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Someone wanna asplain this health insurance thing?
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Mike
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PostPosted: Sat Apr 17, 2010 6:12 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Lester Square wrote:
(As it happens, and if you care, I more-or-less completely subscribe to determinism as a principle. If you really care, I can describe my reasons but I strongly suspect that you don't.)


I second a vote for some elaboration!
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dPaladin
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PostPosted: Sun Apr 18, 2010 1:41 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Yeah, let's hear it. It might make me love you forever.
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Lester Square
is your father (NOOOOO)


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PostPosted: Sun Apr 18, 2010 6:56 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

It won't make you love me forever. But for what it's worth, I love you. Sad

Ah, well, it's a mode-of-operation thing.
Sure, I'm familiar with what I'll call the Izzhov Hypothesis (which goes vaguely along the lines of: "events are not predetermined because quantum-physics") and I appreciate it. I'm also sorry for not having recognised Izzhov's doctorate in molecular physics. Razz
But it's, I suppose, like anything else: a case of what assumptions you make about the world in order to operate. I assume a world bound by causality in everything I do. It could in all possibility be demonstrated that randomness can occur. Particularly at the quantum level. 'Cause that stuff's crazy-weird if the entire sum of my quantum-mechanics knowledge is anything to go by (my entire knowledge of quantum-mechanics, by the way, comes from popular non-scientist Bill Bryson). At the human level I can only account for the model of the world constructed in my mind (based, I also assume, on a small selection of external stimuli) by means of causal assumptions.
Am I wrong for doing this? Possibly.
Is there a better selection of non-causality-based assumptions one can make about the world which allow me to operate in the same way? I am not aware of one.
Why do I want to "operate" in the first place? Because quantum-physics.

I'm probably being ridiculously unclear, but that's because it's 1AM and I haven't been drinking.
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Izzhov
is not something that you just dump something on


Joined: 05 Oct 2007
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PostPosted: Sun Apr 18, 2010 10:39 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Lester Square wrote:
Sure, I'm familiar with what I'll call the Izzhov Hypothesis (which goes vaguely along the lines of: "events are not predetermined because quantum-physics") and I appreciate it. I'm also sorry for not having recognised Izzhov's doctorate in molecular physics. Razz

Hey, man, just gimme 8 years and I'll have one. Orb Lune
Lester Square wrote:
uot;]But it's, I suppose, like anything else: a case of what assumptions you make about the world in order to operate. I assume a world bound by causality in everything I do. It could in all possibility be demonstrated that randomness can occur. Particularly at the quantum level. 'Cause that stuff's crazy-weird if the entire sum of my quantum-mechanics knowledge is anything to go by (my entire knowledge of quantum-mechanics, by the way, comes from popular non-scientist Bill Bryson). At the human level I can only account for the model of the world constructed in my mind (based, I also assume, on a small selection of external stimuli) by means of causal assumptions.
Am I wrong for doing this? Possibly.
Is there a better selection of non-causality-based assumptions one can make about the world which allow me to operate in the same way? I am not aware of one.
Why do I want to "operate" in the first place? Because quantum-physics.

I'm probably being ridiculously unclear, but that's because it's 1AM and I haven't been drinking.

Listen, this doesn't make me love you forever; this makes me love you one year less than forever.
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Cheese Monkey
Your Slacker-Fu is weak, son.


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PostPosted: Mon Apr 19, 2010 7:22 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Sadly, I'm a little out of my element in this discussion. Confused I know slightly less than your average cardboard box about quantum physics, other than "itz randum lol."

So the topic here is, "if quantum physics isn't responsible for randomness and choice, nothing is." Do I have that right? And where would there be a page that explains quantum physics in relation to all this?
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Izzhov
is not something that you just dump something on


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PostPosted: Mon Apr 19, 2010 8:20 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Read this entire page and you'll see where I'm coming from.

OK, if it's tl and you dr you can just read this:

Website wrote:
At the same time, we have to stress again, there is a fundamental difference between the randomness of a die and the randomness of a photon. The throw of a die isn't "really" random. If you knew everything possible about the angle it was thrown at, and its weight distribution, and the table it was landing on, and so on, you could in principle predict its flight perfectly and tell what number will come up on top. But in the case of the photon, it doesn't matter how much you know up front: because even when all the starting conditions are the same, it may do different things. (Of course the die is really made up of tiny particles obeying quantum mechanics and displaying true randomness, but there are so many of them that the overall behavior of the die can in principle be predicted with near certainty.)

In response to the part in parentheses: but not total certainty. There's always the probability it'll come up differently from the prediction. See below.

Basically, it's impossible to predict exactly what's going to happen, not just because the motion of subatomic particles is random in the most literal sense of the word, but also because the exact position and path of a particle cannot even be observed. This kinda sucks, which is why Einstein spent half his life trying to disprove it (and failed). This is why I object to the usage of the phrase "set in stone" used in determinism; nothing can ever be predetermined with total accuracy according to quantum mechanics, and the inherent randomness of particle motion means anything can happen. For example, every time you set a foot on the ground, there is an extremely tiny chance that the particles in your feet and in that part of the ground will line up perfectly and cause your foot to actually sink into the ground, intertwining it at the molecular level. Unsettling, isn't it? There is also a small probability that your computer will spontaneously rise into the air and ram into your face, and that your eyes will transform into candy, if all the subatomic particles' motion occurs just right. Don't worry, the probability of each of those things occurring is less than 1 in the number of atoms in the universe. But there is no way to predict whether or not these things will actually happen; it can only be modeled by chance.

Anyways, my point is, free will may or may not exist, but to state that the entire path of the universe was laid out from the beginning is absurd.

EDIT: This has nothing to do with health insurance.
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Doctor Phileas Fragg
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PostPosted: Tue Apr 20, 2010 7:28 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Our topics are derailed in the most fascinating ways.
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Eirik
is a wrong git


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PostPosted: Thu May 27, 2010 12:36 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Yeah, I was gonna say that's one of the most extreme topic-shifts I think I've seen and yet another reason to love this place!
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What's being said, what's in your head, what's in the words that we believe?
Bop to the sound, drop what you've got -- 'cause it's a song inside of me.
I can see your face, I can feel the sea, I see that it's a part of me.
Let's break the trance, let's make 'em dance and see what we are meant to be!
Might be the end, might be the start, could be the air that lies between.
Could be this song, could be the beat, could be the words that set you free.
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