I was alluding to his burden to make a case, not claiming it to be logical necessity. Sorry if my informal language was misleading. — Relativist
And yet it also gets many things right, and therefore it is reasonable to accept much of it as true. — Relativist
QFT is widely accepted by physicists, so if your metaphysics is not consistent with it, you have a burden to show that your assumptions are more likely to be true than QFT. — Relativist
Metaphysics aims to account for what exists. The best science tells us that quantum fields exist, and they behave per quantum field theory. If you don't account for quantum fields, then your metaphysics is at best incomplete, at worst - it is incoherent.why ought metaphysics be consistent with physics? Metaphysics is a distinct subject from physics. — Metaphysician Undercover
You still have to account for what physics gets right. If you treat particles as fundamental, you will get even more wrong than physics does.I've already told you why physics is obviously wrong, it is rife with contradiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
And yet it also gets many things right, and therefore it is reasonable to accept much of it as true. — Relativist
Metaphysics aims to account for what exists. The best science tells us that quantum fields exist, and they behave per quantum field theory. If you don't account for quantum fields, then your metaphysics is at best incomplete, at worst - it is incoherent. — Relativist
I sense you might be trying to claim that fields are just mathematical entities, but this doesn't address field behavior that does not fit a particle paradigm. Perhaps you're only treating classical objects (the stuff of the macro world) as truly "physical" - but this is question begging because the particles themselves are best explained as field quanta. — Relativist
You still have to account for what physics gets right. If you treat particles as fundamental, you will get even more wrong than physics does. — Relativist
Quantum mechanics, special relativity, and QFT have been remarkably successful at making predictions. How is that "deceptive"?Since quantum field theory is nothing but a mathematical attempt to cover up a fundamental, underlying contradiction, it is nothing but deception — Metaphysician Undercover
QFT DOES resolve wave-particle duality. Since you believe particles are fundamental, how do you explain the dualistic results of double-experiments? QFT mathematically explains the results, and the implication is that this is due to the nature of the stuff (e.g. photons) that is being measured. You are free to account for this meta physically, but if your metaphysics just ignores it, then your metaphysics is falsified.Better science would address the contradiction directly, and remove the offending theories, instead of hiding the fundamental contradiction behind a veil of mathematics, and appearance of reconciliation.
Field EQUATIONS are mathematical entities, and since they accurately predict behavior, they must be describing something that is actually there. If not actual fields, then what?Because they are mathematical entities, fields are not directly observable. Fields are mathematical equations designed to deal with the appearance of particles. QFT is the model, the empirical observations of particles is what is being modeled. — Metaphysician Undercover
The manipulation of fields has results that are predicted by QFT, such as confirming standard model of particle physics. I'll grant QFT is just a model that can be treated as purely instrumentalist without necessarily buying into the description. I wouldn't object to that, but it would lead to two reasonable options: 1) agnosticism regarding the nature of what QFT is describing; 2) an alternative model that accounts for QFT success. You don't seem to be doing either, since you just toss out the entire theory so you can propose a fiction.Fields are manipulated by physicists, they do not actually have any independent behaviour — Metaphysician Undercover
Here:You haven't provided me with any examples of what physics has gotten right yet, — Metaphysician Undercover
Accepting scientific theory as true doesn't entail faith, it just implies that one can justifiably believe them. But scientific theories must be treated as tentative because they are merely the inference to the best explanation, and the history of science shows that what is CURRENTLY the best explanation tends to change as more information is gathered. I'd be interested in seeing a theist propose a biblical God as inference to best explanation for something.And yet it also gets many things right, and therefore it is reasonable to accept much of it as true. — Relativist
I think in this sentence is the crux of many of these discussions. This just shows a faith in the ability of science. To be clear, I think that belief is reasonable- and there is nothing at all wrong with that. I just don't see it as a superior faith belief than theism. I just think it is very common to treat science, and faith in science's ability as the same concept. And they are not. — Rank Amateur
I'm arguing for the independent existence of God from time in terms of God being equivalent to the Greatest Conceivable Being. — adhomienem
Let's test that.If I am correct, your acceptance of it as true, is as faith based as my theism. — Rank Amateur
Quantum mechanics, special relativity, and QFT have been remarkably successful at making predictions. How is that "deceptive"? — Relativist
QFT DOES resolve wave-particle duality. — Relativist
Since you believe particles are fundamental, how do you explain the dualistic results of double-experiments? — Relativist
Field EQUATIONS are mathematical entities, and since they accurately predict behavior, they must be describing something that is actually there. If not actual fields, then what? — Relativist
You don't seem to be doing either, since you just toss out the entire theory so you can propose a fiction. — Relativist
