Both can be measured at the same time. All properties can be measured at the same time. — TenderBar
Yes, if all parties are ok with it, have a threesome.. I reckon it's at this point the analogy breaks down. :grin: — TheMadFool
How fast is the banana ripening at any one time? — Gary M Washburn
Apparently they do. — Caldwell
Okay thank you. This is actually good! That is a critique of scientific methodology, which really is at the heart of the debate. I understand your point.Here's an example. If you go to somewhere like sciforums or any other 'place' where people, including scientists, belief (current) scientific practice is the only route to knowledge, you may well (and I have) encountered people saying things like if (some form of Alternative Medicine) worked, it would be part of regular medicine. Which, implicitly, assumes the independence of the FDA, the objectivity and openness of research, the inablity of corporations to create the conclusions they want, how the incredibly high price of meeting FDA protocols requires patentability, the lack of current paradigmantic biases,.....So, what, yes, is a subset of current scientific research is actually not based on objectively carried out and objectively evaluated (by regulartory bodies or by scientist peers)
the future of any science is threatened, since humans are. I think there is a practical outcome threat. — Bylaw
I found a Marxist defense of complementarity by him when I googled his name and Bohr. — Bylaw
Yeah, someone has to digest for us this idea of complementarity -- with an e, not i.Ok but it is totally unclear how or why. I have no idea why complimentarity says something about the death of science. I can conjecture a Marxist 'death of science scenario', or an ecological one, but that does not seem to be your point. So right now I am at a loss :) — Tobias
"The daring (not to say scandalous) character of Bohr's quantum postulate cannot be stressed too strongly: that the frequency of a radiation emitted or absorbed by an atom did not coincide with any frequency of its internal motion must have appeared to most contemporary physicists well-nigh unthinkable. Bohr was fully conscious of this most heretical feature of his considerations: he mentions it with due emphasis in his paper.....[Bohr's remark]"In the necessity of the new assumptions I think that we agree; but do you think such horrid assumptions, as I have used necessary? For the moment I am inclined to most radical ideas and do consider the application of the mechanics as of only formal validity."" — Caldwell
I thought we were talking about science deniers, not the limits of science. — Gary M Washburn
What if the asymptote doss not tend toward a numerical value, or even a mathematical principle, but to a re-characterization of all values? Calculus is a reduction to infinitesimal of values not definable mathematically. But it requires regarding those values (deviating from law) as "negligible". It also requires using them as a positive value for part of the rationalization of that neglect, but then as zero to complete it. — Gary M Washburn
This is a strange statement. — jgill
We are talking about decline theorists' estimate of..well..implosion of science. — Caldwell
Let's use logic here. He supported Bohr's remark that the quantum postulate is a horrid assumption. Not that Rosenfeld supported the postulate itself. Tell me if you get this vibe. You can correct me.↪Caldwell
It seemed like he supported him on those, though I have trouble finding clear info. — Bylaw
the decay of science? — Bylaw
that the frequency of a radiation emitted or absorbed by an atom did not coincide with any frequency of its internal motion — Caldwell
How can there be an asymptotic convergence between quantum and "classical" physics if the whole thrust of quanta is to hide some portion of its phenomena from mathematical formulation? "Classical physics" is mechanics. What mechanism emphatically and explicitly hides its mechanism from science? And what kind of logic "passes over in silence" where its terms fail its anticipated conclusion? And doesn't the task of understanding the silence and the hidden start its talking there? And, once again, if the best rigor we can bring to this is that point of departure, how can it be untruth? Isn't emotion the beginning of reason, not the end of it? If rigor is humanizing, then maybe reality is too. If science is failing, it is its commitment to dehumanizing reason. — Gary M Washburn
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