#41

NoFreeWill posted:

space fetishism is worse than religion, at least religion puts you in touch with a tradition and community with positive values.



#42
[account deactivated]
#43
science is alright. i am "in" biology i suppose, but if my math foundation (most notably advanced algebra) was better i would have gone into chemistry without a second thought, i'm really extremely enamored with organic chemistry and miss my courses in it a great deal, but i dont think i could ever handle the p-chem and such required of chemistry majors simply because i can't afford to get a C in calculus 2 or some other math course.

looking at pictures of the universe and other popular-physics stuff always upsets me because i know i will never be able to do anything beyond simply "looking at the pictures." physical science is math, plain and simple, without mathematics it is all utterly meaningless.
#44

gwarp posted:

looking at pictures of the universe and other popular-physics stuff always upsets me because i know i will never be able to do anything beyond simply "looking at the pictures." physical science is math, plain and simple, without mathematics it is all utterly meaningless.



so i was a shitty math student but ended up in physics because i eventually understand the formalism after using my intuition in parameterizing the physical system. i honestly feel that with the right teacher, learning "advanced" math (calc, diffy q, linear algebra, etc) is possible. the problem is is that math education in this fucking nation sucks. probably sucks everywhere.

regardless, the more you actually get into the logical and mathematical formalism the more it becomes clear that it really is just a half-ass description vs representation of reality. a good example of this is one of the things that shook my faith in science - the minus signs in the solutions for mass in the dirac equation that is the equation of motion for fermion particles: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dirac_equation. well there's no such thing as negative mass (or negative time, i suppose) - but that's what the mathematical formalism enforces that such a quantity must exist. now, we've understood these negative mass solutions to be for antiparticles and that is accepted convention. but the point remains unchanged - the math predicts/suggests something effectively impossible. misconstruing the suggestion we "discover" the existence of antiparticles, which is nifty but inexplicable. we use our hindsight to slap together some rationalization, which we keep consistent henceforth.

i wont even touch on renormalization: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renormalization (in part because after a year of QFT im not in any position to really explain anything meaningfully but its pretty...weird).

shame they wont talk about the quirks of physics in things like cosmos where the beauty of nature doesn't always have parallels in the formalism.

edit: i guess this serves as a personal reflection to myself more than anything else. i will say despite practically being voodoo as far as i understand it, dimensional regularization - the process in which you can solve infinite integrals for feynman in some dimension by making the dimensions a interaction occurs in arbitrary - and doing the math - and then setting back to the original dimension is utterly brilliant and beautiful.

Edited by guidoanselmi ()

#45
i don't know about others, but I easily pick up on mathematics in a scientific setting, yet am completely lost in pure math. ive taken a year of non-calculus based physics and did very well, i think i would have done the same in the calculus based one too, only one problem, i didn't know calculus. i have a feeling for many that the mathematical basis of the "falsifiable" universe as well as the universe's not currently "testable" mathematical bases are easily learned, just jumping the actual math hurdle is the hard part. this might just be me and it's the opposite for everyone else lol (do well in pure math, poorly in applied math). (also if mathematics is always right and we know the fundamental units of pretty much everything now, why do you need to experiment on anything in physics anyway, guess that's why "experimental physicist" isn't a thing anymore lol)

for me personally though, i could probably at least pass the mathematics required of an education in some kind of physical science, but i want to go to medical school so can't really get a single B, let alone a C
#46
mathematics isn't even something one can teach, rather it is something that a person teaches themselves imo, in high school i didn't care at all and i didn't even try to retain the mathematics taught to me. if then i knew what i know now i would have spent all my time and effort in mathematics, shunning everything else entirely. math instruction should be more about motivation, how to do that i don't know
#47
i have space fetishism, and fail aids
#48

guidoanselmi posted:



i will agree though, i always felt there was some kind of simple beauty in sitting down and just doing physics, even with my limited "toolbelt" of algebra and trigonometry. like i said, i loved organic chemistry, yet i didn't have this same feeling looking over and trying to figure out multi-step syntheses (as much as i enjoyed doing them). i can't explain it too well, but the ability to precisely explain existence, be it at the quantum or cosmic level, through nothing more than a few numbers conveys an extraordinary feeling of simplicity. bizarre to say, but i can't really explain it any other way.

#49

guidoanselmi posted:

gwarp posted:

looking at pictures of the universe and other popular-physics stuff always upsets me because i know i will never be able to do anything beyond simply "looking at the pictures." physical science is math, plain and simple, without mathematics it is all utterly meaningless.

so i was a shitty math student but ended up in physics because i eventually understand the formalism after using my intuition in parameterizing the physical system. i honestly feel that with the right teacher, learning "advanced" math (calc, diffy q, linear algebra, etc) is possible. the problem is is that math education in this fucking nation sucks. probably sucks everywhere.

regardless, the more you actually get into the logical and mathematical formalism the more it becomes clear that it really is just a half-ass description vs representation of reality. a good example of this is one of the things that shook my faith in science - the minus signs in the solutions for mass in the dirac equation that is the equation of motion for fermion particles: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dirac_equation. well there's no such thing as negative mass (or negative time, i suppose) - but that's what the mathematical formalism enforces that such a quantity must exist. now, we've understood these negative mass solutions to be for antiparticles and that is accepted convention. but the point remains unchanged - the math predicts/suggests something effectively impossible. misconstruing the suggestion we "discover" the existence of antiparticles, which is nifty but inexplicable. we use our hindsight to slap together some rationalization, which we keep consistent henceforth.

