It is this case of hearing an identity, not understanding its context properly, or applying it in ways it never should that I am trying to point out in this discussion. Math and physics is not the only realm this happens in, but it appears my post has rambled on enough. I see this same even occur in citing philosopher quotes or conclusions in arguments as well. What do you think about the topic? Is there a name for what I'm musing about? I do not believe this action is intentional or malicious, but it is something that I see occur. — Philosophim
While in one context electrons have no mass, — Philosophim
What's that got to do with "The hidden placeholders of identity as reality"? — Banno
Years ago, there was a theory of reality called "String theory" that used upwards of 10 dimensions. Many people thought the idea of "dimension" meant something like you're taught in school. 2 dimensions is a plane, 3 dimensions Is a plane of planes, and the fourth dimension is time. — Philosophim
Could you give one or two examples from a philosophical perspective. Something mundane and fairly easy to understand. — T Clark
↪Philosophim First, I am a bit puzzled by your choice of words "identity" and "placeholder": I don't think I've seen them used like this before. From the context, you seem to be referring to models, concepts, representations, abstractions, maps (as in "the map is not the territory"). Is that what you mean? — SophistiCat
Second, I am struggling to discern your point here. The most specific example that you give concerning the use of extra dimensions in string theories is poorly chosen, since neither you nor most of the readers understand the background enough to have a reasonable discussion about it. That these dimensions are "not representations of reality or dimensions as we believe them to be" is obviously true in one sense: we the common people are used to thinking about space as three-dimensional (and that only because Descartes' invention has been drilled into us from an early age). But what of it? — SophistiCat
It's a pretty common misconception that the fourth dimension is time. — john27
So the fact that string theory uses placeholders for spatially relevant dimensions isn't wrong at all I dont think, its kind of like saying "we know it's out there, we just dont know what it looks like." — john27
I think that is the point. — Philosophim
But do we know its out there? All that a dimension is, is a variable. We don't really know what the variable represents in reality, because we can't observe it in reality. The fact that we abstract it out to spatial dimensions is the problem. — Philosophim
use knowledge in a negative or positive extremity (i.e all the time or none of the time) and it's distasteful, but apply a nugget of wisdom moderately, and it can help clarify a lot of things. — john27
What exactly do you see as the problem? Abstract thought? — SophistiCat
I see...And you suggest that hidden placeholders and variable realties in our formulas result in leaky abstractions, because they fail to assess the reality beneath? — john27
It would also be incorrect to come to certain conclusions about reality based on specific contexts. While in one context electrons have no mass, if someone were to conclude a theory about the basics of reality with it being necessary that they have no mass, they would be making a massive mistake. — Philosophim
I see problems like this crop up all the time when people address quantum mechanics on the board. — Philosophim
I see this same even occur in citing philosopher quotes or conclusions in arguments as well. — Philosophim
Certainly. In philosophy I've seen people take certain identities and believe because such an identity can be claimed, it must be "real" in some way. The most famous I can think of is probably "This sentence is false". There is an initial assumption that a sentence can be true or false, and people spend hours thinking about it. — Philosophim
The reality is, the sentence is rubbish. It doesn't actually claim anything. A better sentence would be, "This is a false sentence". I believe this issue is we abstract away certain details for general communication and believe that the abstraction holds true when we return to detailed communication. — Philosophim
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.