From: mpc755 on
On Mar 13, 7:47 pm, Huang <huangxienc...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
> On Mar 13, 6:04 pm, mpc755 <mpc...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > On Mar 13, 4:35 pm, Huang <huangxienc...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> > > > > Big wink back at ya - because while science and physics would indeed
> > > > > disappear without the process of observability, mathematics is not
> > > > > science and I would argue that it might just as easily remain without
> > > > > us being here to appreciate it.
>
> > > > Mathematics is an invention. What occurs physically in nature occurs
> > > > whether we mathematically define it or not.- Hide quoted text -
>
> You have no proof either way. Nobody does. prove to me that it is an
> invention and not a discovery, or vice versa. You cannot.
>

It doesn't matter if it is an invention or a discovery. It is not
fundamental in nature. Mathematics does not physically exist in and of
itself.


> The relationships which are modelled by mathematics may very well be
> fundamentally inherent to the very fabric of the universe - a
> component of nature.

Correct. 'Modeled'. Mathematics is used to model the very fabric of
the universe. Mathematics is not the very fabric in and of itself.

> More fundamental even than space itself, that
> things like logic are embedded in reality and we simply fail to
> acknowledge this as part of our natural world.
>
> There is a huge difference between the two views (discovery or
> invention), and it is very important to the debate at hand.

Discovery of nature is different than the use of mathematics to
discover nature. Nature exists with or without mathematics.
Mathematics does not exist without nature.
From: BURT on
On Mar 13, 4:50 pm, mpc755 <mpc...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> On Mar 13, 7:47 pm, Huang <huangxienc...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> > On Mar 13, 6:04 pm, mpc755 <mpc...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > On Mar 13, 4:35 pm, Huang <huangxienc...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> > > > > > Big wink back at ya - because while science and physics would indeed
> > > > > > disappear without the process of observability, mathematics is not
> > > > > > science and I would argue that it might just as easily remain without
> > > > > > us being here to appreciate it.
>
> > > > > Mathematics is an invention. What occurs physically in nature occurs
> > > > > whether we mathematically define it or not.- Hide quoted text -
>
> > You have no proof either way. Nobody does. prove to me that it is an
> > invention and not a discovery, or vice versa. You cannot.
>
> It doesn't matter if it is an invention or a discovery. It is not
> fundamental in nature. Mathematics does not physically exist in and of
> itself.
>

There is one math that is physical. It is known as Gamma mathematics
and it is universal in physics.

Mitch Raemsch



> > The relationships which are modelled by mathematics may very well be
> > fundamentally inherent to the very fabric of the universe - a
> > component of nature.
>
> Correct. 'Modeled'. Mathematics is used to model the very fabric of
> the universe. Mathematics is not the very fabric in and of itself.
>
> > More fundamental even than space itself, that
> > things like logic are embedded in reality and we simply fail to
> > acknowledge this as part of our natural world.
>
> > There is a huge difference between the two views (discovery or
> > invention), and it is very important to the debate at hand.
>
> Discovery of nature is different than the use of mathematics to
> discover nature. Nature exists with or without mathematics.
> Mathematics does not exist without nature.

Zero.

Mitch Raemsch
From: BillyGates on
Edward Green wrote:
> On Mar 13, 4:35 pm, Huang <huangxienc...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
>>>> Big wink back at ya - because while science and physics would
>>>> indeed disappear without the process of observability, mathematics
>>>> is not science and I would argue that it might just as easily
>>>> remain without us being here to appreciate it.
>>
>>> Mathematics is an invention. What occurs physically in nature occurs
>>> whether we mathematically define it or not.- Hide quoted text -
>>
>> Ridiculous. You cannot say whether mathematics was invented, or
>> merely uncovered. There is a difference between discovery and
>> invention.
>
> Not really, if you think about it. Invention, or even the creation of
> art, is simply the uncovering of some logically feasible arrangement
> of matter, information, and so forth.
>

to whom? To humans or to something external to humans? Do aliens find our
"art" logical? What about mother nature? Maybe we are just rearranging
randomness into another form of randomness?

From: mpc755 on
On Mar 13, 8:20 pm, BURT <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
> On Mar 13, 4:50 pm, mpc755 <mpc...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
> > On Mar 13, 7:47 pm, Huang <huangxienc...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> > > On Mar 13, 6:04 pm, mpc755 <mpc...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > > On Mar 13, 4:35 pm, Huang <huangxienc...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> > > > > > > Big wink back at ya - because while science and physics would indeed
> > > > > > > disappear without the process of observability, mathematics is not
> > > > > > > science and I would argue that it might just as easily remain without
> > > > > > > us being here to appreciate it.
>
> > > > > > Mathematics is an invention. What occurs physically in nature occurs
> > > > > > whether we mathematically define it or not.- Hide quoted text -
>
> > > You have no proof either way. Nobody does. prove to me that it is an
> > > invention and not a discovery, or vice versa. You cannot.
>
> > It doesn't matter if it is an invention or a discovery. It is not
> > fundamental in nature. Mathematics does not physically exist in and of
> > itself.
>
> There is one math that is physical. It is known as Gamma mathematics
> and it is universal in physics.
>
> Mitch Raemsch
>
>
>
> > > The relationships which are modelled by mathematics may very well be
> > > fundamentally inherent to the very fabric of the universe - a
> > > component of nature.
>
> > Correct. 'Modeled'. Mathematics is used to model the very fabric of
> > the universe. Mathematics is not the very fabric in and of itself.
>
> > > More fundamental even than space itself, that
> > > things like logic are embedded in reality and we simply fail to
> > > acknowledge this as part of our natural world.
>
> > > There is a huge difference between the two views (discovery or
> > > invention), and it is very important to the debate at hand.
>
> > Discovery of nature is different than the use of mathematics to
> > discover nature. Nature exists with or without mathematics.
> > Mathematics does not exist without nature.
>
> Zero.
>
> Mitch Raemsch

Without nature there is no zero.
From: Huang on
Thoughts, emotions, feelings, fears, love, hate and all the rest are
completely and totally unmeasureable !!! Descartes is NOT A
PHYSICIST !!!

I cannot take 50 cc of love and pour it into a flask. I CANNOT take 2
kilos of hate and put it into a beaker and leave it in the lab. You
cannot measure these things, and you cannot make valid physical
observations of them either !!!

For Descartes to say "I Think" this, and "I Think" that - is
meaningless to PHYSICS.

HOWEVER - you can indeed OBSERVE that 2 apples plus 3 apples is indeed
5 apples. This constitutes a VALID physical observation because it is
Reproducible, Quantitative, Qualitative, Falsifiable, and what you
have observed is a logical process in action .

I'll get to randomness, existential indeterminacy and Conjecture
later. The important thing to note is that Descartes is NO
PHYSICIST !!!