Almo
Masterblazer
bikerdruid said:nonsenseHello Biker druid
how would you know that the maths was meant to be about gravity, unless someone told you what gravity was? Eh?
Agreed.
bikerdruid said:nonsenseHello Biker druid
how would you know that the maths was meant to be about gravity, unless someone told you what gravity was? Eh?
I talked about types of causality, not particular causalities.
Newtonian is reciprocal.
And concepts these days are only best solutions for the results we are looking for.
-. Are you saying that mind can affect matter?
Try this though. Is mind "effected" by matter?
Jonesboy said:Not only are you advocating mind over matter, but you are supposing that the brain makes us do things.
I think, you need, to examine that.
Hello Biker druid
how would you know that the maths was meant to be about gravity, unless someone told you what gravity was? Eh?
The Indeterminable is infinity. This is empty mathematics.
And I fancy Jenny Agutter, and not just 'cos she was born in Taunton.I fancy The Indeterminable.
Did physics at school, many years ago, but don't remember covering ultraviolet catastrophe as we only spent about 30 seconds on QM. Thankyou for giving me something else to read and learn about.![]()
Gravity informs your understanding of the mathematics of gravity. Nothing new is added.
Gravity informs your understanding of the mathematics of gravity. Nothing new is added.
Science has four types of causality: Newtonian, mind/brain, quantum/relativistic, and form/non-form. All but the Newtonian causality are employed in two creation myths - mind, and the physical universe.
The creation of the Universe according to Science
Quantum and relatavistic theories, patched around the ultimately topological ideas of string theory, today pose as one pole of Science's creation myth. The other pole is emptiness from which the former are presumed to be in a causal relationship.
Science's universe creation myth assumes form and non-form. Science expresses the relationship of form and non-form as the relationship between quantum/relativistic events and emptiness.
Originally Posted by Jonesboy View Post
If certain objects are scientific then they must have certain material properties that make them scientific. What are these properties?
But if science doesn't tell us 'which things we ought to explore' then how are we to choose among them?
Agreed.
Originally Posted by Jonesboy View Post
If certain objects are scientific then they must have certain material properties that make them scientific. What are these properties?
There are no ideas that are not commensense.
Also agreed.ETA: Everyone should just stop talking with Jonesboy. I smell troll.
To describe this as "common sense" is to stretch the definition of common sense well past breaking point.
Dave
We were THAT stupid then?Multivac said:without science we would still be living in caves