Physics and science, just man made idea?

In summary: These types usually have a religious motive for taking such a stance on science. So what are your thoughts on this? how do you respond to this kind of reasoning?
  • #1
physics_head
4
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There are many people out there who assert that physics and science is just a man made invention, made by convention. They say a bunch of people just decided and agreed to say that the laws of physics are what they are and that since it was all just made up arbitrarily, this means it may not be true. These types usually have a religious motive for taking such a stance on science. So what are your thoughts on this? how do you respond to this kind of reasoning?
 
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  • #2
Well all of our theories are man-made essentially, but that's not to say that they are arbitrary or false.

Our theories approximate physical phenomena to varying degrees of accuracy. As scientists we make sure the theories fit with empirical data. Without these theories we wouldn't really have any of the stuff we have today. No computers, tv, electricity, etc...

While the theories are not 100% absolutely true they do approximate everything to a high degree of accuracy.
 
  • #3
I'm not sure if this question could even be answered by science outside of semantic arguments.
 
  • #4
Saying they are 'just' man made does a disservice to them. They are among man kind's greatest creations of all time.

They are made up somewhat arbitrarily, but as Feldoh says - if they don't jive with observation (at least to some extent) they are thrown out. In this fashion these 'mere man made' theories have provided more descriptive and predictive power than any other philosophy in history.
 
  • #5
physics_head said:
There are many people out there who assert that physics and science is just a man made invention, made by convention. They say a bunch of people just decided and agreed to say that the laws of physics are what they are and that since it was all just made up arbitrarily, this means it may not be true. These types usually have a religious motive for taking such a stance on science. So what are your thoughts on this? how do you respond to this kind of reasoning?

Many non-religious Philosophers of Science believe the same thing.

Throughout history, philosophers have been saying we can't have absolute truth, but only relative truth. Looking at history, Science always changes with new evidence that comes in. How do we not know it'll do the same thing in the future, even if it's a further refined explanation/law?

Well, there's quantum physics and Einstein didn't think it was absolute truth.

Was Newton's equations for gravitation absolute truth or man made, and some sort of relative rather than absolute truth? Are the equations we have now going to be the same exact in a thousand years? Newton said gravitation is a force, and no one thought that was man made at the time, but rather real. Then Einstein said gravitation is the bending of space and time, implications very similar but what it is means something quite different.

There are many who talk about what in Science is not directly observable (ex. gravitation, electrons, x-rays, plate tectonics - yes we can observe movement but no time machine for millions of years ago). Some of them point out that the unobservables are only instruments in making predictions, but not necessarily real.



But then, you can point out that most scientific theories which are well tested most of the time only get replaced by something which is the same exact plus or minus a few minor details; most which are completely replaced by something else never made it off the ground in the first place. When something's well tested and does happen to get completely replaced, it usually keeps most of its implications (Newton's gravitation being a force for example).
 
  • #6
Saying it's willy nilly wouldn't be correct. In Science you go with the best explanation for the evidence. Some call it the best fit for the evidence, or explains the most amount of facts using the lease amount of assumptions. We could say no one has observed electrons with an electron microscope, and some could claim that aliens are causing our experiments to go a certain way. However, that requires more assumptions and doesn't explain as many facts.

In a court of law, "beyond reasonable doubt" doesn't mean it's been proved, but no doubt which is reasonable. Since the jury wasn't there, there can't be proof, but just no reasonable doubt from the evidence. Even "clear and convincing evidence" is good evidence.
 
  • #7
Isn't god just man made? The "laws" of nature happen regardless of humans ability to classify our understandings of such. We've simply just progressed enough technologically and academically that we can convey our understanding of the universe through math & Physics.
 
  • #8
physics_head said:
There are many people out there who assert that physics and science is just a man made invention, made by convention. They say a bunch of people just decided and agreed to say that the laws of physics are what they are and that since it was all just made up arbitrarily, this means it may not be true. These types usually have a religious motive for taking such a stance on science. So what are your thoughts on this? how do you respond to this kind of reasoning?

Without a doubt some of the most theoretical branches of physics are largely dictated by rational opinions of a few (very smart) people that hold clout.

However, as a whole, to claim that science and physics are arbitrarily made up is such an ignorant statement that it could only be made by someone who has such a dismal understanding that trying to explain otherwise would be like trying to argue with a dining room table without first teaching it how to speak English.
 
