Time? - Printable Version +- Frictional Games Forum (read-only) (https://www.frictionalgames.com/forum) +-- Forum: Frictional Games (https://www.frictionalgames.com/forum/forum-3.html) +--- Forum: Off-Topic (https://www.frictionalgames.com/forum/forum-16.html) +--- Thread: Time? (/thread-18513.html) |
RE: Time? - KingWolf - 09-30-2012 Lol. Same here. RE: Time? - failedALIAS - 09-30-2012 RE: Time? - Robby - 09-30-2012 Yet again. Guess I'm talking to my *ss again. RE: Time? - BAndrew - 09-30-2012 (09-30-2012, 02:02 AM)failedALIAS Wrote:Well the state of atoms isn't random, no random at all. It's just based on the chaos theory which says chaotic systems who are based on simple mathematical rules can have outcomes that are entirely unpredictible (they can be described by mathematics, but they can't be predicted through mathematics). That's how our weather system works. You cannot predict the weather after 1 month for example can you? If we didn't exist will the atoms stop reacting mathematically? I don't think so. Mathematics is woven to the most basic laws of physics.(09-30-2012, 01:32 AM)Prelauncher Wrote: For example, love. With language you can describe the emotion love, but you can still feel love without turning it into words.A can describe it with one word(from the english language): Horrible. RE: Time? - Kreekakon - 09-30-2012 Mathematics are the way we understand the laws of physics. Without them even if whatever happens has meaning we couldn't understand it at all. H20 wouldn't be called H20. It would just be a bunch of atoms grouping together. Mathematics are our understanding of physics, and not the exact same thing. It's just a system we use to understand/translate it. RE: Time? - failedALIAS - 09-30-2012 (09-30-2012, 08:35 AM)BAndrew Wrote:HYPOTHETICAL(09-30-2012, 02:02 AM)failedALIAS Wrote:Well the state of atoms isn't random, no random at all. It's just based on the chaos theory which says chaotic systems who are based on simple mathematical rules can have outcomes that are entirely unpredictible (they can be described by mathematics, but they can't be predicted through mathematics). That's how our weather system works. You cannot predict the weather after 1 month for example can you? If we didn't exist will the atoms stop reacting mathematically? I don't think so. Mathematics is woven to the most basic laws of physics.(09-30-2012, 01:32 AM)Prelauncher Wrote: For example, love. With language you can describe the emotion love, but you can still feel love without turning it into words.A can describe it with one word(from the english language): Horrible. RE: Time? - BAndrew - 09-30-2012 (09-30-2012, 08:39 AM)Kreekakon Wrote: Mathematics are the way we understand the laws of physics. Without them even if whatever happens has meaning we couldn't understand it at all. H20 wouldn't be called H20. It would just be a bunch of atoms grouping together.By that logic they is no physics because physics is our understanding of physics. What you say makes no sense. RE: Time? - Robby - 09-30-2012 Obliterational confusion! The best kind! RE: Time? - failedALIAS - 09-30-2012 (09-30-2012, 08:45 AM)BAndrew Wrote:(09-30-2012, 08:39 AM)Kreekakon Wrote: Mathematics are the way we understand the laws of physics. Without them even if whatever happens has meaning we couldn't understand it at all. H20 wouldn't be called H20. It would just be a bunch of atoms grouping together.By that logic they is no physics because physics is our understanding of physics. What you say makes no sense. RE: Time? - BAndrew - 09-30-2012 (09-30-2012, 08:41 AM)failedALIAS Wrote: HYPOTHETICALThen your hypothesis is simply wrong. |