Math represents something. Whether the c in e=mc2, or the t in some formulas that represents time, and etc etc. Math therefore is most often religion!
You're thinking of
applied mathematics
. Not all maths is representational (e.g.
pure maths). Unlike religion, applied mathematics is a useful tool for producing practical real-world results through engineering, etc.
It is true that science has no proofs though...being a big lie that is the way it must always be for manscience. Ever learning but NEVER able to come to a knowledge of the truth.
Well, no. A lie is a deliberate falsehood. The results of science are generally models that are extremely close approximations to how the world is observed to behave. If science is a lie, then all close approximations to the truth are lies, which would make translations (in fact
all interpersonal communications) lies, which would make the scriptures lies. Oops...
When one religiously uses only what exists to determine what did exist or will exist, there can be no fact involved.
You mean like when you religiously use scripture, e.g. the bible, to determine what did exist or will exist?
We can
only use what exists - trying to use what
doesn't exist won't get you very far. This is the contrast between science and religion.
What we observe now, when superimposed onto the future or far past is circular reasoning. (unless and until you prove that they are the same .. and remember you can not use the present to determine that!)
I already explained how it is done without circularity. You are in exactly the same position yourself - you only have what you observe, know, and remember
now to describe what may have happened in the past and what may happen in the future - and humans being what they are, that's a pretty unreliable basis. The scientific method explicitly addresses such unreliabilities.
If the physical laws of the distant past were not the same as those we observe today, the predictions science makes about what we should expect to observe today, based on the assumption that they
were the same, would not be accurate - but they are accurate; and that's how we know the physical laws of the past were the same as they are today. Call it circular if you wish, but it works.
...You cannot imbed assumptions and laws of the present INTO models of a different future or past!
Of course you can - and if those assumptions turn out to be wrong, your predictions based on them will not be correct. If those predictions are consistently correct, you can be pretty sure your assumptions were correct.
Come on over to the fair minded and open minded, informed side! The side that has truth.
LOL!