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Old 07-12-2012, 10:58 AM   #76
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Re: 1.618 Phi, the golden ratio (the fibonnaci sequence)

There is a difference between this claim: "there is more that science has yet to explain"
and this claim: "there must be higher order in the universe"

The former is a quite justified given how there are meaningful questions we don't have answers to and we have a long inductive basis of science progressing and answering new things.

The latter, however, is not justified or even clear what it means. If you think the latter is the SAME statement as the former, however, I accuse you of a pernicious use of bad language.
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Old 07-12-2012, 11:15 AM   #77
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Re: 1.618 Phi, the golden ratio (the fibonnaci sequence)

Well, as I alluded to in my post this morning - my belief is that no matter how far science can go, there will likely always be the "unanswered" and possibly the "unanswerable" based on human limitations. However you would like to define the potential unanswerable questions is what I would call "higher order". But yea as I mentioned I am very eager to learn better theological language.

and no, I can't prove that there are any unanswerable questions so it's all speculation/meaningless/whatever.
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Old 07-12-2012, 11:31 AM   #78
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Re: 1.618 Phi, the golden ratio (the fibonnaci sequence)

Ah good. So you said the higher order MUST exist. Then you said there is a potential for unanswerable questions. Then you said that the unanswerable questions and the higher order meant the same thing. And then you said you can't prove there are any unanswerable questions.

So which is it? Do these unanswerable questions/higher order MUST exist or POTENTIALLY exist. You are saying different things. If the latter, I agree. If the former, justify it.
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Old 07-12-2012, 12:11 PM   #79
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Re: 1.618 Phi, the golden ratio (the fibonnaci sequence)

potentially exist. but I believe they do. I'm glad we finally agree . Sorry I'm new to this stuff I had never taken theology, let alone debated about it, therefore I failed to realize words like MUST would cause such an upstir . That's just how I talk when I'm hypothesizing on the spot...
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Old 07-12-2012, 12:39 PM   #80
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Re: 1.618 Phi, the golden ratio (the fibonnaci sequence)

The reason I push back so forcefully is that many people, particularly people new to atheism, are very tempted to use this large repository of mystical/religious sounding words like "higher order" even when they mean something quite secular by it. It is part of the English language and religious terminology is often the only terminology people think with to describe the universe. Except there is no reason to think that religion is correct, and we should not so cavalierly provide cover for it by using its terminology.
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Old 07-12-2012, 06:28 PM   #81
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Re: 1.618 Phi, the golden ratio (the fibonnaci sequence)

OP: If you change 'must be more' to 'might be more' you'll be on more solid ground, imo. It's my position and it's based on the reading, as a lay person, that I've done.

Here is a talk by Prof. Lawrence Krauss titled 'A Universe From Nothing' (he has also written a book by the same name):

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ZiXC8Yh4T0

in which Prof. Krauss quite handily explains how 'something' can arise from 'nothing' through quantum processes. At the end of it all (in the book), however, he says (in a parenthesis, heh) that 'Although to be fair, to make any scientific progress in calculating possibilities, we generally assume that certain properties, like quantum mechanics, permeate all possibilities.' To eliminate all 'nothings' and then to leave over a 'something' powerful and mysterious enough to create what is being attempted to be explained is disengenous, iyam.

Pointing at QM as an explanation for why there might be more may be attacked as a 'God of the gaps' argument so I'll mention that the universe might be as Richard Feynman imagined, an onion whose layers we get tired of peeling away, in which case there will always be a gap and that the contemplation 'the universe is queerer than we can suppose' is seriously addressed by Richard Dawkins:

http://www.ted.com/talks/richard_daw..._universe.html
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Old 07-12-2012, 07:15 PM   #82
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Is it wrong to have beliefs about anything?
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Old 07-12-2012, 08:14 PM   #83
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Re: 1.618 Phi, the golden ratio (the fibonnaci sequence)

Quote:
Originally Posted by Howard Beale View Post
OP: If you change 'must be more' to 'might be more' you'll be on more solid ground, imo. It's my position and it's based on the reading, as a lay person, that I've done.