  • #9
27Thousand said:
Throughout history, philosophers have been saying we can't have absolute truth, but only relative truth. Looking at history, Science always changes with new evidence that comes in. How do we not know it'll do the same thing in the future, even if it's a further refined explanation/law?
I would say the scientific method will never ever change. It is the best truth finding procedure possible. But what likely will change are the current "best" theories produced by this method as new evidence is collected...

Newton said gravitation is a force, and no one thought that was man made at the time, but rather real. Then Einstein said gravitation is the bending of space and time, implications very similar but what it is means something quite different.
so if it's "man made", then it can't be a "real" or true theory?, but if its not man-made, then it must be "Real" or "true"? So what do you mean by "man made theory"? what do you mean by "real theory"? why should real theories be "non-man made" or why should a "man made theory" imply a theory that isn't true?
 
  • #10
physics_head said:
so if it's "man made", then it can't be a "real" or true theory?, but if its not man-made, then it must be "Real" or "true"? So what do you mean by "man made theory"? what do you mean by "real theory"? why should real theories be "non-man made" or why should a "man made theory" imply a theory that isn't true?

Einstein said we can't know for sure if something's for sure in Science. Many would say we have approximations, some say they're close to external reality while other scientists say all we know is they're good instruments for making predictions. What I'm saying is I don't know anyone who says we can have absolute truth rather than relative truth.

physics_head said:
I would say the scientific method will never ever change. It is the best truth finding procedure possible. But what likely will change are the current "best" theories produced by this method as new evidence is collected...

Scientists go with the scientific explanation which is the "best explanation for the evidence". Many believe Quantum Theory may be refined or replaced by a theory which explains the evidence better. Spacetime curvatures replaced Newton's force theory. Newton's ideas were approximations. Einstein's were explanations which made more predictions. The key to all this is "better explanation". I don't understand how anyone could say Science is bad since it's the best explanation to the evidence.

As far as the Scientific Method itself, well I guess no one in this forum can place monetary bets for this lifetime. However considering that there are supposed to be billions of more years left for the Earth to live, and who knows how long humans will live, and that history often repeats itself in finding better and better methods, who knows. :wink: The key would be "no backsliding allowed".
 
  • #11
27Thousand said:
Einstein said we can't know for sure if something's for sure in Science. Many would say we have approximations, some say they're close to external reality while other scientists say all we know is they're good instruments for making predictions. What I'm saying is I don't know anyone who says we can have absolute truth rather than relative truth.
We can find the absolute Truth (or rather, we have no reason to believe we can't). The problem is that we can never be certain that we have found it. As problems go, though, that isn't much of one.
 
  • #12
Why not apply the Scientific Method to your question and report results?
 
  • #13
27Thousand said:
Einstein said we can't know for sure if something's for sure in Science. Many would say we have approximations, some say they're close to external reality while other scientists say all we know is they're good instruments for making predictions. What I'm saying is I don't know anyone who says we can have absolute truth rather than relative truth.

okay, but why should a "man made" theory imply that it is not true or "real"? what is the definition of a "real" theory?
As far as the Scientific Method itself, well I guess no one in this forum can place monetary bets for this lifetime. However considering that there are supposed to be billions of more years left for the Earth to live, and who knows how long humans will live, and that history often repeats itself in finding better and better methods, who knows. :wink: The key would be "no backsliding allowed".
Well, unlike the physical theories the scientific method produced, deciding if the scientific method is the best truth finding method does not depend on physical evidence, but just reason itself. So we don't need to wait for some observation to occur to decide that it needs replacement, all we need, if we are going to show it needs replacement, is for someone to come up with a scenario where the scientific method would conclude theory A is the best one given evidence when its obvious that theory B is really the best one given the evidence, thus proving the scientific method concluded the wrong theory given the evidence. But that's not possible, since the scientific method uses the correct criteria for deciding what the "best" theory is given the evidence, thus no counterexample scenario can ever be thought up, and therefore it can't be replaced. only the theories it produces can be replaced...
 
  • #14
russ_watters said:
We can find the absolute Truth (or rather, we have no reason to believe we can't). The problem is that we can never be certain that we have found it. As problems go, though, that isn't much of one.

