• Proximate1
    28
    Scientists have defined a "point particle" as a dimensionless element of physical reality. Admittedly this perception is attached to the concept that mathematical theories simply have no relevance at scales less than these so called "point particles". As Atoms, so called indivisible elements by the Greeks, have been later discovered to be composed of still more elemental quarks, is it possible to move down to scales of smallness beyond quarks or is a dimensionless particle as small as it gets?
  • fishfry
    2.7k
    Scientists have defined a "point particle" as a dimensionless element of physical reality.Proximate1

    I do not believe any scientist has proposed the physical existence of such a thing. For one thing, in physics we know that our theories break down at the Planck scale. There might be something "down there" or there might not be; but we have no mathematical tools with which to approach the question.

    Newton proved that we can replace a mass with a point mass for purposes of calculation; but that's not the same as anyone thinking there are dimensionless points in reality.

    I saw a very interesting video the other day. The Secret Life of Quarks. You know how we're told that protons and neutrons each have three quarks inside them? It's not that simple. The number three comes out of integrating the "quark density function" to show that the difference of the number of quarks minus the number of antiquarks is three. But there might be millions, billions, trillions of quarks. I'm not actually sure how all this works, but I did understand that it's not like three as in one, two, three. You get a different number of total quarks depending on the scale at which you look. It's very mysterious. And this is the limit of theory. Nobody has any idea what's smaller.

    I'd be very surprised if reality contains dimensionless mathematical points.

    Check this out if you're interested in particle physics, it's quite watchable but a lot deeper than some of the handwavy popularized stuff.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H_PmmMkGyx0
  • T Clark
    13k
    As Atoms, so called indivisible elements by the Greeks, have been later discovered to be composed of still more elemental quarks, is it possible to move down to scales of smallness beyond quarks or is a dimensionless particle as small as it gets?Proximate1

    This is from Wikipedia:

    In physics, the Planck length, denoted ℓP, is a unit of length. It is equal to 1.616255×10−35 m... The Planck length is the scale at which quantum gravitational effects are believed to begin to become apparent in what is called the Quantum foam, and where the interactions require a working theory of quantum gravity to be analyzed. The Planck length may also represent the diameter of the smallest possible black hole.

    I have read, I don't remember where, that the Planck length is considered the smallest possible length.
  • 180 Proof
    14.1k
    At planck length (c10^-35m) or less, distance (space) – like at planck duration (c10^-43s) or less, interval (time) – has no 'scientific meaning'; spacetime [seems] quantized @planck scales rather than continuously divisible. (Thus both "Zeno's Arrow" & "Zeno's Hare" actually move; also re: Aristotle's refutation of 'actual infinity'.)

    Atoms, so called indivisible elements by the Greeks, have been later discovered to be composed of still more elemental quarks ...Proximate1
    Planck units – fundamental relationships – seem to correspond more to what ancient Greeks (& Indian Cārvāka) had in mind than to what early modern chemists, then physicists, anachronistically (mis)labeled "atoms". The only thing that was "discovered" with regard to "atoms" was that John Dalton et al were wildly premature and mistaken.
  • norm
    168
    I'd be very surprised if reality contains dimensionless mathematical points.fishfry

    Beyond the excellent point you make about these points, I'll invoke the issue of intelligibility. What exactly do we have in mind? I understand representing something like a pure location with a vector, but it's still somewhat vague.
  • TheMadFool
    13.8k
    As Atoms, so called indivisible elements by the Greeks, have been later discovered to be composed of still more elemental quarks, is it possible to move down to scales of smallness beyond quarks or is a dimensionless particle as small as it gets?Proximate1

    I was always and even now am quite disappointed about how the Greeks "got it wrong" because atoms are divisible into quarks as per current-best science. However, the Greeks would've been in error only if the atoms they were talking about are the particles science defines as atoms. The possibility remains that the Greek "atom" could actually be quarks and if these can be broken down into simpler particles, these. In short, the Greeks were right on the money about matter being atomic/particulate in nature.

    Secondly, on the matter of continuous decomposition of particles whether quarks or something else, there are two ways things can turn out:

    1. Particle physics will hit a wall i.e. we'll discover a particle that can't further be decomposed into smaller particles

    or

    2. Particles can be continually divided into smaller and smaller sub-particles but there'll come a point beyond which it'll stop making sense. A similar situation arises in the social sciences - we can divide society into communities, communities into families, families into individuals but then dividing further would mean going down into the level of organs, tissues, cells, molecules, atoms, quarks and social sciences at these levels is meaningless. Perhaps, if one is open-minded enough, the end of particle physics could be the beginning of______________(???)
  • SophistiCat
    2.2k
    In cold water?
  • fishfry
    2.7k
    Beyond the excellent point you make about these points, I'll invoke the issue of intelligibility. What exactly do we have in mind? I understand representing something like a pure location with a vector, but it's still somewhat vague.norm

    Not sure what you mean. Mathematical points on a line are represented as real numbers; mathematical points in n-space are represented as ordered n-tuples of real numbers. There are other kinds of spaces with other notions of points. For example in function spaces, functions themselves are the points.

