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"Physics is the only real science. The rest are just stamp collecting." |
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| Jan23-07, 06:46 PM | #52 |
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"Physics is the only real science. The rest are just stamp collecting."
A Rutherfordian take on mathematics:
"All mathematics is either set theory, or tautologies".
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| Jan23-07, 08:22 PM | #53 |
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http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/mind-identity/ conscious experience and self awareness are also the same, according to the discipline (and who oughta know!?) http://consc.net/papers/puzzle.html In fact the two have been melded into one idea which is conscious awareness There's nothing mysterious, metaphysical or spooky about the mind, brain, awareness or consciousness. Its all physical Thanks to physics (NB: topic!) for helping to clarify that physcial fact about the physiology of the brain/mind/conscious awareness. Who else would have come up with an fMRI machine with accompanying accutrimonts. Physics is like a pencil. Its how you use it that determines the outcome. This is true for all the arts and sciences. That's how I see it anyway. But, its been said that we're "not to believe everything we think"!
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| Jan25-07, 09:33 AM | #54 |
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![]() And an old one: There are 10 kind of people: Those that understand binary and those that do not. |
| Jan31-07, 11:05 PM | #55 |
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These are physical phenomena and so they are reducible to physics formuli. Or are Gödel’s incompleteness theorems true? Does emergence prevent predictability? Is irreducible complexity a reality or are are physicists lazy? The following link shows that some physicists are busy trying to extract formuli out of biological function and other stuff. Statistical Physics, Biological Physics and Physics of Quantum Systems http://ion.elte.hu/kredit/Intezet/Ph...olSTAT-uj.html |
| Feb1-07, 01:50 PM | #56 |
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| Feb1-07, 07:45 PM | #57 |
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What is there so special in the outside energy other than the ability to do work?:)
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| Feb1-07, 10:00 PM | #58 |
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| Feb2-07, 12:01 AM | #59 |
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The brain and the nervous system are structured, physiologically, in such a way that they produce the "electrochemical activity" you're talking about. The activities of these structures sometimes produce a result we've called "mind" or "brain activity". food has to become an "internal source of energy" before it can help "power electrochemical activity". Actually food becomes that electrochemical soup of activity. You'd know more about this if you studied the mammalian cellular metabolic chart. Food maintains the brain and its activities. This isn't a new thing. All organs are supported by food. The word "mind" is an overblown human dramatization of brain activity. This doesn't diminish the amazing potentials the human brain can realize. We call a bile duct a "bile duct" because its a duct that carries bile. You could always lobby to change the name of the brain to "the mind duct" or "the vessel of electrochemical activity". But its called a brain, for now.
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| Feb2-07, 04:24 AM | #60 |
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Software does come from 0s and 1s and that seems pretty hard to understand; just looking inside the HDD for the windows does not work :p |
| Feb2-07, 10:37 AM | #61 |
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| Feb19-07, 08:12 AM | #62 |
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My humble opinion...
Mathematics is the ambiguous science. (it's attribute both nature and social) Physics is the real science. (it's study "everything") Chemistry is the central science. (its connects maths,phys,bio each nature) Biology is the life science. (its always learning of organisms and enviroments) While, Mathematics is always partner with Physisc, whereas Chemistry is always partner with Biology. I guess these were everybody knew. I'm just disagree with that statement is discriminating other sciences, who because he just to love the one he fascinates. Because all sciences are equally important. |
| Feb19-07, 09:05 PM | #63 |
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| Feb19-07, 10:36 PM | #64 |
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Recognitions:
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For any given problem there's a large number of possible adaptations. A solution to a problem is still a solution independently of it having coming up in physics or biology, or while cleaning your room. Above all what's important is the mathematics and abstract side of problems. The rest are variables.
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| Feb20-07, 06:59 AM | #65 |
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I don't see much chance of physics providing the cure for cancer,or MS, or of uncovering the mysteries of human psychology for that matter, or for cracking the biology of the aging process, or explaining how the human mind works at a neurological level either: do you? Or for providing solutions to poverty and hunger, or economic difficulties, or providing us with a legal framework that works for the benefit of it's citizenry, or for controlling population or solving the issues of global warming. Or producing the next big drug for depression using x.
Anyway it's obviously just a bit of bravado from the Englishman, probably had a bit too much of the old ale when he said that. In other words it's what I tend to term the "my dad is better'n your dad", idea, whereby you are biased towards your dad because you happen to know the most about him. ![]() ![]() Same with the maths thing, if you don't know how to do the maths, you do what Einstein did, you take it to a mathematician, sciences don't exist in a vacuum
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| Feb22-07, 12:27 AM | #66 |
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[QUOTE=1016;1249450]Chemistry is always partner with Biology.[QUOTE]
Maths is used in chemisty too, as Rutherford would have known, seeing as he did work on discovering things about atoms. So i can't really understand how he could say other sciences are nothing compared to physics when he worked on things for chemistry. Unless chemistry was so insignificant back then that it was considered physics. |
| Mar25-10, 07:01 PM | #67 |
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"Physics is the only real science. The rest are just stamp collecting."
-- Ernest Rutherford No, it is a descriptive science like all others: it describes aspects of the universe the same as the rest do. |
| Mar25-10, 08:34 PM | #68 |
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The other view is that simplicity (physics) is actually just a subset of complexity (like the study of biology and systems science). Complexity may be the more general, the more fundamental, because that is the way the world actually is - in a developed state.
A classic cite here is from Schrodinger's What is Life? “living matters, while not eluding the ‘laws of physics’ as established up to date, is likely to involve ‘other laws of physics’ hitherto unknown, which, however, once they have been revealed, will form just as integral a part of science as the former”. Then even more bold is Robert Rosen. Here is a summary from The Way of the Cell: Molecules, Organisms and the Order of Life by Franklin Harold. “[Rosen's] quest for principles that make organic systems different from inorganic ones does not lead him to invoke mysterious forces that breathe life into the common clay, but he does bid us to rethink the relationship between biology and physics, and that is quite radical enough. Both disciplines deal with systems, and for the past two centuries biologists have sought to interpret their subject by the extension of laws inferred by physicists from the study of simple mechanisms. That, in Rosen’s view, puts the cart before the horses: in reality, simple systems such as gases or planetary orbits are special and limited instances, while complex systems represent the general case. If organisms are ever to be understood as material physical entities, physics will first have to be transformed into a science of complex systems”. Where does the future of fundamental physics lie? Perhaps in the principles of systems already uncovered by theoretical biology. We are of course seeing the likes of Smolin picking up selection theory to talk about Darwinian cosmology. Which is nice, but that bit of insight is what, 150 years old? Cutting edge stuff in theoretical biology is semiotics, or evo-devo, or dissipative structure theory. (I should give an honorable mention to cosmologists like Charley Lineweaver who are using current concepts - http://www.mso.anu.edu.au/~charley/) |
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