Although I'm going to agree that we may have absolute truth and not be aware of it, I'm going to have to appeal to history. Almost every scientific observable principle law gets refined, even if just a very tiny bit, over time. That doesn't mean they're not untrustworthy or not a close approximation of truth, but just that I feel skeptical that we have absolute truth. Newton's physical laws were tested and then later modified a little with Einstein. Newton's physical laws work in most situations, but not all. So thus I'd think that's really good relative truth, but not quite absolute truth. Again, I'm not bashing Science, but rather saying anything can be improved on. I would think many scientists think it's exciting to make new discoveries.
 
  • #15
WhoWee said:
Why not apply the Scientific Method to your question and report results?

I've been thinking lately that it would be cool to apply to the Scientific Method to various arguments in the scientific realism vs. anti-realism debate. It would be fun to test their arguments to see if some of their concerns hold up, or are mostly rubber.
 
  • #16
physics_head said:
okay, but why should a "man made" theory imply that it is not true or "real"? what is the definition of a "real" theory?

What sounds reasonable to me is it's the best explanation for the evidence, and thus not reasonable to act like it's not true. I tell people to remember back when they had science fair experiments and you would say, "If this is true this will happen." If it can make predictions over and over again from many different angles, then even if it's not true the world behaves closely to how it would if it were true, so thus it's useful. If it's good at predictions, it's going to be very useful for technology. Combine falsifying what you can brainstorm for alternatives and going with the best explanation, it's also the most reasonable explanation.

physics_head said:
Well, unlike the physical theories the scientific method produced, deciding if the scientific method is the best truth finding method does not depend on physical evidence, but just reason itself. So we don't need to wait for some observation to occur to decide that it needs replacement, all we need, if we are going to show it needs replacement, is for someone to come up with a scenario where the scientific method would conclude theory A is the best one given evidence when its obvious that theory B is really the best one given the evidence, thus proving the scientific method concluded the wrong theory given the evidence. But that's not possible, since the scientific method uses the correct criteria for deciding what the "best" theory is given the evidence, thus no counterexample scenario can ever be thought up, and therefore it can't be replaced. only the theories it produces can be replaced...

With the billions of years remaining and who knows how much more time for humans, what if they were to come up with an even better method than the already great Scientific Method? Haven't they already had quite a few revolutions throughout human history? Just another million years and with Science & Technology speeding up even more quickly, who knows what will happen.
 
  • #17
russ_watters said:
We can find the absolute Truth (or rather, we have no reason to believe we can't). The problem is that we can never be certain that we have found it. As problems go, though, that isn't much of one.

As many may possibly remember from earlier, some members on physicsforums said that one has to be creative and imaginative, including every last single vocabulary word, to the point you can't have any human thoughts/feelings. :confused: So in return to them, if we're strong in our message here, if we're as consistent as the sun rising, then we should be as creative in saying that Science will change. What's good for the goose is good for the physicsforums.

Something many may want to consider, just like a record player repeats itself, so does history itself. History shows us that a major constant in human knowledge is change itself. The facts: The National Academy of Sciences is the highest science organization in the U.S. Many of its members say they don't have "faith" in scientific laws and theories, but rather "accept" them, because there's always the possibility that Science can change with new incoming evidence.

If we want to be as creative as the amount of rain drops falling in a rainstorm, and as imaginative as the rainbow after wards, the scientists who claim Science can change with new evidence will probably be the ones making the innovations. I know some members of physicsforums earlier were saying that anything scientific/technical sounding is automatically not creative, no matter how unique, but that's their cup of tea.
 
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  • #18
27Thousand said:
But then, you can point out that most scientific theories which are well tested most of the time only get replaced by something which is the same exact plus or minus a few minor details; most which are completely replaced by something else never made it off the ground in the first place. When something's well tested and does happen to get completely replaced, it usually keeps most of its implications (Newton's gravitation being a force for example).
General Relativity completely replaced Newton's law of gravity? Not a chance. Engineers do not use General Relativity when they compute the stresses and strains on the new building design. They don't even use Newton's law of gravity. Most likely, they'll assume Earth standard gravity and be done with it. If they want to be a bit more accurate, they'll use the following formula, which doesn't look much like Newton's law at all:

[tex]a_g = 9.780327(1+0.0053024\sin^2\phi-0.000058\sin^22\phi)\,\text{m/s}^2[/tex]

This equation is an empirical rule. It considerably more accurate than this:

[tex]a_g = \frac{G M_e}{r^2}[/tex]

where r is the distance from the center of the Earth to the point on the surface of the Earth where the building is to be constructed. It is more accurate for two reasons. First, the above is a misapplication of Newton's law. It assumes the Earth is spherical. Second, Newton's law of gravity doesn't have a centrifugal force term. "But wait, centrifugal force isn't a real force!" So what? The effects of it on a building are real.

