Albert Einstein: "The Old One does not play dice."
Many Worlds: "You're right again, Einstein!"
Albert Einstein: "The Old One does not play dice."
Many Worlds: "You're right again, Einstein!"
I have learned a lot about this topic because of your participation, Cioran. Thanks! I don't understand all the implications of the determinism issue, nor much about QM, but if one hears the ideas used they start making sense.
There is the topic of "copying" that is now on my mind. Deutsch used the idea in The Fabric of Reality, page 307. Here's just some sentences using the word related to "time travel":
It is not meaningful to ask "which" copy of me would have which experience: so long as we are identical, there is no such thing as 'which' of us. Parallel universes do not have hidden serial numbers: they are distinguished only by what happens in them. Therefore in rendering all this for the benefit of one copy of me, the virtual-reality generator must recreate for me the effect of existing as two identical copies who then become different and have different experiences.
I was also looking at the "no-cloning theorem" of QM: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No-cloning_theorem
There are a bunch of these "no-go" theorems, but it seems that QM prohibits copies, or clones, being made of a universe even on a small scale. The question that is in my mind at the moment is whether the MWI is in conflict with QM because of all the copies that it needs. Now I don't understand the proof of this theorem. I wish I did, but I think it means that QM does not allow copies of the world to be created.
If that is true, that would mean that the multiverse has only one universe in it--or QM is false.
Last edited by YesNo; 11-20-2012 at 12:55 AM.
My blog: https://frankhubeny.blog/
Ad Hominen argument. First time I have heard of it thanks for bringing it up.
''Nothing that I would do but that is something surely that you might do'' is this what it means?
Sorry I just want to confirm.
I was reading about 'ad hom' this and found this:
The answer surely isInductive fallacies are not formal in this sense. Their merit is judged in terms of rational persuasiveness, inductive strength or methodology (for example, statistical inference). For instance, the fallacy of hasty generalization, can be roughly stated as an invalid syllogism:
1.A is an X
2.A is also a Y
3.Therefore, all Xs are also Ys
therefore X and Y are As.
because it should be
a=x
a=y
then
a=y=x
That is the answer A=X=Y. The only answer.
Is this the same as saying two rights do not make it wrong? or two wrongs don't make it right?
Last edited by cacian; 11-21-2012 at 05:25 AM.
it may never try
but when it does it sigh
it is just that
good
it fly
~
R e m i n d e r
Please do not personalise your arguments.
Off-topic and/or inflammatory posts will be removed without further notice.
~
~
"It is not that I am mad; it is only that my head is different from yours.”
~
Not wrong about what? Are you saying that you are right that we cannot know whether sun the sun orbits the earth?
Does the sun orbit the earth, or not?
Why would Galileo have been hauled before the Spanish Inquisition? He was not a subject of the kingdom of Spain. He was summoned before the Roman Inquisition.P.S. Sorry about the SI abbreviation - I was too lazy to spell out Spanish Inquisition thinking it was obvious from context, and I was wrong about that...
Where did I make an argument that because the inquisition was a bad thing, then its arguments about the geocentrism v. heliocentrism debate were wrong? Clearly I made no such ad hominem attack, so why did you suggest that I did?
ad homimem:
a claims x
a has some personal characteristic of the nature y.
Therefore, because a has characteristic y, his claim of x is false.
In fact, x is true or false regardless of whether a has characteristic y or not. So ad hominem is fallacious argumentation.
Example:
Hitler said vegetarianism is good.
Hilter was an evil man who killed millions.
Therefore, vegetarianism is bad
If the sun, along with the other stars, revolved around the earth, that would contradict special relativity which says that matter does not go faster than the speed of light. There are stars that are more than one light-day from earth. If they were moving in a circle around the earth, they would travel more than 2*pi*1 light-days in one day's time which means they would go faster than light.
One would have to choose between that model and special relativity. There may be other objections to the sun going around the earth that I can't think of at the moment.
My blog: https://frankhubeny.blog/
This intricate so what you are suggesting is that the conclusive sentence can be both.
This does not make sense because
While
a says something
and
a is something else
There is a link missing between the first and the second. How does one go from x to y?
Unless there is a link then there is no third consequential correct or fallacious.
The only time one this work is this
a=x
a-y
then a=y=x. That is the only preposition and it is exact.
