It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by Astyanax
reply to post by NickK3
Naturally, I disagree. For me, physical reality is all of reality. The complex aspect it presents to human experience and assembles in human conception is--as far as humans are concerned--just the way it is.
It almost certainly assembles itself differently for a bat, differently yet again for a sperm whale and in still another aspect for a plasma being living among the gas-clouds and nascent stars of Eta Carinae. All these aspects, too, are just the way it is.
Reality is always the same, yet appears different depending on how it is observed and interpreted.
Originally posted by Astyanax
reply to post by NickK3
Reality is always the same, yet appears different depending on how it is observed and interpreted. Hence there is no need to go beyond the physical into some hypothetical nonphysical reality, such as Plato's world of forms or the 'higher theoric world' proposed by Neal Stephenson in Anathem. We can, as you say, trust what seems real to be real--most of the time, at least.
There is no rational proof of "physical reality" same as there is no rational proof of God's existence. Former can be handled by pragmatic argument and I'm happy with it - but it is no proof at all.
Originally posted by Astyanax
We can, as you say, trust what seems real to be real--most of the time, at least.
Quantum mechanics is here for 80+ years and it describe non-reality.
Argument for not exact science - philosophy: It will be always pleasure to read Plato/Aristotle. Also Euclid and Descartes are still actual.
But will you read early (modern) works on chemistry, biology, medicine? No, unless you are historian. This works are outdated.
Welcome to Trailblazing, an interactive timeline for everybody with an interest in science. Compiled by scientists, science communicators and historians – and co-ordinated by Professor Michael Thompson FRS – it celebrates three and a half centuries of scientific endeavour and has been launched to commemorate the Royal Society’s 350th anniversary in 2010.
Trailblazing is a user-friendly, ‘explore-at-your-own-pace’, virtual journey through science. It showcases sixty fascinating and inspiring articles selected from an archive of more than 60,000 published by the Royal Society between 1665 and 2010.
Is Plato outdated?