When NASA or any other space agency launches a spacecraft into space, they do not use general relativity. The use good old Newton's law of gravity (applied correctly of course, taking into account that the Earth isn't spherical). Even in space there are very few applications where general relativity is needed. A simplified form of general relativity in which general relativity is a perturbing force in addition to Newtonian gravity is used for predicting the orbits of the planets for hundreds of years. General relativity is absolutely essential for GPS. Other than that, rocket scientists tend to use Newtonian gravity. Newton's law of gravity did not suddenly stop working when Einstein came up with general relativity.

27Thousand said:
physics_head said:
There are many people out there who assert that physics and science is just a man made invention, made by convention. They say a bunch of people just decided and agreed to say that the laws of physics are what they are and that since it was all just made up arbitrarily, this means it may not be true.
Many non-religious Philosophers of Science believe the same thing.
Here is a paper by a physicist who finally got fed up with the way some of his fellow academicians thought.
http://physics.nyu.edu/sokal/transgress_v2/transgress_v2_singlefile.html
There are many natural scientists, and especially physicists, who continue to reject the notion that the disciplines concerned with social and cultural criticism can have anything to contribute, except perhaps peripherally, to their research. Still less are they receptive to the idea that the very foundations of their worldview must be revised or rebuilt in the light of such criticism. Rather, they cling to the dogma imposed by the long post-Enlightenment hegemony over the Western intellectual outlook, which can be summarized briefly as follows: that there exists an external world, whose properties are independent of any individual human being and indeed of humanity as a whole; that these properties are encoded in ``eternal'' physical laws; and that human beings can obtain reliable, albeit imperfect and tentative, knowledge of these laws by hewing to the ``objective'' procedures and epistemological strictures prescribed by the (so-called) scientific method.
 
  • #19
D H said:
General Relativity completely replaced Newton's law of gravity? Not a chance. Engineers do not use General Relativity when they compute the stresses and strains on the new building design. They don't even use Newton's law of gravity. Most likely, they'll assume Earth standard gravity and be done with it. If they want to be a bit more accurate, they'll use the following formula, which doesn't look much like Newton's law at all:

[tex]a_g = 9.780327(1+0.0053024\sin^2\phi-0.000058\sin^22\phi)\,\text{m/s}^2[/tex]

This equation is an empirical rule. It considerably more accurate than this:

[tex]a_g = \frac{G M_e}{r^2}[/tex]

where r is the distance from the center of the Earth to the point on the surface of the Earth where the building is to be constructed. It is more accurate for two reasons. First, the above is a misapplication of Newton's law. It assumes the Earth is spherical. Second, Newton's law of gravity doesn't have a centrifugal force term. "But wait, centrifugal force isn't a real force!" So what? The effects of it on a building are real.

When NASA or any other space agency launches a spacecraft into space, they do not use general relativity. The use good old Newton's law of gravity (applied correctly of course, taking into account that the Earth isn't spherical). Even in space there are very few applications where general relativity is needed. A simplified form of general relativity in which general relativity is a perturbing force in addition to Newtonian gravity is used for predicting the orbits of the planets for hundreds of years. General relativity is absolutely essential for GPS. Other than that, rocket scientists tend to use Newtonian gravity. Newton's law of gravity did not suddenly stop working when Einstein came up with general relativity.

You're correct about the actual implications in virtually most situations, but I'm not so sure about the actual reality of Newton's Gravitation. Keep in mind, that's why I said in the rare case where something in Science is replaced rather than just slightly modified, the actual implications usually stay very similar. The implications were similar from Newton to Einstein. However, many say gravitation being the bending of space and time in reality is very different than being an actual external force, even if the implications are pretty much the same. Before Newton and during ancient Greek times, Aristotle said there was a natural law that things move to their natural positions, because of heaviness. Although Newton's implications changed gravitation when going to space, people are going to say many previous implications on Earth were similar (apples still fell to the ground like Aristotle's time, even if falling in a vacuum was modified). Now a days, many say the actual implications for situations like a black hole are different than what Newton would have claimed. The explanations through time changed, although the implications built on top of each other.

