Just a random question that popped into my head. I'd say yes, but I want to know what other people think.
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I would say so. We know what it is, why it is, why and how it does what it does, and it's various properties (color, pH, ect.)Catholicism said:Just a random question that popped into my head. I'd say yes, but I want to know what other people think.
Just a word of warning: make sure you entertain some useful thoughts once in a while in between all those mindgames.Catholicism said:Just a random question that popped into my head.
So far I haven´t run into any problems when using the word "apple". On the market, when I asked for apples, they gave me what I had expected them to give me.I'd say yes, but I want to know what other people think.
If your speaking about an apple from a certain tree; and if that tree is called the knowledge between good and evil then the apple represents mans taste of knowledge between good and evil.DouglasBrown said:I would say so. We know what it is, why it is, why and how it does what it does, and it's various properties (color, pH, ect.)
The other things are just chalked up to opinion (the taste, the "feel". the experience, etc).
Catholicism said:Do we know what an apple is?
Casstranquility said:I'd say, sort of. We know what it is we call an apple, from centuries of having called a certain fruit an 'apple'. Now, perhaps, if we looked deep within the apple, we'd discover that we really don't have any idea 'what' it is, just a bunch of labels that we gave to it. We'd see that this 'fruit' we call an 'apple' is really just a perception-for it is truly made out of energy and space.
Interesting approach!DouglasBrown said:If an apple were truly made from energy and space, then, logically, every object would have to be made from it, if you looked deeply enough as you say. Then, either one of two things could come of it (assuming "we" is mankind and assuming "energy and space" are physical/quantifiable, which I am for the sake of this argument)
a.) Every object is made from different amounts of energy and space, and, using that, we could identify (know) what an object is by its energry/space amounts and ratios.
b.) Each object is made of the same amount of energy and space, then all we would need to do is focus all of our attention on the energy and space, learning all we can about it. Then, if we could learn all there is to know about the energy and space (eventually we would come very close) we would know all there is to know about all physical objects at their deepest level with perceptions stripped away.
quatona said:I am wondering, though, whether there is a method of learning about physical phenomena that is not - at least partly - based on our perception.
I agree.DouglasBrown said:That's a very interesting topic, and I would have to say there is no way perception can't get into the equation at some point. We make the tools, we devise the tests, we percieve the results. Unless we can can completely and utterly remove humans and human error from the equation, perception will always be a factor.
While I agree that technically chemistry is just a special case of physics, and biology is just a special case of chemisty, and sociology and the other social sciences are just special cases of biology, making everything special cases of physics, I also know that this is, in practice, a ludicrous division. We simply do not have the math to compute even basic information about atoms beyond Hydrogen or maybe Helium, and can certainly not derive chemistry from our knowledge of atoms. We can't derive the richness of biological interaction from chemistry, and so on.DouglasBrown said:Then, if we could learn all there is to know about the energy and space (eventually we would come very close) we would know all there is to know about all physical objects at their deepest level with perceptions stripped away.
Plus, who would want to eat quarks or strings interacting?michabo said:By saying that apples are just quarks or strings interacting, you destroy the richness and complexity that is an apple.
michabo said:While I agree that technically chemistry is just a special case of physics, and biology is just a special case of chemisty, and sociology and the other social sciences are just special cases of biology, making everything special cases of physics, I also know that this is, in practice, a ludicrous division. We simply do not have the math to compute even basic information about atoms beyond Hydrogen or maybe Helium, and can certainly not derive chemistry from our knowledge of atoms. We can't derive the richness of biological interaction from chemistry, and so on.
By saying that apples are just quarks or strings interacting, you destroy the richness and complexity that is an apple.
Luckily, I didn't say that.michabo said:By saying that apples are just quarks or strings interacting, you destroy the richness and complexity that is an apple.