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What's this about Hawking abandoning the idea of a TOE

What the heck are you talking about? Have you been drinking again?
 
To quote from the Sunday Times

"BRITAIN’S most famous scientist has abandoned his 16-year quest for a single elusive equation that he believed could explain the workings of the universe, writes Nick Speed.

Stephen Hawking had been trying to find a “theory of everything” which he reckoned could answer science’s greatest questions of time and space in a single statement.

The admission by Hawking, in a paper on his website, that he has ended his quest, is a climbdown from claims in his 1988 book, A Brief History of Time.

“Some people will be very disappointed,” says Hawking. “But I have changed my mind. I’m glad our search for understanding will never come to an end, and that we’ll always have the challenge of new discovery.”"
 
shemp said:
1. Please post a link to this.

2. Please stop drinking.

  • I haven't been drinking, nor does it alter the intellectual content or the truthful nature of my posts when I do.
  • I cannot provide a link because the article pops up in a small window which doesn't have an address. At least it does when you do a search on the Sunday Times site.
    [/list=a]

    Here is the Sunday Times link. You'll need to find the article for yourself.

    Edit to add: Actually here is the precise link.
 
Interesting Ian,

That is "theory of everything". Very gratifying though that he's been brought around to my way of thinking

Exactly how does his changing his mind about a theory of everything being possible, constitute "coming around to your way of thinking"? I don't think such a theory is possible either. So what? I find it rather unlikely that his reasons for coming to this conclusion bear any resemblance to your own.


Dr. Stupid
 
Stimpson J. Cat said:
Interesting Ian,



Exactly how does his changing his mind about a theory of everything being possible, constitute "coming around to your way of thinking"? I don't think such a theory is possible either. So what? I find it rather unlikely that his reasons for coming to this conclusion bear any resemblance to your own.


Dr. Stupid

I didn't say his reasons were. I meant "my way of thinking" in reference to the conclusion, not the journey. You also obviously didn't notice the smiley.

Please put me on ignore. You never have anything constructive to say about my posts.
 
Stimpy:

Does that mean the same conclusion, reached by different premises and logic (or even illogic), is both Correct and at the same time Incorrect?

Hmmm.


Finally, damn Godel.
 
Hammegk,

Does that mean the same conclusion, reached by different premises and logic (or even illogic), is both Correct and at the same time Incorrect?

No, it means that just because you have reached the correct conclusion, does not mean that the reasoning you used is sound.


Ian,

Please put me on ignore. You never have anything constructive to say about my posts.

That sounds more like a reason for you to put me on ignore, than vice-versa. If you don't want me to read and respond to your posts, then don't make them here.


Dr. Stupid
 
Stimpson J. Cat said:
Hammegk,



No, it means that just because you have reached the correct conclusion, does not mean that the reasoning you used is sound.



Sure, Hawking's reasoning may not be sound, but it's gratifying he's come to the correct conclusion.

What I want to know though, is why you don't believe in a TOE? Science is about recognising that apparently disparate phenomena can be subsumed in a single theory (written in mathematics). The natural outcome of this is that all phenomena whatsoever will be able to be so subsumed under a single theory.

BTW, even if I were a naturalist I would reject the possibility of a TOE. I was just wondering if your reasoning was similar to mine.
 
How concise does an explanation of reality have to be to be dubbed a "Theory of Everything," as opposed to a big pile of theories? Does the total number of mathematical equations have to be less than some magical limit L?

~~ Paul
 
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:
How concise does an explanation of reality have to be to be dubbed a "Theory of Everything," as opposed to a big pile of theories? Does the total number of mathematical equations have to be less than some magical limit L?

~~ Paul
I think a pile of theories counts as a single theory, provided that the theories in the pile are consistent with each other.
 
Stimpson J. Cat said:

No, it means that just because you have reached the correct conclusion, does not mean that the reasoning you used is sound.
Would you prefer we base thoughts, words, and actions on a correct conclusion no matter how it was arrived at, or an incorrect conclusion logically justified but based on incorrect premises?
 
hammegk said:

Would you prefer we base thoughts, words, and actions on a correct conclusion no matter how it was arrived at, or an incorrect conclusion logically justified but based on incorrect premises?

For the student, here we see an excellent example of the False Dichotomy in the wild. Careful now, it bites.
 
Ian,

What I want to know though, is why you don't believe in a TOE? Science is about recognising that apparently disparate phenomena can be subsumed in a single theory (written in mathematics).

Science is about learning as much as possible about the world around us, and constructing models that we can use to describe it.

The natural outcome of this is that all phenomena whatsoever will be able to be so subsumed under a single theory.

Only if knowing all of the facts about the World was a state we could ever reasonably hope to attain. Even if we had a theory of everything, we could never empirically determine that it was one. All we could do is say that we had not yet discovered any phenomena which it doesn't accurately describe. Furthermore, Godel's incompleteness theorem basically guarantees that even if the theory describes every observation ever made, there will still be questions about the Universe that can be meaningfully asked within the context of science, but which cannot be answered by the theory. This is true even if the number of facts about the Universe is finite, because the logical framework we use to describe the Universe is a second order system.

The only way we could ever have a true TOE, would be if the number of facts about the Universe is finite, and the TOE was simply a list of all of those facts. But even if the number of facts is finite, it is clearly so large as to render any attempt to deal with them as a list of facts, rather than as some set of mathematical rules, intractable. And as long as our models are mathematical rules, those models will imply an infinite number of facts, and will be subject to Godel's incompleteness theorem.


Hammegk,

Would you prefer we base thoughts, words, and actions on a correct conclusion no matter how it was arrived at, or an incorrect conclusion logically justified but based on incorrect premises?

No. ;)


Dr. Stupid
 
hammegk said:

Would you prefer we base thoughts, words, and actions on a correct conclusion no matter how it was arrived at, or an incorrect conclusion logically justified but based on incorrect premises?

{deleted for reason that post was not relevent to thread}
 
scribble said:


For the student, here we see an excellent example of the False Dichotomy in the wild. Careful now, it bites.

I don't believe I stated those were the only possibilities, just a couple of choices that we may be required to make. Every rational person would prefer to base thought, word, and deed on a correct conclusion logically derived from the correct premises.

Godel pointed out that no internally consistent logical system can Prove it's premises. IIRC, this occured shortly after Russell & Whitehead used a few hundred pages of text to prove that 1+1=2.

So, how do you "have faith" you know which choice you are actually basing your decision on?



Stimpy said:
What will you do? Nothing? Flip a coin? Pray for guidance? Other(please explain)?
 
hammegk said:
Godel pointed out that no internally consistent logical system can Prove it's premises.
No, Godel pointed out that any consistent logical system will be incomplete. There is a significant difference.
 

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