Here's some food for thought, right now many elementary school kids will say Newton saying there's an external force is proven because they can see apples falling from a tree, photos show planets revolving around the Sun, and how else do we explain that (they don't know about General Relativity). Just because the implications work for most situations, does that mean Newton's reality is reality? Before Galileo/Newton, people would say Aristotle's idea that things move to their natural position was proven because from personal experience they could see apples falling from a tree and see stars/planets move across the sky (affirming the consequent). They would argue that the evidence of falling objects proves you can't argue with Aristotle. How do we not know the explanation of what gravitation actually is might dramatically change with a better explanation in the future, to the magnitude of going from Aristotle to Einstein, while the implications staying very similar but new ones building on top of each other?
 
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  • #20
27Thousand said:
Before Newton and during ancient Greek times, Aristotle said there was a natural law that things move to their natural positions, because of heaviness. Although Newton's implications changed gravitation when going to space, people are going to say many previous implications on Earth were similar (apples still fell to the ground like Aristotle's time, even if falling in a vacuum was modified).
Newton's formulation did not change how things behaved one iota. Nor did Einstein's formulation. Things do whatever it is they do. The planets did not suddenly change the way they orbit when Newton and Einstein came up with their theories of how gravity works / what it is. It is axiomatic to science that there is some external truth out there somewhere, and a scientists job is to find it, explain it, and do so in as simple a form as possible. So far, there is no evidence that that axiom is anything but true.

You are quibbling with semantics regarding the reality or non-reality of gravity as a force. It really is just quibbling and just ontology. From the perspective of Newtonian mechanics it is a "real" force. In Newton's world, a force is anything that causes acceleration in a Newtonian inertial frame. Newton didn't know about photons, gluons, W bosons, Z bosons. In general relativity a force is anything that causes an ideal accelerometer to register something other than zero. GR, like Newtonian mechanics, is a classical (non-quantum) theory. We do not yet know how to meld general relativity with quantum mechanics. Suppose we do, we find some bosons that mediate gravitation. Does this mean gravity magically becomes a force once again?

How we look at things and what we look at things are not the same. Thinking that science is an invention of the human mind implies that the right kind wishful thinking will make it so that falling off the top of a 20 story building is no longer fatal. Sorry, you are going to fall to your death. All the wishful thinking in the world is not going to change that.
 
  • #21
D H said:
You are quibbling with semantics regarding the reality or non-reality of gravity as a force.

Many tell me that Gravitation from Newton to Einstein is not just semantics. So I don't understand? I would think there's an objective reality out there for what Gravitation really is, regardless of all the side theories and predictions made.

Keep in mind Scientific Realists often point out that in the rare cases where a very well tested scientific explanation is completely replaced rather than modified, most of the implications stay the same such as in gravitational force to spacetime curvatures. How is that not a good argument that although you can't prove, it's reasonable to believe Science is a close approximation to the truth? I'm aware that the actual PHYSICAL IMPLICATIONS stayed mostly the same, but how did the actual EXPLANATION of gravitation just get slightly modified or built upon rather than completely replaced?

On the other hand, although I'm not so sure about agreeing with the Instrumentalist Anti-Scientific Realists, they do say we can't know the reality of scientific explanation unobservables whatsoever but only that they're good at making physical predictions. Although I think it's extremely out in left field when Scientific Instrumentalists say electrons are only good instruments to make physical predictions (because we haven't seen them under an electron microscope and thus unobservables), I do realize I wouldn't be able to debate their arguments.

D H said:
We do not yet know how to meld general relativity with quantum mechanics. Suppose we do, we find some bosons that mediate gravitation. Does this mean gravity magically becomes a force once again?

