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View Poll Results: Is causality valid in real life too?
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Yes, only we are not fully aware of the forces involved
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8 |
53.33% |
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No, the causality theory is basicaly flawed
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6.67% |
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Sometimes it does seem to work
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1 |
6.67% |
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I dunno
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2 |
13.33% |
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I have some different opinions not listed above
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20.00% |
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06-26-2006
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#21 (permalink)
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A Person
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Re: Do you believe in casuality in real life?
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Originally Posted by Pyrotex
All the physics rules you are familiar with cease to be of any application at all once you get down to the realm of the discrete quanta.
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I disagree with this, as I understand it the Physics merely shift gradually as you get further and further down in a very odd way. There would be no search for GUT if what you say is true.
I would ask that you provide evidence of your remark.
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There are no truths in science, only the falsifiable hypotheses and explanations of the people who test them.
Hyper Physics
Hyper Math
Wikipedia
Last edited by KickAssClown; 06-26-2006 at 01:08 PM..
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06-26-2006
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#22 (permalink)
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Slaying Bad Memes
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Re: Do you believe in casuality in real life?
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Originally Posted by KickAssClown
...I disagree with this, as I understand it the Physics merely shift gradually as you get further and further down in a very odd way. There would be no search for GUT if what you say is true. I would ask that you provide evidence of your remark.
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My evidence is: Principles of Quantum Mechanics by R. Shankar, by far the most popularly acclaimed QM textbook currently in existence. The chapter on how QM effects become "visible" at the very small and supplant mundane macro mechanics is especially revealing.
Basically, macro mechanics is an emergent phenomenon that arises as the amount of matter (charge, whatever) becomes large enough that the underlying QM effects "average out", revealing the macro effects as the "corporate" behavior. There is no gradual change of law. Macro mechanics applies only to macro aggregates of matter, charge, whatever; the behavior of macro mechanics only arises AFTER you have enough matter, charge, whatever, to cause this new behavior to "emerge" as if out of nothing.
The QM laws are fully relevant at ALL scales, but quickly average out effectively to zero unless you are dealing only with a very few "particles" (or even just one). This can give the illusion that as you get smaller and smaller, the laws change from MM to QM. Not so.
It's like the movement of a flock of birds. This requires more than one bird for the "flocking behavior" to be evident at all. One bird does what one bird does--but what one bird does is not "flocking". The "flock" behavior only arises AFTER you have enough birds to cause the new behavior to "emerge" as if out of nothing.
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Hypography Forums Moderator
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What concerns me is not the way things are, but rather the way people think things are.
Epictetus, Greek Philosopher
The map is NOT the territory.
Korzybski, Polish-American Philosopher
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06-26-2006
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#23 (permalink)
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A Person
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Re: Do you believe in casuality in real life?
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Originally Posted by Pyrotex
There is no gradual change of law.
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Never said that. Merely stated that Physics Changes as it gets to the microscopic level, not that it disappears altogether.
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There are no truths in science, only the falsifiable hypotheses and explanations of the people who test them.
Hyper Physics
Hyper Math
Wikipedia
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06-26-2006
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#24 (permalink)
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Slaying Bad Memes
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Re: Do you believe in casuality in real life?
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Originally Posted by KickAssClown
Never said that. Merely stated that Physics Changes as it gets to the microscopic level, not that it disappears altogether.
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aaaahhhh, KAC.  I did not intend to say that THAT was YOUR point of view. Rather, it is MY POV.
The laws of Physics we all know and love are emergent phenomenon (laws) that rise out of the aggregate of matter. Down at the microscopic level, they DO disappear. They vanish as if they never were. They describe ONLY aggregate matter. Below that, there IS NO aggregate behavior--because there is no aggregated matter.
And underneath where the macro mechanics laws had been (and now are vanished)...are the laws of quanta, particles, photons, now revealed in the absence of macro mechanics. The quantum laws that were ALWAYS there, but obscured and hidden by the behavior of aggregated matter.
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Hypography Forums Moderator
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What concerns me is not the way things are, but rather the way people think things are.
Epictetus, Greek Philosopher
The map is NOT the territory.
Korzybski, Polish-American Philosopher
Last edited by Pyrotex; 06-26-2006 at 01:51 PM..
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06-26-2006
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#25 (permalink)
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Re: Do you believe in casuality in real life?
So anywho, Pyro, would you agree with my understanding of the idea of causality?
That if everything in the universe were causal there would be no free will.
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06-26-2006
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#26 (permalink)
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Re: Do you believe in casuality in real life?
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Originally Posted by cwes99_03
So anywho, Pyro, would you agree with my understanding of the idea of causality? That if everything in the universe were causal there would be no free will.
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If everything were totally causal and not dependent upon inherent probabilities (uncertainties)... then... hmmmmm... Yes. There would technically (!?!) be no Free Will. However, our behavior would still NOT be predictable, insofar as we can never, ever, NEVER have infinite knowledge of the state of a person.
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Hypography Forums Moderator
-- - - - - -
What concerns me is not the way things are, but rather the way people think things are.
Epictetus, Greek Philosopher
The map is NOT the territory.
Korzybski, Polish-American Philosopher
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06-26-2006
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#27 (permalink)
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A different person
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Re: Do you believe in casuality in real life?
If we believe that there can be causes for any event, even those whose cause we donot know. Then it is quite plausible that the positions of planets etc. may be useful to predict the future of human beings as I had reasoned out in an earlier thread.
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While engaged in the pursuit of the truth always be ready for the unexpected; for change alone is constant.
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06-27-2006
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#28 (permalink)
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Re: Do you believe in casuality in real life?
TY, thusly I don't believe in strict causality.
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06-27-2006
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#29 (permalink)
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A Person
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Re: Do you believe in casuality in real life?
How about, Locally determined Causuality? In which each piece of the universe (each particle) is it's own local causuality. Other causualities can come into another's and generate a given effect, but the system is inherently delocalized, such that it is on a whole indeterminate...
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There are no truths in science, only the falsifiable hypotheses and explanations of the people who test them.
Hyper Physics
Hyper Math
Wikipedia
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06-28-2006
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#30 (permalink)
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Re: Do you believe in casuality in real life?
That is an interesting idea. What causes you to postulate this theory?
I believe that there is free will. Thus I believe that there are chains of cause and effect and that these chains very in length, but that any one person can decide to break that chain, if even by happenstance that they choose to do something such as glue a ball on the pool table down so that other balls cannot move it.
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