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05-17-2005
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#1 (permalink)
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Coincidence of Molecules
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Is math evidence?
Mathematics is a wonderful tool to support and explain various phenomenon. But it can help perdict out comes with probability, but is only absolute when concerned within itself. So I was wondering what we thought about certain ideas that are only supported mathematically. Is the math alone enough evidence to support such ideas?
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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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05-17-2005
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#2 (permalink)
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Questioning
Location: Port Angeles, WA.
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Re: Is math evidence?
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Originally Posted by Fishteacher73
But it can help perdict out comes with probability, but is only absolute when concerned within itself. So I was wondering what we thought about certain ideas that are only supported mathematically. Is the math alone enough evidence to support such ideas?
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Why should it be, I think not..I think if we believe math alone is enough evidence then we will miss the big one......
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05-17-2005
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#3 (permalink)
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Resident Diabolist
Location: Geneva-Bern-Zürich, Switzerland;Oslo,Norway
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Re: Is math evidence?
no take the string theory,as far as I know there are different versions of it , all construcetd on math evidence. But experiments will show the one, if any, which is right.
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05-17-2005
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#4 (permalink)
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Curious
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Re: Is math evidence?
Maybe I am not understanding this correctly, but I think that it could. Just because human conversational vocabulary cannot describe whats is being explained in mathematics, but the math can explain portions of other math. Why wouldn't it work?
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05-17-2005
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#5 (permalink)
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¿42?
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Re: Is math evidence?
I think the question is a little broad. Math is certainly evidence enough to prove something like Fermat's Last Theorem. On the other hand I think it would take quite a bit more than math to settle the Freewill vs Determinism debate.
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Last edited by C1ay; 05-18-2005 at 11:07 AM..
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05-18-2005
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#6 (permalink)
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Explaining
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Re: Is math evidence?
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Originally Posted by sanctus
no take the string theory,as far as I know there are different versions of it , all construcetd on math evidence. But experiments will show the one, if any, which is right.
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In physics one has math underlining the explination of a theory. But in generally it takes far more than math to show a theory is correct. In math the math alone can prove itself. Other areas of science tend to vary a bit on this. In general, the search for a GUT has sometimes been linked with the idea of one set of equations that explains everything. However, the search is actually for far more than just a set of unified equations alone. On equations alone one would expect String Theory to be proven out. The problem is finding equations that not only generate the vacuum or spacetime we live in, but also one that has experimental and observational evidence backing it up. We had a problem with the standard model where untill we applied renormalization we always got infinite answers out of the equations. Now with String theory we get another sort of infinite answer in the way of different potential spacetimes. So here one would not see math as proving anything except that the equations appear to have the property of what we are after and are unique. What we need is equations that yield exactly what we observe out there in nature. You might say that math helps explain what is possible and how something works via the equations. But it's the observational lessons we derive out of nature directly that tell us if something is actually correct or not.
I have a friend with a math background that for years has tried to figure things out in a physics perspective. He can do the math all day. But some of his suggestions just run opposite of what nature shows is real. What he lacks is that understanding that it takes more than math for something to be correct. Yes, I've tried to explain this. For some reason it never seems to sink into him.
Last edited by paultrr; 05-18-2005 at 10:35 AM..
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05-18-2005
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#7 (permalink)
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Eccentric Heretic
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Re: Is math evidence?
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Originally Posted by Fishteacher73
...Is the math alone enough evidence to support such ideas?
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Yes.
Assumptions are everything, even in empicial experimentation. In the same vein, a math proof has assumptions in beginning conditions, and it has an output. The elements are essentialy identical to a physical experiment, except the "methods" are more explicit. A math proof can stand in for experiment, and support theory just like an experiment. Likewise, a math proof can be refuted because the assumptions are invlidated. (Or the math could be wrong, but I assume that those are rarely published.)
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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)
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05-18-2005
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#8 (permalink)
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Coincidence of Molecules
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Re: Is math evidence?
In a pure math, I think It stands self evident. The issues arise in my mind when various constants are plugged in "to make the math work". This seems IMO to not be the same as basic mechanical physics. This cut and paste idea with patches over the holes I feel is not absolute proof.
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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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05-18-2005
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#9 (permalink)
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Eccentric Heretic
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Re: Is math evidence?
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Originally Posted by Fishteacher73
...This cut and paste idea with patches over the holes I feel is not absolute proof.
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Agreed.
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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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05-18-2005
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#10 (permalink)
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Visions of grandeur
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Re: Is math evidence?
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Originally Posted by C1ay
I think the question is a little broad. Math is certainly evidence enough to prove something like Fermat's Last Theorem. On the other hand I think it would take quite a bit more than math to settle the Freewill vs Determinism debate.
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Good point C1ay; There are also questions about things like infinity, can math really explain such a concept? One can get paradoxical answers regarding the notion of infinity if they choose to stretch the limits of mathematics. The mental concept of infinity, I believe is outside the limits of mathematics.
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Tolstoy wrote; "men only learn when they're suffering". The question is; how much do you want to learn?
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