Taking that, what if someone were to talk about the possibility of a new gravitational theory saying things move to their natural positions, relative to some other specifics? Then later that theory starts making more research predictions than Relativity does? Does that mean Aristotle's theory was right after all even if much of his original physical implications outside of things falling down and across the sky were wrong? Besides many of Aristotle's physical implications being false, most would say his actual explanation was wrong also. In a million years from now, could they find "out of the ordinary" situations with extremely very different physical implications than General Relativity would say? Does that mean our scientific explanations of what gravitation really is have actually been proved outside of their physical implications?

Why do they say Gravitation is an unobservable, even if the implications aren't?
 
  • #22
D H said:
We do not yet know how to meld general relativity with quantum mechanics. Suppose we do, we find some bosons that mediate gravitation. Does this mean gravity magically becomes a force once again?

As many may recall, physicsforums earlier said that you have to be so original that you can't even eat breakfast because "breakfast" is found in a dictionary. If we're as consistent as a Supreme Court judge, then that would mean we have to be just as creative with Science. Everything from electrons to all implications of germs causing disease to plate tectonics, to every last detail, is subject to being slightly modified. Even if one is an undergraduate, one must keep on thinking about improvement. In Science, coming up with mumbo jumbo isn't considered creativity, but rather coming up with new explanations/observable principles which do a better job of explaining the evidence than the current ones do. I could be wrong, but those who say Science is set in stone probably won't get to do any of that.

In order to do that, one must look for anomalies in current theories/laws, brainstorm alternatives (even if they're the same except minor details), and then think of ways to test them. Einstein would try to prove things for himself and think of experiments to test others' ideas. He said he loved Science, but that he couldn't be 100% sure of what's truth. Why not learn from the top dogs?
 
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  • #23
27Thousand said:
Many tell me that Gravitation from Newton to Einstein is not just semantics. So I don't understand?
"Many tell me". Who?

And no, apparently you do not understand.

27Thousand said:
As many may recall, physicsforums earlier said that you have to be so original that you can't even eat breakfast because "breakfast" is found in a dictionary.
Who is "physicsforums"? Where do you get this nonsense? I think you are making it up.

27Thousand said:
I would think there's an objective reality out there for what Gravitation really is, regardless of all the side theories and predictions made.
Then where exactly is the argument?

Why do they say Gravitation is an unobservable, even if the implications aren't?
Who is this "they" to whom you keep referring? Stop being a passive aggressive post-modernist. Say what you mean. When you are attributing something to someone, give a proper reference. Give a link. Otherwise I'll have to assume you made it up.

As far as gravitation being unobservable goes, you have to be careful as to what this means. We certainly can observe the effects of gravitation. It's really quite simple. Let an apple fall on your head. If the apple doesn't work, try something with more mass.

What we can't do is construct a device that measures gravitational force without looking at the outside world. Newtonian physics explains this in terms of the non-existence of a gravity shield. General relativity explains this in terms of curved space-time being a manifold. How the future physics that finally bridges the gap between general relativity and quantum mechanics will explain this, we don't know. That wedding has not yet taken place.
 
  • #24
27Thousand said:
You're correct about the actual implications in virtually most situations, but I'm not so sure about the actual reality of Newton's Gravitation.
What "actual reality"? You think Newton had some deeper, qualatative description of gravity independent of the math? He didn't. I think you misunderstand what science is...
However, many say gravitation being the bending of space and time in reality is very different than being an actual external force, even if the implications are pretty much the same.
Gravitational force is a force. It says so right in Newton's gravitational force equation and as DH explained, that equation is still perfectly valid in a large number of applications!
 
  • #25
27Thousand said:
Although I'm going to agree that we may have absolute truth and not be aware of it, I'm going to have to appeal to history. Almost every scientific observable principle law gets refined, even if just a very tiny bit, over time. That doesn't mean they're not untrustworthy or not a close approximation of truth, but just that I feel skeptical that we have absolute truth.
On some subjects we may have it on others we may not.
Newton's physical laws were tested and then later modified a little with Einstein. Newton's physical laws work in most situations, but not all. So thus I'd think that's really good relative truth, but not quite absolute truth. Again, I'm not bashing Science, but rather saying anything can be improved on. I would think many scientists think it's exciting to make new discoveries.
If Newton's laws are completely correct in a given situation, wouldn't that make them Absolute Truth for that limited situation?
 