Here is a talk by Prof. Lawrence Krauss titled 'A Universe From Nothing' (he has also written a book by the same name):

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ZiXC8Yh4T0

in which Prof. Krauss quite handily explains how 'something' can arise from 'nothing' through quantum processes. At the end of it all (in the book), however, he says (in a parenthesis, heh) that 'Although to be fair, to make any scientific progress in calculating possibilities, we generally assume that certain properties, like quantum mechanics, permeate all possibilities.' To eliminate all 'nothings' and then to leave over a 'something' powerful and mysterious enough to create what is being attempted to be explained is disengenous, iyam.

Pointing at QM as an explanation for why there might be more may be attacked as a 'God of the gaps' argument so I'll mention that the universe might be as Richard Feynman imagined, an onion whose layers we get tired of peeling away, in which case there will always be a gap and that the contemplation 'the universe is queerer than we can suppose' is seriously addressed by Richard Dawkins:

http://www.ted.com/talks/richard_daw..._universe.html
in the process of watching this now, and was just wondering what the implications of the recent discovery of 'the god particle' has on this (the first link).
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Old 07-12-2012, 08:26 PM   #84
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Re: 1.618 Phi, the golden ratio (the fibonnaci sequence)

bonus question if someone can answer: If what Lawrence Krauss says is true - Where did the nothing come from? :/ We still have the same problem it seems....
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Old 07-12-2012, 08:42 PM   #85
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Re: 1.618 Phi, the golden ratio (the fibonnaci sequence)

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Originally Posted by Mr Muck McFold View Post
Is it wrong to have beliefs about anything?
Of course not, why would you think so?
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Old 07-12-2012, 08:44 PM   #86
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Re: 1.618 Phi, the golden ratio (the fibonnaci sequence)

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Sorry I'm new to this stuff
I think we're being sandbagged.
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Old 07-12-2012, 08:45 PM   #87
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Re: 1.618 Phi, the golden ratio (the fibonnaci sequence)

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Originally Posted by jon_midas View Post
Where did the nothing come from? :/ We still have the same problem it seems....
Where did the answer to this problem come from? This question is an infinite regress until we have something that breaks causality
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Old 07-12-2012, 09:12 PM   #88
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Re: 1.618 Phi, the golden ratio (the fibonnaci sequence)

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I think we're being sandbagged.


Quote:
Originally Posted by uke_master View Post
Where did the answer to this problem come from? This question is an infinite regress until we have something that breaks causality
Is any work currently being done to find alternatives to causality? Seems pretty fundamental to everything we've ever "understood" up til this point.

In the case that we can never break causality, do we agree with Richard Dawkins (and me) that the "universe is queerer than we can suppose", and there will always be unanswerable questions?
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Old 07-12-2012, 09:29 PM   #89
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Re: 1.618 Phi, the golden ratio (the fibonnaci sequence)

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Originally Posted by jon_midas View Post
bonus question if someone can answer: If what Lawrence Krauss says is true - Where did the nothing come from? :/ We still have the same problem it seems....
That's my point. The book is called 'A Universe From Nothing' but, in the end, there are the quantum processes. I'm frankly not interested in digging through the book for quotes (unless I'm pushed hard enough) but I believe that he explains the bleak future of the universe as it is destined, according to our current understanding, to return to nothing, or, as he mentions nearly in passing that some string theorists maintain that a universe like ours cannot be stable and 'will then recollapse inward to a point, returning to the quantum haze from which our own existence may have begun.'

I take from his book that, at bottom, there are the quantum processes operating out of a haze. Maybe the haze can be penetrated someday, maybe not, but, with such a thing being credited w/ all of creation of both what we see and even what we only suspect, suppose or hope may be I see room for the 'more' that you speak of.
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Old 07-12-2012, 09:50 PM   #90
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Quote:
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bonus question if someone can answer: If what Lawrence Krauss says is true - Where did the nothing come from? :/ We still have the same problem it seems....
This question seems wrongheaded. Nothingness is the absence of substance, of something. Nothingness is the most primitive state in this sense and we should only be surprised only when stuff shows up thusly. Krauss is starting from a state of nothingness and explaining the arrival of substance. Though we certainly don't understand everything there is to understand about the universe or how and why matter were generated, or even if it was all accidental or inevitable (or even intentional), it seems like we should be treating a state of nothingness as axiomatic.
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