wuliheron
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cosmographer said:I agree that language is historical, gradual and catastrophic. So what I can extract from that statement in relation to the naming-task at hand is 1) that the choice should be wise and 2) perhaps should not be rooted in a metaphysics? Sure I can agree with 1) but I don't see how any human could divorce themselves from doing metaphysics when naming the world is the game. As you indicated, language implicates full-scale ontological imaginaries. There is nothing beyond for us, or for science.
I really don't mean to make things difficult, but I don't see how they could be any easier. You wish to call the not-natural eventing at quantum levels something. Where would you expect the determination to come from that imposes a word that is fitting? Planck was not in a situation different from you or me.
By simply calling a spade a spade and describing what we observe. When Newton proposed his "force" it was controversial because of the association of the word with magic. However, no one had any better suggestion and eventually its widespread use in the sciences divorced the word somewhat from its superstitious roots. When Planck labeled what he observed as quanta he was again merely describing what he observed as accurately and completely as he could.