

Nope, I'm digging it.FBM wrote:Before I say anything else on the topic, I just want to ask if I'm being annoying. I think sometimes I unintentionally and unknowingly annoy people with my questions, and I don't like it when that happens.
True that. I'm also very suspicious of language.JimC wrote:Sure - objects are compound, complex, and when we apply reductionist techniques, aspects of their nature change according to the scale at which we wish to observe. Fascinating, interesting, scientifically important and sometimes confusing in terms of language used to describe the phenomena...
Even aside from divisibility into components which eventually become wave functions and fields, in what way is an apparently singular fish discrete, other than just as a convenient fiction? It seems to me that it could be just as accurately described as a local, ongoing set of phenomena within a larger continuum. There's a constant flow of stuff going in and out, and the external boundaries are far less clear-cut than a casual look would suggest, I think.None of which changes the fact that I, a computer, or an alien can simply and easily count how many discrete fishes exist at any one time in a given aquarium...
Well I find the topic fascinating since I learned about etic and emic realities from a colleague who was a behavioural scientist and then learning more about perceptual psychology from another. I have no answers, but the questions are exciting and it seems to me like a fine riddle of existence.FBM wrote:Just checking, Audley.I was going to come from a different angle, but I should also probably reiterate that I'm not actually making a claim one way or the other; I'm just testing out the various claims made.
Don't worry.FBM wrote:Before I say anything else on the topic, I just want to ask if I'm being annoying. I think sometimes I unintentionally and unknowingly annoy people with my questions, and I don't like it when that happens.
Yep. How is a school of fish different from a collection of cells, other than scale?FBM wrote:Even aside from divisibility into components which eventually become wave functions and fields, in what way is an apparently singular fish discrete, other than just as a convenient fiction? It seems to me that it could be just as accurately described as a local, ongoing set of phenomena within a larger continuum. There's a constant flow of stuff going in and out, and the external boundaries are far less clear-cut than a casual look would suggest, I think.None of which changes the fact that I, a computer, or an alien can simply and easily count how many discrete fishes exist at any one time in a given aquarium...
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// Replaces with spaces the braces in cases where braces in places cause stasis
$str = str_replace(array("\{","\}")," ",$str);
Very discrete. You can tell them anything, they never repeat gossip.Azathoth wrote:Is a worker ant discrete? It is useless unless it is part of a colony
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