The only alleged deception you've stated is wave particle duality. That's pretty silly, because QFT does not assume wave particle duality.Quantum mechanics, special relativity, and QFT have been remarkably successful at making predictions. How is that "deceptive"? — Relativist
I already explained how QFT is deceptive — Metaphysician Undercover
Indeed, and that's exactly what QFT says. So there's not actually a contradiction. I made the mistake of taking you seriously when you mentioned contradictions in physics. There ARE some contradictions in physics - where general relativity breaks down, and quantum theory doesn't apply. I assumed that's what you were talking about. My bad.it would have to be one or the other, or something completely different — Metaphysician Undercover
Successful predictions provide a good reason at least to accept an instrumentalist understanding of QFT. The success of a theory in this respect is the exact opposite of a deception.But making successful predictions is a good tool to aid one's capacity to deceive, so I don't see how making predictions is evidence that it's not deception. — Metaphysician Undercover
The only "deficiency" you've identified is your incorrect assumption that it entails wave-particle duality.I already told you, the theories involved are deficient. They need to be examined, the deficient aspects exposed and discarded. — Metaphysician Undercover
Particles are the building blocks of matter, but the known particles are within the standard model of particle physics. Quantum field theory provides the mathematical framework for the Standard Model, describing the dynamics and kinematics.By the way, I don't really believe that particles are fundamental, my point was that physics treats particles as fundamental.
It accounts for both the appearance and disappearance of particles. If you dispense with fields, matter/energy is not conserved. Without fields, there's no explanation for vacuum energy.Field EQUATIONS are mathematical entities, and since they accurately predict behavior, they must be describing something that is actually there. If not actual fields, then what? — Relativist
Field equations accurately predict the appearance of particles. Therefore what they are describing "that is actually there", is the appearance of particles. — Metaphysician Undercover
So your entire claim seems to hinge in a misconception of yours.I'm not proposing any alternative model so I am not proposing a fiction. I am stating the obvious, that the entire theoretical structure of QFT revolves around a fundamental contradiction, wave-particle duality.
The only "deficiency" you've identified is your incorrect assumption that it entails wave-particle duality. — Relativist
So your entire claim seems to hinge in a misconception of yours. — Relativist
There ARE some contradictions in physics - where general relativity breaks down, and quantum theory doesn't apply. I assumed that's what you were talking about. My bad. — Relativist
That's simply not true. Particles are real, but they are not independent billiard balls floating in nothingness. A particle is a wave packet, a segment of the field (often referred to as a "ripple" in the field) - so there's no fundamental duality. The "medium" is the quantum field. Movement of the particle consists of the "ripple" traversing the field:QFT doesn't entail wave-particle duality, it assumes it, as a premise. And if your claim is that QFT renders the particle unreal, and the wave as the only real aspect, then you still have the contradiction of a wave without a medium, and so an inability to say what a particle is (other than a particle). As I said, QFT doesn't resolve the contradiction of wave-particle duality, it only obscures it, hides it behind complex mathematics. — Metaphysician Undercover
In the above, the rope is analogous to a field, and the ripple is a particle. (If particles were free standing entities, it would beg the question of a medium). — Relativist
But it's consistent with the math. You don't have to accept realism, but if your ontology conflicts with the math of QFT (the math that produces the correct predictions) then your ontology clearly conflicts with reality and is falsified. — Relativist
You're missing my point. The measurements are indisputably factual, and the success of the predictions needs to be accounted for. If your metaphysics cannot account for it, then it has a fatal flaw.As I said, the ability to predict doesn't concern me, it is irrelevant, because it can be used just as easily to support falsehood as it can be used to support truth.
You're missing my point. The measurements are indisputably factual, and the success of the predictions needs to be accounted for. If your metaphysics cannot account for it, then it has a fatal flaw. — Relativist
That's absurd. Of course measurements are factual! A measurement is made, and it has certain values. There's an a priori degree of uncertainty in what one measurement will yield, but there's certainty about the distribution of repeated measurements. If your ontology is inconsistent with these results then your ontology is falsified.There is an uncertainty principle which indicates that the measurements are indisputably not factual. That's what the Fourier transform indicates, some measurements cannot be made. If the measurements cannot be made, then whatever it is which takes the place of these measurements cannot be indisputably factual measurements, but are the opposite of this. — Metaphysician Undercover
The GCB would not have a limited attention — adhomienem
Without the existence of clocks, time would be immeasurable according to your definition. Immeasurable time, then, leads us back to the same question I posed earlier — adhomienem
I agree that we run into problems attempting to understand timelessness when we ourselves are bound by time. — adhomienem
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