    None of which has anything to do with physics. Physics uses math to express and model their theories of nature, but the theories are not literally nature itself. Nature is beyond math IMO.
  • Dharmi
    264
    There's no smallest particle.

    Because reality at it's smallest is qualitative, not quantitative.
  • norm
    168
    None of which has anything to do with physics. Physics uses math to express and model their theories of nature, but the theories are not literally nature itself. Nature is beyond math IMO.fishfry

    That's kind of what I'm getting at. The perfect point doesn't make physical/intuitive sense. We know how to handle vectors, of course. I'm very much with you on the gap between models and reality. Maybe there's no direct access to 'Reality' at all, but that would take us into the metaphysical quagmire (another person could argue that 'reality' is just some token used in thousands of different ways, etc.)
  • Dharmi
    264
    Maybe there's no direct access to 'Reality' at all, but that would take us into the metaphysical quagmirenorm

    Correcto. Our access to reality is conditioned by our material nature. Making it limited, ultimately. But since people don't want to hear that, I guess we can just keep saying a Theory of Everything is right around the corner. Trust us. :wink:
  • norm
    168
    Correcto. Our access to reality is conditioned by our material nature. Making it limited, ultimately. But since people don't want to hear that, I guess we can just keep saying a Theory of Everything is right around the corner. Trust us.Dharmi

    Yeah that's pretty much my view. There are some good points against this view (primarily directed against the intelligibility of concepts like reality-in-itself) but it still seems roughly right to me (or one of the least misleading or errant ways of talking/thinking.)
  • Dharmi
    264
    Yeah that's pretty much my view. There are some good points against this view (primarily directed against the intelligibility of concepts like reality-in-itself) but it still seems roughly right to me (or one of the least misleading or errant ways of talking/thinking.)norm

    Well, that isn't my view. My view is the idea that one can have access to reality is a genuine idea. It's the method that is flawed. Materiality is not the end-all-be-all of reality. Consciousness is. Namely, the Absolute Infinite Unoriginate Primeval Consciousness, what's called God.

    But we need to use the proper methodology. In the same way we use logical means to prove logical things. Empirical means to prove empirical things. We need to use conscious means to prove conscious things.

    Hence, through the yoga system in the Vedic philosophy, we do the experiment, we purify our consciousness, we self-realize our own true consciousness and from that point, we realize the Divine Consciousness. That's how we know reality per se.

    In my system.
  • norm
    168
    Materiality is not the end-all-be-all of reality. Consciousness is. Namely, the Absolute Infinite Unoriginate Primeval Consciousness, what's called God.Dharmi

    I have some exposure to that way of thinking through Husserl. I used to argue myself that 'consciousness' is another name of Being. I've also liked texts like 'Does Consciousness Exist?" by William James. http://www.dominiopublico.gov.br/download/texto/ps000113.pdf

    In the end, though, I found myself in the Groundless Grounds camp. Personally I think the mind-matter-etc. is a dead end and that metaphysics builds castles in the sand. IMO, we can't play chess with language. Instead we have a poetry of high stakes, ultimately driven by spiritual-political concerns.
  • Dharmi
    264


    This is why I am not arguing metaphysics. It's not a logical, conceptual point. It's an experiential one. You can verify for yourself if God exists or not, you do the experiment, see for yourself. No metaphysics needed.
  • Dharmi
    264
    In the end, though, I found myself in the Groundless Grounds camp. Personally I think the mind-matter-etc. is a dead end and that metaphysics builds castles in the sand. IMO, we can't play chess with language. Instead we have a poetry of high stakes, ultimately driven by spiritual-political concerns.norm

    Yes, Postmodern linguistic philosophy is not philosophy. It's what Socrates and Plato rightly derided as philodoxy. Lover of opinion. Philosophy is about the truth, about wisdom, about reality. Not about language games. If philosophy is about language games, then it's a waste of time. We can do something more productive with our time.
  • norm
    168
    This is why I am not arguing metaphysics. It's not a logical, conceptual point. It's an experiential one. You can verify for yourself if God exists or not, you do the experiment, see for yourself. No metaphysics needed.Dharmi

    I do like the epistemological issues we are touching on. Improvising, I'd say that Derrida's critique of the self's direct access to the self is pretty effective (not just his, but he aims very carefully at the foundation of metaphysics.) As I mean the word, the notion of self-verification is profoundly metaphysical. Some is right there, infinitely close, that we can look at. Call is 'mind' or 'consciousness' or whatever. It's usually also conceived as radically private, privacy itself. The problem with this view is that the study of language reveals the implausibility of its being a private possession. The private self is something like an extremely useful 'fiction.' 'Fiction' is not the perfect word. I don't think there is a perfect word or a clean arrival (I'll always improvise as I sketch my cloudy anti-position.) Instead one just loosens up and accepts the fuzziness of language and perhaps the impossibility of a System.
  • Dharmi
    264


    If you're saying what I think you're saying, then it's based on a misconception. I am not saying "I am God" the self is not what I refer to as God.

