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| Resident Diabolist | physics doesn't say... Today in my course about dynamical system the prof said something quite interesting: "physics doesn't justify its laws, it verfies the consequences". What do you think about this? ---------------- Administrator A COUNTRY WITHOUT AN ARMY IS LIKE A FISH WITHOUT A BIKE!!! I don't believe in god, but I do believe in what others call utopies. | |
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| Hypographer ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Re: physics doesn't say... I think it is an interesting statement. It is at least partially true - the laws of physics are not made but deducted. They are reached by observation and prediction using the scientific method. When the laws don't fit the methods then either our physics are wrong or our understanding of nature is wrong (although these two are closely related...). But it is also partially false. Physics has to justify it's laws. If it only verifies the consequences then the physicist has no responsibility to verify that the laws are understood correctly. As observed in our discussions with James about his new non-mechanistic physics, there are many ways to understand nature and one way to express them is by formulating laws of physics. So when phycisists realize that something is not right they need to find out why (is it their data, their method, their bias - or the law?) and then be able to prove that. Interesting topic, Sanctus. ---------------- Your Friendly Neighborhood AdministratorWant to sponsor Hypography? Buy a print in our Fall 2008 Benefit Sale Join our Facebook group or follow us on Twitter Science is not only compatible with spirituality; it is a profound source of spirituality. - Carl Sagan | |
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| Exhausted Gondolier | Re: physics doesn't say... "physics doesn't justify its laws, it verfies the consequences" I find this a somewhat limited pov, although many a physicist entertains it, simply because they carry out the role of verification. Without attempts to justify laws, we would have discovered a lot less of them. Examples plentiful. | |
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| Eccentric Heretic | Re: physics doesn't say... Quote:
Physicists have no prolem throwing out "laws" that don't fit observed results. ---------------- Few problems are so complex that they cannot be substantially clarified by one more cup of coffee (or a nice cabernet if it is after 5:00)Moderator in absentia. Return anticipated. Timing somewhat vague. | ||
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| Exhausted Gondolier | Re: physics doesn't say... Quote:
The professor of my advanced Field Theory course, when drawing a conclusion by reasoning that wasn't mere calculus, would say: "and this, if Justice exists, must be equal to..." Last edited by Qfwfq; 04-13-2005 at 08:42 AM. | ||
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| Coincidence of Molecules | Re: physics doesn't say... This is along the lines of a discussion I had that involved laws of nature vs the laws of science. The discussion was about whether the laws of science are the laws if nature or if the laws of science are aproximations of the laws of nature. We really did not get anywhere, but it was interesting. Both camps have some valid points. ---------------- Don't walk behind me; I may not lead. Don't walk in front of me; I may not follow. Just walk beside me and be my friend. Albert Camus | |
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| Creating | Re: physics doesn't say... Physics is a collection of mathematical models not falsified by observation. It only predicts the "how." It is spectacularly good at it. Physics does not speculate about the "why." That is religions' balliwick - and a right proper mess of it religions make. Any axiomatic system must be based upon unjustifiable postulates and is therefore fallable. Many models are facile heuristics rather than exact. Newton was wrong for tacitly approximating c=infinity and h=zero, but he's usually good enough. No predictive theory we can imagine to date allows c=c, h=h, and G=G simultaneously. Completion of physics is allocated to the interested reader. ---------------- Uncle Al http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/ (Toxic URL! Unsafe for children and most mammals) http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/lajos.htm#a2 | |
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| Explaining | Re: physics doesn't say... Quote:
Evolution is itself a theory that has evolved since the time of Darwin. Its a more general theory in that it covers the scope of a lot of fields far more than pure physics theories tend to. Yes, it concerns Biology. But chemistry, physics, etc all enter in with evolution also. QM out of physics has bearing on how the universe first started, what elements where present, etc. What chemicals can arrange themselves into certain groups has bearing on say the DNA of living organisms. Also the type of atmosphere the early earth had has effects on the exact way life evolved. | ||
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| Explaining | Re: physics doesn't say... Quote:
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| Exhausted Gondolier | Re: physics doesn't say... Quote:
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If it hadn't been for the asking about many whys, there wouldn't have been so much progress. Who would have ever worked out and proposed the quark-lepton model if nobody had asked about the why of the subatomic zoo? Who would have investigated atomic structure at all without asking the whys about the different elements, of radioactivity and of electric fluid? If people had been content verifying the consequences, for instance, of beta radiation Fermi would never have published "Versuch einer Theorie der Beta-Strahlung" and, without asking the whys about the different forces, why would Einstein have contrived GR and why would Goldstone, Higgs and Weinberg have ever worked out the standard model? Somebody didn't just find them in a drawer of the Burana monastery and say "Hey, boys, try verifying these laws!". Quote:
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