That sounds like a bit of a bull**** generalisation, to be honest.
Of course it is a generalization. Any statement about a group of people must logically be a generalization.
Also all generalizations miss details and are therefore bull****, so I would agree that it is a bull**** generalization.
But as George box says, "All models are wrong, but some are useful". So I am wondering is it a useful generalization in understanding the relationship between theories of biological systems presented by biologists and theories of biological systems presented by physicists.
As an example of this weird relationship: My SO studies human muscles and creates mathematical models of their contraction rates based on ion concentration etc. At a conference she was asked by a physiologist, I guy that studied muscles for years and years, "How can you use mathematics to describe muscle action?". In the sense that it is impossible to do so. She was dumbfounded by this question because her position was anything can be described by equations.
Maths is a language like French or German. If you can describe a scientific theory in English you can describe it in French and you can definitely describe it in Maths since maths is a language. We like maths because it is more applicable to deducing predictions. It is easier, for example, to talk about QM in mathematical language in order to make predictions. You can completely describe QM in English, and make predictions, however that would require too much work.
We really don't understand how biologists seem to not understand that a) maths can be used to describe biological systems and b) that doing so could be really useful.
Honestly all the above is bull**** generalizations and you know more about this than me. I would be really interested in your ideas about the relationship between biological studies and maths. If you have time. Maybe you could start an "Ask a biologist anything thread". I am incredibly ignorant of your position.
Physicists can stuff their arrogance up an orifice of their choosing
We are talking about a group of people that think if they form a consistent theory in their field that that would be a "Theory of Everything". I would like it to be explained to me how uniting the forces of nature under one paradigm would explain why Zebras have stripes rather than spots, however for physicists this seems to be a given.
Some also seem to think that there is physics and all other sciences are "stamp collecting".
The Per Bak guy literally wrote a book called, "How Nature Works". That would be equivalent to you forming a hypothesis on the system you are studying and saying that applies to all of the universe.
Arrogance seems to be par for the course for physicists. I think that we should let them have their bottle. They do sometimes produce good ideas.
And nowhere does the scientific definition of "theory" include equations.
The prepositions is not that a scientific theory has to be written in mathematical language. It is that if it can be written in English or any other language it can be written in mathematics.
Almost everyone is great at mathematics. The problem is that most people cannot
read mathematical equations. Saying you are bad at maths is akin to saying that I am bad at biological evolution because I do not speak English and the "Origin of the Species" is written in English. It is an issue about representation of the concepts.
Chill out, man. That "one book" thing was hyperbole.
Sorry I went on a bit of a rant there, didn't I?
I was just concerned that you were under the opinion that you were incapable of understanding certain topics. You are not. The only heresy in academia is not having a wrong opinion but saying that you are incapable of forming an opinion.
The majority of things that you will read, you will not understand. The reason you will not understand it is not because you are stupid, it is because your current knowledge is not sufficient to make connections with that new knowledge. There is nothing wrong with that. There is something wrong with thinking that you cannot understand something beyond an "informal understanding".