    "The Self" so-called is merely the Divine Spark. God is the Absolute, the all-Pervading Infinite Consciousness. So, private self-verification, is not what I am speaking of.

    Though, self-realization is necessary, it's not the end. Knowing the Absolute is the end.

    And if we want to play the skepticism game, then we're not actually doing philosophy. This is philodoxy, love of perspective, of theory, of opinion, of belief, rather than love of truth, love of wisdom. Technically, there is no access to anything whatsoever. If we want to play the nihilism game, then we're not playing the philosophy game.
  • norm
    168
    Yes, Postmodern linguistic philosophy is not philosophy. It's what Socrates and Plato rightly derided as philodoxy. Lover of opinion. Philosophy is about the truth, about wisdom, about reality. Not about language games. If philosophy is about language games, then it's a waste of time. We can do something more productive with our time.Dharmi

    To each their own, but I find some thinkers labelled pomo to be intensely sincere in the pursuit of truth. I don't trust pejorative labels. I've had love-hate relationships with controversial philosophers and in the end I'd see what was good and what was bad in them. They are never as good as their worshipers think and never as bad as their critics would like them to be. Something like that.

    FWIW, I have insulted philosophers without having really looked into them myself, and I always ended up regretting it when I finally read them. Even if I didn't find them convincing, I also discovered that they weren't what I projected on them.
  • Dharmi
    264
    FWIW, I have insulted philosophers without having really looked into them myself, and I always ended up regretting it when I finally read them. Even if I didn't find them convincing, I also discovered that they weren't what I projected on them.norm

    So, I've read all of these rascal philosophers. I've done a degree in philosophy, I've read all of the books on the library shelf when I was in College, even now, though I know what they say, I still listen to them. I listened to Stanley Fish and Richard Rorty just recently.

    I don't deny their sincerity in pursuit of truth, but their belief system is the blind leading the blind. If truth is not real, then their position is untrue by their own admission let alone mine. Hence, I don't consider it worth serious philosophical consideration.

    Philosophy is about Absolute Truth, Absolute Reality, and the nature of the Good. If you are denying the very possibility of those things, I consider that anti-philosophy. Not philosophy.
  • Proximate1
    28

    I think that you have written a really a clear response. The limitations of our ability to understand is more the barrier than what may be the actuality of it all.

    "A point particle (ideal particle or point-like particle, often spelled pointlike particle) is an idealization of particles heavily used in physics. Its defining feature is that it lacks spatial extension; being dimensionless, it does not take up space." - Wiki

    It looks like there is question about the simple limitations of space itself.
  • norm
    168
    And if we want to play the skepticism game, then we're not actually doing philosophy. This is philodoxy, love of perspective, of theory, of opinion, of belief, rather than love of truth, love of wisdom. Technically, there is no access to anything whatsoever. If we want to play the nihilism game, then we're not playing the philosophy game.Dharmi

    I hear you, and I agree that motive is important. There can be lazy skeptics and lazy nihilists, absolutely. But earnest people can arrive at positions that others find offensive.

    I do agree with you that there's a narrow type of philosophy that we might call Philosophy which does want to justify reality (theodicy) and build a system. To this kind of Philosopher, the skeptic and the nihilist are cheating. They aren't philosophers at all. But lots of contemporary philosophy is then anti-philosophical, 'anti-Platonist,' etc. I'm more in that camp. I value novels as much as treatises. For me philosophy is something like talking about existence in general courageously and rationally.
  • norm
    168
    So, I've read all of these rascal philosophers. I've done a degree in philosophy, I've read all of the books on the library shelf when I was in College, even now, though I know what they say, I still listen to them. I listened to Stanley Fish and Richard Rorty just recently.Dharmi

    Nice! I've read most of Rorty, and I learned from him. I don't totally embrace him, but the man could write.

    I don't deny their sincerity in pursuit of truth, but their belief system is the blind leading the blind. If truth is not real, then their position is untrue by their own admission let alone mine. Hence, I don't consider it worth serious philosophical consideration.

    Philosophy is about Absolute Truth, Absolute Reality, and the nature of the Good. If you are denying the very possibility of those things, I consider that anti-philosophy. Not philosophy.
    Dharmi

    There's a sense in which I agree with you, but it's a delicate issue. Language is tricky. Irony is complex. People often don't or even can't say exactly what they mean directly. Sometimes a joke tells the truth. Sometimes a paradox tells the truth.

