tom.stoer
Science Advisor
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I don't think it's coincidence.
I agree to some statements in this thread that reality must follow some basic rules of logic (perhaps more complex than classical logic, e.g. due to quantum mechanics).
I would say that if nature represents some rules of logic this implies that it must represent all fields of mathematics that emerge from logic. As logic (+ set theory) leads automatically to natural numbers, it is not too strange that we find natural numbers in physics
I do not know why nature has chosen to exist in some other (more complex) representations of certain fields of mathematics. Classically nature represents (in addition to natural numbers) certain manifolds etc. Quantum mechanically it represents Hilbert spaces. I do not know why Hilbert spaces and not some more general Banach spaces - or something totally different.
Perhaps these more complex structures are a hint that we must focus on the derivation of the complex physical structures from more simple ones; that would mean that nature encodes or represents something like the emergence of mathematical frameworks in certain limits, but that the basic laws are quite "simple".
In that sense some ideas of modern physics are definately going into the wrong direction. Strings are certainly not the building blocks as their fundamental laws seem to be quite complex (nobody knows them today). Loops are closer to this idea, but still too complex (the simplest framework seems to be a certain spin foam model, but still this requires complex reasoning). I am not an expert but causal sets could be a step into the right direction.
In the very beginning I said that MUH seems to be quite strange because it replaces the quest for a fundamental matehmatical principle with the statement that there is no such principle ("all mathematical frameworks do exist"). I guess that there must be a basic principle, a selection rule or something which - together with a rather simple mathematical framework - allows nature (description of nature) to emerge from these fundamental entities. This principle would be a physical principle in the sense that it appears as a mathematical axiom = something w/o proof = something you have to believe in.
I know thta this idea does not mean that you can get rid of all human baggage as we called it. In addition it does not explain why nature respects logic (or logic plus some entities, principles, ...). It does not explain why "this principle" and not "that one".
But I see this as a rather modest step towards a "ToE".
I agree to some statements in this thread that reality must follow some basic rules of logic (perhaps more complex than classical logic, e.g. due to quantum mechanics).
I would say that if nature represents some rules of logic this implies that it must represent all fields of mathematics that emerge from logic. As logic (+ set theory) leads automatically to natural numbers, it is not too strange that we find natural numbers in physics
I do not know why nature has chosen to exist in some other (more complex) representations of certain fields of mathematics. Classically nature represents (in addition to natural numbers) certain manifolds etc. Quantum mechanically it represents Hilbert spaces. I do not know why Hilbert spaces and not some more general Banach spaces - or something totally different.
Perhaps these more complex structures are a hint that we must focus on the derivation of the complex physical structures from more simple ones; that would mean that nature encodes or represents something like the emergence of mathematical frameworks in certain limits, but that the basic laws are quite "simple".
In that sense some ideas of modern physics are definately going into the wrong direction. Strings are certainly not the building blocks as their fundamental laws seem to be quite complex (nobody knows them today). Loops are closer to this idea, but still too complex (the simplest framework seems to be a certain spin foam model, but still this requires complex reasoning). I am not an expert but causal sets could be a step into the right direction.
In the very beginning I said that MUH seems to be quite strange because it replaces the quest for a fundamental matehmatical principle with the statement that there is no such principle ("all mathematical frameworks do exist"). I guess that there must be a basic principle, a selection rule or something which - together with a rather simple mathematical framework - allows nature (description of nature) to emerge from these fundamental entities. This principle would be a physical principle in the sense that it appears as a mathematical axiom = something w/o proof = something you have to believe in.
I know thta this idea does not mean that you can get rid of all human baggage as we called it. In addition it does not explain why nature respects logic (or logic plus some entities, principles, ...). It does not explain why "this principle" and not "that one".
But I see this as a rather modest step towards a "ToE".