  • #26
russ_watters said:
What "actual reality"? You think Newton had some deeper, qualatative description of gravity independent of the math? He didn't. I think you misunderstand what science is...
Gravitational force is a force. It says so right in Newton's gravitational force equation and as DH explained, that equation is still perfectly valid in a large number of applications!

Thought experiment and back up from educational sources:

If I'm in a car going around a corner very quickly, I get pushed to the side. That's not because there's an external force in the curb pulling on me, but rather that my body wants to move in a straight line unless acted upon by an outside force. Einstein said gravitation is the same as acceleration rather than an external force, gave his rocket on the ground vs. space thought experiment, and it's been tested. How do you explain the studies for the equivalence principle, inertial mass and gravitational mass? Einstein's Gravitation being a fictitious force, or the bending of spacetime creating an illusion of an external force? Link from UCLA http://www.physics.ucla.edu/demoweb..._and_general_relativity/curved_spacetime.html You're not implying that at slow speeds and low mass, gravitation is an external force field, while in other situations it's instead the bending of spacetime? I thought gravitation is gravitation. That's why I said the implications stayed similar, although the explanation was replaced (physical laws vs. what a scientific theory is).

If Newton's idea that gravitation is a force was real, how do you explain gravitational redshift, gravitational time dilation, the wobble of Mercury's orbit, stuff that happens with black holes, and how the bending of light is not what Newton would predict but rather what Einstein would? Newton said a body at rest stays at rest unless an external force does something, so according to him if I'm holding an apple and drop it, the reason it doesn't stay at rest is because of an external force called gravity. However Einstein said it was the bending of spacetime with no force involved, just acceleration plus the bending of spacetime create the illusion.

Something I found from the National Academy of Sciences, the highest Science organization in the U.S. http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=751&page=8

Another source says: "The general theory overturned Newton's theory of gravity which had been valid for two hundred and fifty years. In Newton's universe, gravity was regarded as an attractive force which all massive bodies exert on each other. The planets moved in elliptical orbits about the sun because of its great mass powerful gravitational force. In Einstein's universe, gravity is not regarded as an exterior force, but rather as a property of space and time or "spacetime"."
http://www.Alberteinstein.info/gallery/gtext3.html

russ_watters said:
If Newton's laws are completely correct in a given situation, wouldn't that make them Absolute Truth for that limited situation?

The observable principle may be correct for that limited situation. However, does that mean the observable principle law is universal (correct), nor even the explanation (theory of gravitation)? Aristotle's theory of gravitation was right in some situations, but I'm not sure that means it's deserving of being correct, but only a very limited relative truth. As they look for explanations of gravitation better than General Relativity, I wonder what it'll look like in a thousand years from now?
 
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  • #27
D H said:
"Many tell me". Who?

And no, apparently you do not understand.

Sources that it's more than just semantics, but rather an overturning for a scientific explanation for what gravitation really is (remember a law of gravitation - observable principle/implications - is not the same as the theory of gravitation - explanation):

"The general theory overturned Newton's theory of gravity which had been valid for two hundred and fifty years. In Newton's universe, gravity was regarded as an attractive force which all massive bodies exert on each other. The planets moved in elliptical orbits about the sun because of its great mass powerful gravitational force. In Einstein's universe, gravity is not regarded as an exterior force, but rather as a property of space and time or "spacetime"."
http://www.Alberteinstein.info/gallery/gtext3.html
If Einstein was so famous with curvatures in spacetime, then why was it only semantics? It has implications for making physical predictions, and if it's real (instead of other theories) then the possibility of an actual reality out there different than Newton's external force theory.

Something I found from the National Academy of Sciences, the highest Science organization in the U.S. http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=751&page=8

D H said:
Who is this "they" to whom you keep referring? Stop being a passive aggressive post-modernist. Say what you mean. When you are attributing something to someone, give a proper reference. Give a link. Otherwise I'll have to assume you made it up.

As far as gravitation being unobservable goes, you have to be careful as to what this means. We certainly can observe the effects of gravitation. It's really quite simple. Let an apple fall on your head. If the apple doesn't work, try something with more mass.

What we can't do is construct a device that measures gravitational force without looking at the outside world. Newtonian physics explains this in terms of the non-existence of a gravity shield. General relativity explains this in terms of curved space-time being a manifold. How the future physics that finally bridges the gap between general relativity and quantum mechanics will explain this, we don't know. That wedding has not yet taken place.