    A hyper-rigorous thinker might itch like crazy for the Absolute, and it's that itch that lights up the obstacles in the way. For me the big issue turns out to be language, though that's not the perfect word. There isn't a perfect word, or that's what I roughly believe. What we want to say can't be said, that's what I almost want to say, but it's not quite right. Language is a public system, and it's more outside than inside. It's as much material as mental. It makes such questionable distinctions possible. Undecidable, but not decidedly undecidable.
  • Dharmi
    264


    Yes, I recognize that. And by your own admission, there is no truth. Which means, again, by your own admission your position is not true.

    I appreciate the perspective that the Postmodern philosophers, Nietzsche, Stirner, Rorty, Derrida, Foucault, Davidson, Putnam, Kuhn, Wittgenstein etc. etc. bring to the table. It's very consistent with nominalist presuppositions. I admire consistency. But I don't consider it philosophy.

    I consider Premodern philosophy and Modern philosophy as philosophy.

    Premodern is the higher, Modern is the lower. Since Premodernism alone attempts to get at Universals and Absolutes. Modernism admits it cannot and occupies itself with the particulars of experience via pragmatic scientism.
  • Dharmi
    264
    There's a sense in which I agree with you, but it's a delicate issue. Language is tricky. Irony is complex. People often don't or even can't say exactly what they mean directly. Sometimes a joke tells the truth. Sometimes a paradox tells the truth.norm

    I know about Ironism, I think I own Rorty's "Contingency, Irony and Solidarity" that, or another work of his. I own one of his books.

    Nevertheless, just because people who are professionals and experts in obscurantism, State and corporate propaganda and sophistry say something, this doesn't mean they are right, especially when they are debunked by their own presuppositions on this issue of truth, and it doesn't mean that they're worthy of consideration.
  • Proximate1
    28

    Ha, I brush my teeth with quantum foam.
    "In physics, the Planck length, denoted ℓP, is a unit of length. It is equal to 1.616255×10−35 m... The Planck length is the scale at which quantum gravitational effects are believed to begin to become apparent in what is called the Quantum foam, and where the interactions require a working theory of quantum gravity to be analyzed. The Planck length may also represent the diameter of the smallest possible black hole.'
    So gravitation may be a feature at scale but is it a limit? My guess is that the concept of a point particle is more or less shorthand for 'we have no way to make sense past this barrier'... yet. This is a horizon of oblivion where philosophy usurps science.
  • Dharmi
    264
    For me the big issue turns out to be language, though that's not the perfect word. There isn't a perfect word, or that's what I roughly believe. What we want to say can't be said, that's what I almost want to say, but it's not quite right. Language is a public system, and it's more outside than inside. It's as much material as mental. It makes such questionable distinctions possible. Undecidable, but not decidedly undecidable.norm

    Language is socially constructed by humans. I think Daniel Everett in his book "Language: The Cultural Tool" has proved as much. I am not taken by language. I'm taken by the nature of the truth, if there is such a thing. If not, who cares there's no reason to waste my time here then. Philosophy is about truth, if there's no truth, then go home and play soccer or watch Friends.
  • norm
    168
    Yes, I recognize that. And by your own admission, there is no truth. Which means, again, by your own admission your position is not true.Dharmi

    Not quite! From my POV you are lurching into Chess again (math with words.) It's fuzzier than that. The meanings of words aren't fixed. Everything is context. I can't talk about Truth-in-general without irony. I believe in facts in the everyday sense. Instead of saying that all metaphysical propositions are FALSE, I'm saying something more like all metaphysical propositions are fuzzy. As we wander away from practical conversations, things get cloudier and cloudier. I don't think we can play checkers with these clouds. It's about the medium, you might say.
  • Dharmi
    264


    Oh no, I understand everything your position says very well. Words have no concrete meaning, yes. Which means everything you say has no concrete meaning. That's the point. So, I guess you're just killing time?
  • T Clark
    13k
    This is a horizon of oblivion where philosophy usurps science.Proximate1

    So far, whenever we get to the absolute end of the line on something, it has turned out that there's still more to find.
  • Proximate1
    28

    'Planck units – fundamental relationships – seem to correspond more to what ancient Greeks (& Indian Cārvāka) had in mind than to what early modern chemists, then physicists, anachronistically (mis)labeled "atoms". The only thing that was "discovered" with regard to "atoms" was that John Dalton et al were wildly premature and mistaken.'
    Well maybe it was a case of 18th century science doing what it could to meet the definition and falling short. In this case quarks would be atoms in the Greek sense but we may be just waiting for a capacity to scale this down too. Everything rarifies to energy at some level, then it is a matter of how it is packaged at decreasing quantum levels. The story of smallness may be more one of space itself as its properties to accommodate corporeal substance are funneled downward to exotic places.
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