Do you think there is a difference between the two?I'm thinking about it a little bit, and it's a real tough question.
6/14/2006 7:04:49 PM
i wouldn't really worry about itaha
6/14/2006 7:13:35 PM
not really worry aboutit's just, crazy and fundamentalwhat types of things go in which catagory and are the two seperate at all?like logic, that feels like an existence thingbut it seems to innately involves causalitycausality seems to involve time, which really is a physical universe sort of thing, at least how fast it flowsi can sort of go with the idea that the direction of time (forward)is an existence thing, which allows for the preservation of causalitybut there are other things too, i just wonder what other people think about this
6/14/2006 7:18:23 PM
i have also smoked weed
6/14/2006 8:46:43 PM
^ HAHA
6/14/2006 10:16:32 PM
when the mod of the section meant to discuss things like this laughs at a comment like thatwe're all in trouble
6/14/2006 10:50:40 PM
could you elaborate on the question?
6/14/2006 10:56:57 PM
i'd discuss it, by my mirror keeps blocking my every moveor copying itwhich i see as him mocking me
6/14/2006 10:58:37 PM
^^take physics for instancewe now live by the standard model, which has 19 adjustable parametersyou can make the argument that those are chosen for this universe, they are "special" to our universe (who knows if this all holds water in the future, hopefully physics will become more self consistent) that would be an example of a property of the physical universenow take counting... i would make the argument that in all things, counting will not changeit is above our universewhat i want to know is, is there an existence outside of the physical universe or ANY physical universe, that is, is there a superset above our universeis it possible that the rules of existence contrive in such a way to create universes? or is the universe self contained, that is, is IT existence[Edited on June 14, 2006 at 11:43 PM. Reason : .]
6/14/2006 11:42:30 PM
Hey, sorry everybody including the mod of this section is shitting on your thread.I'll bite.If you think about it, logic, for example, is a property of our physical universe but indirectly. It's the same with all of our ideas -- they're formed of atoms, which make up the patterns in our brain. However, the interpretation is what gives our thoughts the inability to "collide" with our physical surroundings. You've never seen "2" bump into anything. You can't pick up modus ponens, etc. It's also the reason why your knowledge of your own internal state is infallible. You ARE your internal state. Everything else you perceive, however, is merely a representation of your experiences.Therefore, you almost have a segregated world, that is, everything you experience in the exact moment you experience it in. The only reason why this entire illusion is spun so convincingly is because you have the curious ability to ponder your own existence. This is the singular trait which has brought mankind to his current understanding of the sciences, philosophy, and in some sense, many religions.
6/15/2006 12:01:14 AM
6/15/2006 12:26:20 AM
argh...- no ones "shitting" on my thread that I can see, somebody made a stoner remark and there was a laugh, marko's just loonyand, i don't know, hmm...anyone else?...basically, i would like to know what is absolutelogic (read math) seems like it, maybe entropy, the direction of temporal flow (also with logic)...maybe some physical rulesets, like the definition of Work, or momentum transfer, or energy conservation (although all of these seem to necesitate spatial components)i also wonder if the quantum nature is a product of existence or of our universe, i don't think that's known at all.this is very hard[Edited on June 15, 2006 at 12:48 AM. Reason : .]
6/15/2006 12:40:42 AM
6/15/2006 1:41:14 AM
i think you could differentiate between the two, and I wouldn't put logic with existenceit might've already been said, but I'm not gonna read all of that[Edited on June 15, 2006 at 1:45 AM. Reason : lkd;jal;fj]
6/15/2006 1:44:46 AM
i'd like to think on this more before i hazard a reply to it. interesting question, though.
6/15/2006 2:36:06 AM
ahahhahahahonestly, i think I really only put this on here to get your opinion
6/15/2006 8:59:20 AM
6/15/2006 11:53:45 AM
6/15/2006 5:07:54 PM
Describe a color which you haven't seen. Try to think of a sound that you haven't heard.These things are impossible. Attempting to fathom a universe with completely different laws than what we currently institute is also impossible. That doesn't mean such a universe hasn't, doesn't or won't ever exist, but we cannot understand it with our current knowledge.I posted this in the other thread, but it applies.Parallel Universes is a theory. I'm pretty sure it's hard to prove or disprove.There is another theory of an oscillating universe. Big Bang, then a few billion years later a Big Crunch. Cycle repeats, but physical laws could be different. Again, hard to prove or disprove.Another theory is that the universe is contained within an electron of another universe. Each electron in that universe has it's own universe. Each electron in "our" universe also has a universe within it. The process continues indefinitely in both directions. Again, no way of knowing.[Edited on June 15, 2006 at 5:47 PM. Reason : a]
6/15/2006 5:37:53 PM
Here's my favorite universe theory. This is an alternative to the big bang theory.If you look at our reasoning for the big bang, it's all due to what we observe right now -- we see a whole lot of matter stretching away from itself to the edge of what we can see. "What we can see" actually does have a boundary -- we can only see spacetime events that we are in the right place to see, based on how long ago the event happened and how far away we are, and the speed of light. For instance, right now I know that the sun was burning eight minutes ago, because the sun is eight light-minutes away and I saw that light just now. Just a refresher..So, we know from the doppler effect that distant matter is moving away from us, and is in fact accelerating away, and so it looks like all that matter came from one tiny spot. And I agree up to this point. But there is nothing to indicate that we know about all the matter in the universe. In fact, the speed of light itself suggests that we do not -- it is the boundary on what we can know about.Therefore I suggest that:a) the speed of light is not an upper limit on the velocity of matter, that's only how it looks from our relatively stationary perspective,b) we have no knowledge of objects moving away from us faster than the speed of light, and we have less and less knowledge of objects moving away from us close to the speed of light,c) although the matter we know about probably did come from a small spot, that spot may have been just a little scoop of a much larger volume, all of which is expanding and the rest of which is now moving away from us faster than light and therefore is invisible, andd) the volume may have been as big or bigger than our known universe, perhaps even infinitely large, which lends credibility to the idea that the universe has always existed and never "began."I think someone important came up with this at some point. I was told it sounds like Hawking.[Edited on June 15, 2006 at 5:51 PM. Reason : .]
6/15/2006 5:48:12 PM
6/15/2006 5:52:31 PM
duke has been doing some interesting research on the brane dimension
6/15/2006 6:10:59 PM
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6/15/2006 7:09:40 PM