I'll get the source on that one from the National Academy of Sciences. Basically they're defending the theory (explanation) of evolution. They say some people accuse evolution over millions of years of not being directly observable because no one has a time machine. Then they say that happens all the time in Science; it's the same way for gravitation and x-rays. We can only observe the effects of them but not the actual thing itself, but that doesn't mean it's not reasonable. They say you can't prove in Science and it's always possible to change with new evidence, but that a scientific fact (besides also meaning an observation) is an explanation that's been tested so well that there's no longer any reason to doubt.

Looking at it, since there are so many theories or explanations of gravitation out there right now, how can we say we have actually observed gravitation itself (beyond the indirect effects or implications)? We have equations and observations, but gravitation itself is an unobservable that could be completely replace again in the future. That's what I meant earlier by a scientific theory being completely replaced but the implications staying almost the same. I said that was a realist argument for why we should trust Science as being approximately true.
 
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  • #28
D H said:
27Thousand said:
As many may recall, physicsforums earlier said that you have to be so original that you can't even eat breakfast because "breakfast" is found in a dictionary.
Who is "physicsforums"? Where do you get this nonsense? I think you are making it up.

About physicsforums.com?

First of all, I took three words from a television show and added six new words to create a new phrase. It was something I didn't read and I thought of it on my own. So later I told my roommate the phrase. He laughed and said, "Not from a book!" Me, "I didn't get it from a book." Him, "Not from a book!" Then later in the day he laughed at me, said he was going to be creative, and quoted an extremely common movie quote. I went to Google and searched for his movie quote in quotes, hundreds of thousands of results came up. Then I Googled my made up phrase in quotes and apparently the only results which came up are when I've used it online. I thought that was hypocritical. Also, just like the atomic bomb flattened those Japanese cities it was like he was telling me to turn my mind into oblivion or a vegetable because all vocabulary words are automatically in one of the random millions of books in the world.

So I went to physicsforums.com and they said that maybe I needed to not be from a book and come up with my own ideas. I kept on saying that it was my own words. Then one person said since three words "the world around" was from a television show, that basically means it's from a book. That didn't make any sense to me because of what Google said.

I decided to ask another website about physicsforums.com and this is what they said, without me saying that it was actually physicsforums.com to protect the innocent :
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/i...j3gRlrnty6IX;_ylv=3?qid=20090806183237AA3mVBr
I mean I could be wrong but if you have the mindset that you can't eat breakfast because "breakfast" is in a dictionary, I would believe that's irrational. I mean we have to be reasonable here.
 
  • #29
So that's why I said, "If we want to be as creative as the amount of rain drops falling in a rainstorm, and as imaginative as the rainbow afterward, the scientists who claim Science can change with new evidence will probably be the ones making the innovations."
 
  • #30
all ideas come from the human mind, our standard of "truth" is just how an idea is relevant to our actual universe
 

1. What is the difference between physics and other sciences?

Physics is the branch of science that deals with the study of matter, energy, and their interactions. It focuses on understanding the fundamental laws and principles that govern the behavior of the physical world. Other sciences, such as biology and chemistry, may also study these concepts, but from a different perspective and with different methods.

2. How do we know that physics is not just a man-made idea?

Physics is based on empirical evidence and mathematical models that have been tested and verified through experiments and observations. These laws and principles have been consistently shown to accurately describe and predict the behavior of the physical world, providing strong evidence that they are not just man-made ideas.

3. Can the laws of physics change over time?

The laws of physics are considered to be universal and unchanging. They have been observed to hold true in all known conditions and have not been found to change over time. However, our understanding of these laws may evolve as we continue to make new discoveries and advancements in technology.

4. What is the role of mathematics in physics?

Mathematics is a powerful tool in physics, as it allows us to describe and quantify the relationships between different physical quantities. Many of the laws and principles in physics are expressed through mathematical equations, which can then be used to make predictions and solve complex problems.

5. How does physics impact our daily lives?

Physics has a significant impact on our daily lives, from the technology we use to the natural phenomena we experience. It helps us understand how things work and allows us to develop new technologies and innovations that improve our lives. For example, the principles of electricity and magnetism are essential for the functioning of modern electronics, and the laws of motion are crucial for transportation and engineering.

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