On 1 March 2014 15:48, meekerdb <[email protected]> wrote:

>  On 2/28/2014 5:09 PM, LizR wrote:
>
>  On 1 March 2014 11:58, meekerdb <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> On 2/28/2014 2:32 PM, LizR wrote:
>>
>>> "If it's all math, then where does math come from?"
>>>
>>> Strange to say, elementary maths just appears to be a fact. That is, it
>>> is a fact that 1+1=2.
>>>
>>
>>  Or it comes from our conceptualizing the world as consisting of distinct
>> objects and counting them, c.f. William S. Cooper "The Origin of Reason"
>> and Lakoff and Nunez "Where Mathematics Comes From".
>>
>
>  It isn't just us. Subatomic physics indicates that the world consists of
> distinct objects, and keeps track of the number of them.
>
>
> Of course that's *our theory of subatomic physics*.  Naturally we explain
> the world in terms we understand.  But in fact the objects, e.g. the quarks
> in a nucleus are not really that distinct.  And remember how states
> Boltzmann counted as distinct turned out to need Bose-Einstein counting.
>
>
Well obviously it could be wrong, like any theory, but it looks to me as
though it contains distinct objects, and does some form of accounting on
them. For example colliding an electron and positron creates a gamma ray of
a specific wavelength, which could be turned back into the particles again
under some circumstances. (Also, you are slightly begging the question.
*Why* do we understand the world in those terms?)

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