i wont even touch on renormalization: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renormalization (in part because after a year of QFT im not in any position to really explain anything meaningfully but its pretty...weird).

shame they wont talk about the quirks of physics in things like cosmos where the beauty of nature doesn't always have parallels in the formalism.

edit: i guess this serves as a personal reflection to myself more than anything else. i will say despite practically being voodoo as far as i understand it, dimensional regularization - the process in which you can solve infinite integrals for feynman in some dimension by making the dimensions a interaction occurs in arbitrary - and doing the math - and then setting back to the original dimension is utterly brilliant and beautiful.


i kinda agree and kinda disagree. i agree that math is "just" representation but it's a representation of structure which can definitely exist in the physical world. it's the best tool anyone has for examining, in extreme detail, what the consequences of a specific type of structure and it provides a medium for these structures to interact. for example, i would interpret the "negative" mass in the dirac equation more as an "effective" negative mass that appears if you use that formalism. tbh i don't think it's that different from talking about effective masses of electrons or any of the other particle-like excitations in condensed matter. is a hole a "real" thing, in and of itself? who cares? how can a gap in a structure have mass? you can treat them formally as such and then get physically verifiable results, and the physics is in understanding why that formalism works in the first place. i probably have a pretty different perspective, though, because i did a math degree before i started doing any sort of physics. tbh learning about differential geometry (especially ideas like tangent spaces/bundles) makes field theory a lot easier to understand (what's a vector field? it's an assignment of a vector in R^3 to each point in R^3, and so on).

re: renormalization and feynman's fancy math tricks, i think that these sorts of techniques are very interesting because they make some extremely complicated problem soluble by partitioning them into more or less independent components which can be solved and then putting everything back together (in some sense). the way in which this partitioning is done lets you examine the physical significance of each of those partitions separately and then in reassembling the original problem you can understand how important each of these effects are in relation to one another. but especially in subjects as complex and involved as qft or stat mech there are lots of different ways of approaching a problem, different partitions, but they all relate to the same problem in some sense and ideas and interpretations from one way of partitioning the problem can inform your understanding of other ways of partitioning it. im not really sure what else to make of that but it's definitely interesting.

#50
tensor? i barely know 'er
#51

c_man posted:

i kinda agree and kinda disagree



yeah i do see where youre coming from and i agree/disagree, as well. i was a little glib in my post talking about the dirac equation - but ultimately i feel that the levels to which the math is interpretational is pretty disquieting.

obviously it works but it's a wonder to me, in that good but disquieting way, that it even does.

#52
i mean i think an even better example is "imaginary" numbers. they're no more or less imaginary than a real number (when was the last time you saw something with infinite precision in The World?) and they're just ways for counting extra degrees of freedom that let you solve some problems with a certain kind of structure.
#53
perhaps all numbers are imaginary, thus making socalled 'imaginary numbers' the only real numbers by virtue of their honesty. dialectic of numbers
#54

littlegreenpills posted:

i have space fetishism, and fail aids


same except it's fail fetishism and space aids

#55
space is bullshit and not real
#56
the space betwn your ears
#57
nebula photos are all made up false colour images in which some boring inert clouds of dust without meaning or beauty are turned into multicoloured phallic and pudendal shapes that will at no point ever be actually visible to the human eye regardless of your position relative to them. outer space is an utterly dull infinity of meaninglessness with nothing to teach us and it should be abolished immediately
#58
the fact that wannabe science types actually believe those Incredible Photos are of something remotely existent but continue to deny the reality of the true god tells you all you need to know about the decadent folly of our hellbound society
#59
somewhere out there in the infinity of the cosmos are beings who are born knowing god, socialism and deleuze and Get Everything Right. why havent u dled Seti@Home already
#60
[account deactivated]
#61
whats your fave deleuze joint conch
#62
its actually completely required for you to think on and realize the hellish inhospitable nature of most of the universe to be a communist. its not optional.
#63
chocolate flavored zico is my new favorite thing!!! whats something new and good in ur life rhizzone friends
#64
i like arnold palmer, the beverage
#65
me too i drink it a lot!!!!!!!!!!!!!
#66
[account deactivated]
#67
how is that new for u though?
#68
[account deactivated]
#69
[account deactivated]
#70
salaam to my brothers and sisters i love you more than kanye loves kanye (wolf king)
#71
All the beauty and joy in the world is within u... All the evil n pain is an illusion..... Peace to u from Yung smug
#72
what a way to end a set
#73
#74

Skylark posted:

No offense to anyone but generic encouraging life-affirming sentiments from strangers are as meaningless to me as the anonymous insults anyone can send out on the intenret. Someone has to have cred before anything means anything, because of the nature of the new medium, and I think the internet has to acknowledge that before we can actually talk about what is progressive or offensive


#75
When all of the oil runs out and all of the increasingly expensive scientific instruments used to make discoveries are inoperable what will scientists do instead??
#76
#77

NoFreeWill posted:

When all of the oil runs out and all of the increasingly expensive scientific instruments used to make discoveries are inoperable what will scientists do instead??



This is an amazing quote. Really inspiring

#78
i have hiccups
#79

daddyholes posted:

i like Sagan a lot but i never understood why a bunch of liberal atheists find that photo & essay comforting. its about how we need to shape the fuck up because the implications are terrifying



i thought it was about how nothing has ever mattered so we should all just follow his example and smokke weed til we die

#80

NoFreeWill posted:

When all of the oil runs out and all of the increasingly expensive scientific instruments used to make discoveries are inoperable what will scientists do instead??



sorry br0seph climate change will destabilize the biosphere so badly it will be incapable of sustaining human life long before fossil fuels run out