On Mar 8, 2009, at 9:17:52 AM, "X Acto" <[email protected]> wrote:
Platt,
Interesting comment, when I think of chance in this capacity
I think that chance is limited by the form it takes, therefore
it is not totally random per-say but guided on the contigent of the form
it manifests in, the form it manifests in being contingent on limited
possibility of chance.

Physicists have noted how particles oscillate into and out of existence,
anomaloies of a field.

-Ron




________________________________
From: Platt Holden <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Sunday, March 8, 2009 8:36:45 AM
Subject: Re: [MD] Question?


> Greetings!
> 
> I am wondering what is the relationship between Quantum Theory and 
> the Theory of Evolution.  Are they both science?  Is there a 
> particular ontological assumption underlying each that is the 
> same?  Different?
> 
> It would be okay to tell me my questions make no sense whatsoever
> because...

> Marsha

Hey Marsha,

Both quantum theory and evolution depend on the assumption that chance
has creative power. Compare to the MOQ assumption that DQ has creative 
power, or to the theist's assumption that God has creative power.

Platt




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Hi Marsha,

Obviously a complex subject, since each is broken down into so many labels.

It is difficult to apply the theory of evolution to quantum mechanics.  It may 
be easier to try to explain evolution using quantum mechanics but that also 
takes leaps of faith, in my view.  Evolution is an explanation of structural 
biology as an interaction between what we call life, and nature.  As they are 
both nature and presumably have the same rules, it is a dynamic 
self-interaction, no different from all other dynamic interactions (DQ/SQ?).  
Chance (whatever that means) has been used to describe this interaction in the 
same sense that all collisions of atoms in a gas are by chance (or are they?).  
Indeed, it is all so complex, that it can be described by chance, in the same 
way that many things in physics can be described by Newtonian Mechanics (like 
the earth going around the sun (or does it?)), ignoring the Quantum roots.  

The interesting thing is particles appear and disappear (at least to us), as 
predicted and experimentally verified.  Alan Watts has described this as 
analogous to a tapestry or quilt.  The threads go over and under, when they are 
under we can't see them.  However both the over and under are required for the 
reality of the quilt.  Chance (as can be described through statistics) is a 
funny thing, because for example, if flipping a coin is a matter of chance, 
then you have to assume that the person flipping the coin is outside the system 
and independent; that is, has no impact on the outcome.  I'm not sure who is 
outside the system of Quality, flipping the coin.

Oh, the paper from Surrey, seemed like a lot of hand-waving, but I did not look 
at the references.

Regards,

Willblake2

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