.I hate to say this and I am not meaning to be offensive, but you are using a strawman of materialism. The current naturalism, is not the universe constructed by Democritus, it is not the strawman constructed by Berkley and others. It is not the strawman erected by scores of posters here, who don't ask us materialists what we think but cram us into straw boxes.
The universe appears to be energy, it is governed by quantum mechanics, everything is energy waveforms all the time. There are no properties of matter that are not an expression of these energy wave forms, period, full stop.
Matter is merely a classical set of conventions that implies certain aspects of the wave forms, some are better modeled than others:
Lack of interpenetration: the fact that you can sit in a chair and rest a book on the table is the result of the EM forces of the electrons the atomic shells around atoms.
Transfer of momentum in collisions: same as above
Mass, as in falling: this is an effect of gravity, still not an established model in QM, with some good start
Mass as in inertia: perhaps one of the greatest lack of a models we have. Objects in motion tend to stay in motion, objects at rest tend to stay at rest. the models of inertia are still very tentative.
Chemistry: all explained very well by the wave forms of QM
Materialism has not evaporated under QM, it has transformed, the people who are materialists here will all tell you that matter is energy.
It is the philosophers who keep characterizing the materialists by the ideas of Democritus and Aristotle.