ramstin
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What is the difference between Mathematics and Physics?
The discussion centers around the relationship between mathematics and physics, exploring their differences, similarities, and the roles they play in understanding the physical world. Participants engage in conceptual clarifications, technical explanations, and debates regarding the nature of both fields.
Participants express a range of views, with no clear consensus on the relationship between mathematics and physics. Disagreements persist regarding the definitions, roles, and implications of both fields.
Some participants note the limitations in defining the boundaries between mathematics and physics, suggesting that there is no absolute distinction and that the relationship is complex and multifaceted.
simon009988 said:math relies on a set of postulates and logic to prove something, where as physicist use experimental results to "prove" something
Cosmo16 said:That isn't really correct either- a lot of phyics is proved theoreticly without experimental data. Proved using mathmathiimatics.
Pengwuino said:Well something is never really proven in physics until an experiment confirms it and even at that, its never 100% proven.
Cosmo16 said:That isn't really correct either- a lot of phyics is proved theoreticly without experimental data. Proved using mathmathiimatics.
ramstin said:What is the difference between Mathematics and Physics?
cepheid said:Ummm...no. Physical theories are formulated mathematically to describe the physical world. That doesn't mean that anything has been "proved" about physics though. If they are good theories, then they should be predictive, i.e. one should be able to go out and do an experiment that may or may not bear out the predictions of the theory. If it does, then that lends credence to the theory. On the other hand, if it the experimental results are inconsistent with the theoretical predictions, the theory is scrapped, even though it was mathematically correct and self-consistent. I hope that this illustrates the difference between science and mathematics.
robert Ihnot said:Newton [..snip..] held the chair of mathematics at Cambridge.
D H said:Many physicists are directly involved with making weapons of war. Those who are not making weapons know that their developments may well be used to create new weapons in their lifetime. Physicists in general do not have a problem with this.
Mathematicians, on the other hand, are rarely involved with making weapons. They do know that what they create might well be used to make weaponry. This bothers the heck out of them even though this probably will not happen until long after they die.