Math doesn't do anything. — creativesoul
How could I be conflating the model with the reality when I am talking about our models of reality? — apokrisis
Math doesn't do anything.
— creativesoul
What do you mean, 'do'? — Wayfarer
Have you ever encountered Eugene Wigner's essay, The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics in the Natural Sciences? It was one of the first things I encountered when I started posting on forums. All grist to the Platonist mill, as far as I'm concerned. — Wayfarer
How many options are given the context? [Maths] has no ability - in and of itself - to do anything. — creativesoul
A much more difficult and confusing situation would arise if we could, some day, establish a theory of the phenomena of consciousness, or of biology, which would be as coherent and convincing as our present theories of the inanimate world.
Is mathematics real 'in and of itself'? I would have thought that it is inextricably bound to the act of calculation. I don't presume to present any kind of answer to such conundrums, but I do say, without much equivocation, that maths is powerful and the ability to 'do math' is behind a great deal of human invention and discovery. — Wayfarer
Incoherency...
Next?
You want to claim that you're not... then draw and maintain the distinction between causality and a report thereof. Then, do the same with QM... — creativesoul
In what way am I failing to distinguish between model and world by drawing close attention to the mediating role played by "the report"?
The sign (or measurement, observation, witness statement, report, fact) is the basis of the semiotic mechanism by which the model and the world are kept apart, and thus why they can then stand in some relation. — apokrisis
And my reply is that we did invent a classical model of causality. And now a quantum model would challenge its predictions. — apokrisis
And we already know it must be the more fundamental model, classicality merely being the emergent description. — apokrisis
QM is our invention. Causality is not. — creativesoul
QM did not exist - in it's entirety - prior to our discovery. Causality does. — creativesoul
It might be a free creation of the mind, but it also has to show itself to work in the real world. — apokrisis
QM is our invention. Causality is not.
— creativesoul
And so you dumbly repeat something that I never said? I said classical physics might give us one model of causality. QM might give us another.
And I wouldn't call a model an "invention" exactly. It might be a free creation of the mind, but it also has to show itself to work in the real world. It is not yet clear whether you would dispute or agree with this obvious qualification. — apokrisis
And likewise causality didn't exist before we invented/discovered/modelled it - at least not as an articulated conception. — apokrisis
we have no reason to think that the world wasn't always "QM". — apokrisis
To try and maintain that QM is just an invention, causality is just a fact, is conflating an epistemic linguistic register with an ontic linguistic register.
It makes no sense. And that incoherence would indeed explain why your posts just seem a confused babble - the sound of naive realism wrestling with its own demons to no useful end. — apokrisis
Not a free creation of the mind — Janus
This would be a devastating reply, if it wasn't based upon something other than what I've been arguing. Then, it would even be true. But alas, it is and it's not. — creativesoul
No, it's not.QM undermines classical causality. QM puts forward its own causal story. Experiment determines which story we are inclined to believe. It's really simple. — apokrisis
It is basic to pragmatism that you could say absolutely anything about the world as a hypothesis. And that modelling freedom is what Einstein was stressing. It is science because you don't have to start with "the truth", just some reasonable conjecture. — apokrisis
But from a philosophical point of view, I still think what is being challenged is indeed the reality of the physical realm. — Wayfarer
The physical realm is not created by sensing beings, sensing beings are created by the physical world, in the sense that they only come to be in the physical world; and in turn the physical world only becomes manifest in sensing beings. — Janus
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