Last edited by cacian; 11-21-2012 at 10:44 AM.
it may never try
but when it does it sigh
it is just that
good
it fly
The equations do tend to simplify when you think of the sun as being in the center of our system, but that doesn't make it true.
If someone was motivated enough they would be able to patch together a "still Earth" model that gets around your objection. Just search the web, you'll find many doing this
http://primecrackpot.blogspot.co.uk/...-universe.html
Maybe the speed of light is infinite until it gets close to Earth?
As the Earth is "the special thing at the centre" you can validly concoct any model to get around any objection. The Roma Catholic church did this for a long time, and only stopped when the power base moved to the military-industrial-science complex. And the RC church have always been much more inclined to cosy up to power than to stick to their original metaphysics.
The Michelson-Morley experiment showed that light was going the same speed in the direction of motion of the Earth, and at right angles to it. Relativity was needed to explain that observation. But in a model where the Earth doesn't move the explanation of Michelson-Morley is extremely simple, it does away with the need for special relativity.
I was going to try out the "bat signal argument" to defeat you, but I couldn't make it work "in reverse"It's interesting in showing how to get speeds of 2pi light years/ per second, though, and I did work hard(ish) on it, so here it is:
Paste black paper shaped like a bat onto a spotlight; the signal used to summon Batman. Broadcast the Bat-call to the cosmos. Rotate the spotlight. As the light turns, the bat shadow sweeps across the sky. Just as the rim of a bicycle wheel moves faster than its hub, so too, our bat shadow will fly faster and faster. If the spotlight takes a second to rotate, at one light year out the bat shadow will have to travel at 2pi light years per second. In the "usual" model, this does not violate relativity because a shadow carries no energy. But what about the circle of light "setting off" the bat shadow, you may ask? Isn't the light itself traveling far faster than the speed of light, through rotating in space? No! The bulbs that produce the light are spinning, but the light particles leave the source at 186,000 miles a second. Once emitted, the photons continue to travel at this speed directly away from the source.
Science has nothing to do with "truth"; its intent is actually to develop a set of codes that allow us to make accurate predictions about observations. Regardless of any external, objective truth.
Not correct - this is just an illogical argument.
An ad hominem argument "appeals to feelings not reason". An example: "Everett was badly treated by his colleagues which makes me feel bad, so Everett's theory is correct." Or, "I've spent my whole life studying physics and would feel totally downhearted if it was all "just models" rather than Reality, so Everett must have discovered Reality."
Logical fallacies like ad hominems are synonymous with "illogical arguments" because that's literally what they are; the explanation Cioran gave of an ad hominem was just fine. The fallacy you gave an example of (regarding Everett being badly treated) is actually a different fallacy known as "Appeal to pity." All of them are sub-fallacies of the more general "Appeal to emotion" category of fallacy.
"As far as we can discern, the sole purpose of human existence is to kindle a light of meaning in the darkness of mere being." --Carl Gustav Jung
"To absent friends, lost loves, old gods, and the season of mists; and may each and every one of us always give the devil his due." --Neil Gaiman; The Sandman Vol. 4: Season of Mists
"I'm on my way, from misery to happiness today. Uh-huh, uh-huh, uh-huh, uh-huh" --The Proclaimers
An ad hominem argument "appeals to feelings not reason". An example: "Everett was badly treated by his colleagues which makes me feel bad, so Everett's theory is correct.
Which theory?
Everett involved here when you are talking using I? I do not get this." Or, "I've spent my whole life studying physics and would feel totally downhearted if it was all "just models" rather than Reality, so Everett must have discovered Reality."
it may never try
but when it does it sigh
it is just that
good
it fly
I'm not sure what you're asking... logical fallacies are incorrect methods of reasoning. The word "fallacy" may share a root with "false," but logic doesn't deal with whether or not propositions are true or false, it only deals with whether or not the methods used to reach conclusions from multiple propositions are correct or fallacious.
"As far as we can discern, the sole purpose of human existence is to kindle a light of meaning in the darkness of mere being." --Carl Gustav Jung
"To absent friends, lost loves, old gods, and the season of mists; and may each and every one of us always give the devil his due." --Neil Gaiman; The Sandman Vol. 4: Season of Mists
"I'm on my way, from misery to happiness today. Uh-huh, uh-huh, uh-huh, uh-huh" --The Proclaimers