First.Comte de Saint-Germain wrote:First of all, I would appreciate it if you tried to use English properly. Mistakes are human, but missing apostrophes and substituting 'you're' for 'your' in the same sentence is unacceptable. Second, I haven't claimed 'the world isn't as it appears to be'..Little Idiot wrote:I have to agree with Jamest on this point; if you say the world isnt as it appears to be, your doing metaphysics.
Unacceptable to who? Are you my judge?
The primary purpose of language is communication, missing an apostrophe does not obscure meaning.
Were you to charge me with a small error, I will easily accept guilt, but since you seek to set rules for what is acceptable, I hope you understand why I ‘give you the finger’.
Second. You may notice I specifically agree with Jamesh, who posts words to the effect of ‘one is doing metaphysics when one says the world is not as it seems to be’.
Not everything is about you, and your ego, Sir.
Do you then say the world is exactly as it appears to be or not?
I assume this is not your opinion, but will you answer this simple question?
Isnt the measurement problem exactly such evidence?Comte de Saint-Germain wrote:Unless there is some evidence or argument to demonstrate that measurability has any metaphysical implications, then clearly, such an equivocation is unwarranted and can not - as of yet - be accepted.
The two slits experiment shows an example of this; elecrons perform diffraction through two slits as normal for waves, (its considered the interference of the probability wave that gives rise to the diffraction pattern, right?). But observation or measurement of the electron stops them behaving as waves, it destroys or collapses the probability wave and so the electron behaves as a particle.
Now the point is that the measurement or observation causes an observable change in the 'empirical reality' and not a small shift; it determines the nature of the electron to be either wave or particulate in nature with entirely different empirical results!
Why? its currently one of the most powerful tools for understanding which humanity possesses.
Eeeehh. No. Please don't bring Quantum Mechanics into this discussion.
As you must know there are different ways to understand QM, which removes any solidity from your unfounded claims about my understanding of QM later in your post.
Err, no.A casual follower of both Quantum Mechanics and traditional mysticism? What, you blew your brain out of an airlock?Isnt this 'something' exactly what Quantum mechanics describes?Comte de Saint-Germain wrote:The idea that one should refrain from speaking of such things is seen to be as cowardice, precisely because it is assumed that 'there is something out there'. The extension, the implication is that there is something to be described, even when it might be unknowable.
As a casual follower of both Quantum Mechanics and traditional mysticism, sometimes it is hard to distinguish which camp issued a particular quote, and I dont just mean 'new age quantum quacks', I refer to the 'founding fathers' of QM, likes of Max Plank who saidAll matter originates and exists only by virtue of a force... We must assume behind this force the existence of a conscious and intelligent Mind. This Mind is the matrix of all matter.
A throw away quip dismisses my point then, the fact that reputable modern physicists say almost exactly the same words as mystics and metaphysicians of the distant past is a matter of chance; you need not bother to actually address this at all. Only an idiot like me would consider it as the slightest bit relevant to a discussion on metaphysics, the suggestion that the ancients knew by metaphysics things we are only now proving through science.
Your casual quip really addresses that one well then.
I assume that’s you attempting to be funny, because otherwise that’s a personal insult.Recall if you will that special relativity put paid to the idea of a 'hard' fixed space time out there independent of the observer, within separate frames of reference, such as on a moving train or on the stationary platform there can be no agreement on simultaneity of events.Comte de Saint-Germain wrote:The point is, however, that the methods not of getting to metaphysics, but the methods of coming to the idea of metaphysics, the methods by which one makes the assumption that there is something that can be covered by the term existence are suspect. This, of course, is highly problematic, not in the least because it is apparently assumed that denying the existence of the sun would mean to deny the sun as an empirical phenomenon, when nothing like that is intended. The sun is empirical and can be measured, but the idea that it is caused by some 'metaphysical sun', some 'thing-in-itself', this idea comes with suspect methods. That is to say, methods that have never been successfully argued for or provided evidence for.
A simple example, using the sun you refer to; as we know light from the sun takes several minutes to reach us, the sun we measure is not the real sun as 'the sun-itself' is, its an outdated image several minutes old. The famous example, if the sun disappeared NOW it would be several minutes before we noticed. Quite simply, our measured empirical world is not the actual world as it really is, any claims based on empirical measurements as the practical are fine, but as the factual need be considered carefully, very carefully. This suggests for me, a real need for metaphysics; we really do need to know what the hell we are talking about!
You are so incredibly ignorant about science I don't know where to begin. In fact, I don't think I will..![]()
If I were as wrong as you suggest, a couple of lines would dismiss my arguments, the 'your too dumb and I am so smart that I don’t need to answer you' line doesn’t fool anybody after high school.
As it happens, here is a clip using exactly the same example (one observer on a train and a second on a platform) and stating exactly the same conclusion as I state ‘within separate frames of reference, such as on a moving train or on the stationary platform there can be no agreement on simultaneity of events’
The problem with telling a teacher of physics that he is incredibly ignorant of physics is that you’re quite likely to have to eat your own words. Whats worse, we teachers often have a bank of clips and so on designed to be shown to students, which make it clear to anyone who is speaking the garbage here.
EDIT to make links work, and sort out messed quotes