So what the experiment does, is to place a limit such that it is not always possible to identify the causal sequence of some set of events — Banno
What are the contents of this purported correlation? What things are being connected, correlated, and/or associated with each other?
Do you have an example? — creativesoul
It's your expectation that physics ought be able to distinguish the temporal order of events that is inadequate. — Banno
The magnitude says that 100 is smaller than 200 and thus orders the numbers from smaller to bigger. — litewave
All points in space exist and thus they constitute all possible groups of points, that is, all possible lines and curves in that space. — litewave
It's your expectation that physics ought be able to distinguish the temporal order of events that is inadequate.
— Banno
So you accept it as an epistemological principle that physicists ought not try to determine the temporal order of events? — Metaphysician Undercover
I guess my answer is that physics ought not try to determine the temporal order of events were there is none. — Banno
You mean when the events are simultaneous? — Metaphysician Undercover
What the OP describes is an inability to determine temporal order, not a lack of temporal order. — Metaphysician Undercover
Your reply was that you thought it was somehow wrong to expect that physicists should be able to determine temporal order. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you hold this as a principle? — Metaphysician Undercover
That's just not so. What the OP describes is exactly a lack of a causal sequence. — Banno
“The weirdness of quantum mechanics means that events can happen without a set order… This is called ‘indefinite causal order’ and it isn’t something that we can observe in our everyday life.”
No. It seems you have (again) entirely missed the crux of QM here. It is not that the sequence of events is just unknown; it is that the sequence of events is indeterminate. See the chat above. — Banno
My experience is that collections exist even when they are loosely connected. I don't feel the need to deny their objective existence.
And I am far from being alone in this. Most mathematicians think that mathematical objects objectively exist, and these objects may not even be physical things. — litewave
For example, thoughts and ideas are connected and correlated. — Metaphysician Undercover
Reality does not care what we find special or significant. It just is. — litewave
What's the point in telling me about something you were going to attempt to do? — Janus
So if your objection want to be coherent, you must now admit that thoughts and ideas are not existentially dependent upon sensory perception. — creativesoul
Have fun with that. I'm out. — creativesoul
Why wouldn't the bigger be prior to the smaller? — Metaphysician Undercover
All possible groups of points does not make a line, nor does it make a curve. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't believe you. You don't experience and arbitrary collection of objects. — Janus
The actuality of the collection consists in its being able to be viewed. — Janus
As to the purported existence of mathematical objects: what kind of existence do they have? We know that things exist for us materially (things we can sense) and also ideally (things we can think or imagine); what other kind of existence can you think of? — Janus
Why not? I experience any collection of objects as a collection. — litewave
You mean sensed? Why would the objective existence of anything depend on whether some creature can sense it? — litewave
We can also infer the objective existence of things we can't sense from things we can sense and think. I think that's the case with some sets/collections and other mathematical objects. — litewave
No, you experience many actual collections of objects; trees, dogs, parks, cities, people, etc, etc, but you only imagine or think of arbitrary collections of totally unrelated objects. — Janus
I believe our very idea of real existence comes from the idea of the existence of those objects we can sense. — Janus
Yes, but what exactly is that "objective existence" if it is not concrete material existence and yet is something more than the merely ideal existence of the contents of thought? — Janus
And I find it absurd to believe that something only exists objectively when someone can sense it. Did the Moon exist objectively before anyone sensed it? — litewave
and yet the truths about numbers seem to be objective truths, independent of humans, and also reflected in our physical world. — litewave
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