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| Tags: bang, before, big, laws, occured, physical, place |
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#21
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Bill Hobba wrote: Basically we still do not really know. But this we do know: The notion of algorithm (computable functions on integers) on the integers is well defined. Refer to any text book on computable functions. Bob Kolker |
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#22
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Bjoern Feuerbacher wrote in message ...
Donald Hamilton wrote: "robert j. kolker" wrote in message ... Donald Hamilton wrote: Do you think the "laws of nature" change over time? I'm talking about the laws not the conditions. It would have been a very different universe without inertia, gravity & electromagnetic energy to guide matter. See -The Life of the Cosmos- by Lee Smolin. He conjectures that the kosmos is evolving and that the "laws of physics" change over time. Bob Kolker My idea of the "physical laws of nature" are - it is the framework of the universe that creates and guides all matter and energy. It is the timeless, invariant phenomena that creates space and gives the universe its personality. Well, you might consider that these same, unchanging physical laws might *look* quite differently under different circumstances. Compare e.g. the time before the electroweak symmetry breaking with the situation today... One can argue that both are governed by the same laws - but due to the different circumstances (he different temperature), the outcome is quite different! Bye, Bjoern I said in a previous post that the conditions may change but the "laws" never do. Everything operates within the framework of these invariant laws of nature. Physicists are restricted to discovering and working within the physical laws whereas philosophers can go beyond into the realm of metaphysics. donham http://novan.com |
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#23
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"robert j. kolker" wrote in message ... Bill Hobba wrote: Basically we still do not really know. But this we do know: The notion of algorithm (computable functions on integers) on the integers is well defined. Refer to any text book on computable functions. Agreed - but that was not my point. My point was that algorithm in a general sense still has issues with a 'bulletproof' definition. But it is not the only thing - simply and example of many things like that, specifically, in the context of my post, I was pointing out laws of nature are like that. Thanks Bill Bob Kolker |
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#24
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Bill Hobba:
'And there is more, much more to an algorithm than the function it computes. The thesis was a great step toward understanding algorithms, but it did not solve the problem what an algorithm is.' Here's what I have (from vitanyi and li) as church's thesis: ``The class of algorithmically computable functions (in the intuitive sense) coincides with the class of partial recursive functions.'' |
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#25
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"Bilge" wrote in message ... Bill Hobba: 'And there is more, much more to an algorithm than the function it computes. The thesis was a great step toward understanding algorithms, but it did not solve the problem what an algorithm is.' Here's what I have (from vitanyi and li) as church's thesis: ``The class of algorithmically computable functions (in the intuitive sense) coincides with the class of partial recursive functions.'' A few years ago did some work on data mining and read about adaptive compression algorithms that led me to Kolmogorov Complexity by Vitanyi and Li. Do not quite remember the above but then again I found it a bit heavy going. Still nice quote - very nice. Thanks Bill |
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#26
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"Donald Hamilton" wrote in message om... Bjoern Feuerbacher wrote in message ... Donald Hamilton wrote: "robert j. kolker" wrote in message ... Donald Hamilton wrote: Do you think the "laws of nature" change over time? I'm talking about the laws not the conditions. It would have been a very different universe without inertia, gravity & electromagnetic energy to guide matter. See -The Life of the Cosmos- by Lee Smolin. He conjectures that the kosmos is evolving and that the "laws of physics" change over time. Bob Kolker My idea of the "physical laws of nature" are - it is the framework of the universe that creates and guides all matter and energy. It is the timeless, invariant phenomena that creates space and gives the universe its personality. Well, you might consider that these same, unchanging physical laws might *look* quite differently under different circumstances. Compare e.g. the time before the electroweak symmetry breaking with the situation today... One can argue that both are governed by the same laws - but due to the different circumstances (he different temperature), the outcome is quite different! Bye, Bjoern I said in a previous post that the conditions may change but the "laws" never do. Hmmmm. Let us look at Ohms law. Does it change - well a diode does not obey it. But wait - a diode is not a resistor - so Ohms law only apples to resistors. But what is a resistor - why something that obeys ohms law. What about Newton's first law - An object at rest tends to stay at rest and an object in motion tends to stay in motion with the same speed and in the same direction unless acted upon by a force. But wait a minute does it not follow from Newton's second law? But is that not a definition anyway so what is the physical content of the first law? Well to cut a long story short its content is that frames exist in which particles obey Newtons first law - these are called inertial frames. But wait a minute - have we ever found one that is strictly inertial - no. So how can nature be determined by the existence of things that do not actually exist and how can such gain the status of law? Indeed from QM how can we know that a particle has constant velocity anyway? Everything operates within the framework of these invariant laws of nature. Like Ohms law and Newton's first law right? Physicists are restricted to discovering and working within the physical laws Physicists are restricted to the scientific method - end of story. If that coincides with your idea of 'physical law' or not is an irrelevancy. whereas philosophers can go beyond into the realm of metaphysics. You mean like Hegel who said; 'But what is Spirit? It is the one immutably homogeneous Infinite - pure Identity - which in its second phrase separates itself from itself and makes this second aspect its own polar opposite, namely as existence for and in Self as contrasted with the Universal. ' Philosophy often looks a lot like unintelligible bull. Bill donham http://novan.com |
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#27
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wrote in message ... | Gerry Quinn wrote: | | In article , says... | Donald Hamilton wrote: | | Since the BB was a physical event there must have been some physical | laws in place before, for the event to occur - don't you think. | | The big bang is a singularity in non-quantum physics. There | don't have to be any laws in place since the theory predicts | a singularity. | | Theories that predict singularities need to be replaced by non-broken | theories. After this is done, the range of matters discussable in | available theory extends into (and maybe past) the regions previously | described as singularities. | | Some day, likely enough, there will be a consensus on matters pertaining | to the time now referred to as the Big Bang singularity. | | Depending on how that theory considers time, it may or may not have | something to say about what happened before. | | | No problem. But us show/or not such a theory. | | Telling us that there may or may not be such a theory | is telling us nothing. | | My point in responding to the original poster is | that his question is meaningless in the context | of the theory that predicted the singularity in | the first place. | | Next time you want to post, post something | that makes sense, please! | | John Anderson You wouldn't know sense if it bit you in the arse. The Seven Deadly Sins of Special Relativity. For quotations following, reference: http://www.fourmilab.ch/etexts/einstein/specrel/www/ ("On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies" by Albert Einstein) 1) "light is always propagated in empty space with a definite velocity c which is independent of the state of motion of the emitting body", a totally unproven assumption without any evidence to support it. 2) "In agreement with experience we further assume the quantity 2AB/(t'A-tA) = c to be a universal constant- the velocity of light in empty space.", an admitted assumption that is quite worthless when there is any relative motion between A and B, yet essential to the derivation of the remainder of Einstein's nonsense. 3) The equation ½[tau(0,0,0,t)+tau(0,0,0,t+x'/(c-v)+x'/(c+v))] = tau(x',0,0,t+x'/(c-v)) , the ½ of which is derived from 2) above and is tantamount to saying (1/3 + 2/3)/2 = 1/3. 4) The missing 0' from that equation, since x' = x-vt, hence 0' = 0-vt, and the equation should be ½[tau(-vt,0,0,t)+tau(-vt,0,0,t+x'/(c-v)+x'/(c+v))] = tau(x',0,0,t+x'/(c-v)) at the very least. 5) The further assumption "IF we place x' = x-vt ... " without considering IF we place x' = x+vt, from which we derive (using Einstein's method) tau = (t+xv/c^2)/sqrt(1-v^2/c^2) xi = (x + vt)/sqrt(1-v^2/c^2)" -Paul B. Andersen 6) The statements "But the ray moves relatively to the initial point of k, when measured in the stationary system, with the velocity c-v..." and "It follows, further, that the velocity of light c cannot be altered by composition with a velocity less than that of light. For this case we obtain V = (c+w)/(1+w/c) = c." which are contradictory, the first being Galilean, the second being contrary to the vector addition of velocities, an axiom of a vector space. 7) The lack of a check to verify the theory is self-consistent by feeding the new PoR given in 6) into the equation given in 3) and finding a total failure. Check: (t1-t)/(t2-t)*[tau(-vt,0,0,t)+tau(-vt,0,0,t+x'/V+x'/V)] = tau(x',0,0,t+x'/V) Androcles. |
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