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#1
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DSK wrote:
That's true enough. But here's where the difference between "science" and philosophy creeps in... when it's science, it happens every time. For example, the phenomenon of water flowing downhill is essentially a random event, the illusion caused by trillions of odd-shaped molecules bouncing around any way they want. But somehow, water *always* flows downhill. The correct statement is: In every instance that we have observed, water has flowed downhill. -- Wally www.artbywally.com/FiatPandaRally/index.htm www.wally.myby.co.uk |
#2
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I've seen water come off a fall and be blown up into the air. I'm quite
sure some evaporated and rose to the clouds. Hmmmmmmmm Joe |
#3
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For example, the phenomenon of water flowing downhill is essentially a
random event, the illusion caused by trillions of odd-shaped molecules bouncing around any way they want. But somehow, water *always* flows downhill. Wally wrote: The correct statement is: In every instance that we have observed, water has flowed downhill. I stand corrected. But the big prize is still the same: Person A bets the farm that water flows downhill. Person B figures it's just random motion and might go up hill at any time... who wins? DSK |
#4
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DSK wrote:
But the big prize is still the same: Person A bets the farm that water flows downhill. Person B figures it's just random motion and might go up hill at any time... who wins? Why should person B figure it's just random motion? -- Wally www.artbywally.com/FiatPandaRally/index.htm www.wally.myby.co.uk |
#5
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But the big prize is still the same: Person A bets the farm that water
flows downhill. Person B figures it's just random motion and might go up hill at any time... who wins? Wally wrote: Why should person B figure it's just random motion? Because he skipped over that part of the physics lesson. Actually, it truly is random... because our human minds are built to see patterns where none exist, we have invented a subtle force called "gravity" to explain why this random action always gives the same result... so far. DSK |
#6
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DSK wrote:
Actually, it truly is random... How can we tell if that's the case? -- Wally www.artbywally.com/FiatPandaRally/index.htm www.wally.myby.co.uk |
#7
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Actually, it truly is random...
Wally wrote: How can we tell if that's the case? First of all, because somebody on the internet said so ![]() Then, a long time ago a man named Brown was watching paint chips dance around under a microscope, and it occured to him that one way to explain it would be water molecules bouncing off the paint chips in random vectors. This explanation is of course just another example of the human mind seeking to find patterns where none exist, but it fits nicely in with a number of other such explanations... none of these explanations can be proven false and together they seem to explain & predict (to a large extent) behavior... does that make it true? What would Aristotle say? DSK |
#8
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DSK wrote:
Then, a long time ago a man named Brown was watching paint chips dance around under a microscope, and it occured to him that one way to explain it would be water molecules bouncing off the paint chips in random vectors. This explanation is of course just another example of the human mind seeking to find patterns where none exist, It could just as easily be an example of the human mind imposing a notion of randomness where none exists. ... but it fits nicely in with a number of other such explanations... none of these explanations can be proven false and together they seem to explain & predict (to a large extent) behavior... does that make it true? Nope. Empirical generalisations yield no truths - unless you redefine 'truth' to fit (and are willing to deal with the notion of 'truer' truths than the redefinition accounts for). What would Aristotle say? No idea. -- Wally www.artbywally.com/FiatPandaRally/index.htm www.wally.myby.co.uk |
#9
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![]() What would Aristotle say? He'd say the various humours are phlogistinated. William Dampier, famous Navigator |
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