Dan Romero pfp
Dan Romero
@dwr.eth
Hypothetical—if you were forced to go get a PhD in one of the following science fields, which would it be and why? 1. Physics 2. Chemistry 3. Biology
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​woj ツ pfp
​woj ツ
@woj.eth
4. maths bc it's just an endless unproductive nerdsnipe and this is what life is about
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sean pfp
sean
@swabbie.eth
what if math is actually the problem and our current mathematical frameworks are the limiting factor in solving contradictory theories in physics? no single mathematical framework can capture all truths. this can lead us to dead ends of we can't find a new one. https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/goedel-incompleteness/
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navi3  pfp
navi3
@navi3
This implies that there is a God and a spirit realm. Not all of the world is logically reducible.
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sean pfp
sean
@swabbie.eth
I’m not sure how it implies that, but in terms of logic, logic is a function of neural patterns predictably interpreting stimulation, so if we’re talking about any part of the world that is perceptible (affects one’s nerves & brain), then it follows some logic by definition, even if we haven’t understood it yet
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𒂠_𒍣𒅀_𒊑 pfp
𒂠_𒍣𒅀_𒊑
@m-j-r
what are your thoughts about predetermination? imho this follows the same premise.
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navi3  pfp
navi3
@navi3
These incompleteness theorems imply that there will never be a logical model that will be complete. No matter how much we know. By corollary this implies that logic can’t encompass all knowledge, and there *must* be something beyond logic to explain our existence.
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