“Just out of curiosity, why would math from the 1800's be any less
relevant
than math from today?...” – Chuck

Chuck, rather than using the fallacy of ‘failure to state” (http://
www.don-lindsay-archive.org/skeptic/arguments.html#state ) along with
misdirection, what are you asserting here? Are you suggesting that
math doesn’t advance over time?...

Oh, and one simple math equation might answer your own question
simply:
E=mc2

My main point which appears to have been missed by you was that string
theory is based upon math. Math is but a representation of reality.
Math is not reality. Therefore strings, not being founded in the
material world, are “not any different in nature than the beliefs
people hold about what appears to be outside of themselves already
discussed.”...my main point.

“…Did the meaning of 2 + 2 change when I wasn't looking?” – Chuck

Again, what are you claiming, if anything? Such Red Herrings are
beneath your talents Chuck.


On May 10, 12:45 pm, Chuck Bowling <[email protected]>
wrote:
> Just out of curiosity, why would math from the 1800's be any less relevant
> than math from today? Did the meaning of 2 + 2 change when I wasn't looking?
>
> On Fri, May 6, 2011 at 8:20 AM, ornamentalmind
> <[email protected]>wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > When it comes to strings, branes etc., I’ve done some research and
> > reading and, while interesting, find it not any different in nature
> > than the beliefs people hold about what appears to be outside of
> > themselves already discussed. In fact, if anything, it is even more of
> > a dream since it is based upon math…and math from the 1800s at that.

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