Bertrand Russell's Barber
Ni dom
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- Jul 23, 2018
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This question may sound stupid to you but do take note that back in the day, I think before Euler's time, Technology had nothing to do with the preoccupations of math or physics.
As someone who works in/with technology and understands how some of it works, it's sometimes really ridiculous to me that things continue working relatively okay and the whole world doesn't just collapse or something. I sometimes worry about it quite a bit.
We take technology for granted so much to the extent that we get pissed off when something doesn't work. Well, for people who dabble in technology, you know that things fail to work a lot more often than the times they actually work.
So it's just crazy to me that there was this guy maxwell and a bunch of other guys like faraday etc and Newton et al before them who wrote down a few principles in mathematical form and we are able to take those equations, add boundary conditions and loss terms and get shit working in the end.
It's just amazing.
What I wrote above is kind of a mess but I'll keep it there anyway for context.
I think what I'm asking fundamentally is what is math and what is its relationship with reality?
Nowadays science precedes technology. Wasn't always the case as in the beginning, before Newton et al, there wasn't really any science to speak of in the mathematical, empirical sense of the word.
Will it continue this way? Is it possible now to come up with some technology that makes stuff work but that we have no scientific (in terms of mathematical/empirical models) explanation for?
P.S. Try to keep all that pseudoscientific/wishywashy stuff away from this thread if possible please, thanks.
As someone who works in/with technology and understands how some of it works, it's sometimes really ridiculous to me that things continue working relatively okay and the whole world doesn't just collapse or something. I sometimes worry about it quite a bit.
We take technology for granted so much to the extent that we get pissed off when something doesn't work. Well, for people who dabble in technology, you know that things fail to work a lot more often than the times they actually work.
So it's just crazy to me that there was this guy maxwell and a bunch of other guys like faraday etc and Newton et al before them who wrote down a few principles in mathematical form and we are able to take those equations, add boundary conditions and loss terms and get shit working in the end.
It's just amazing.
What I wrote above is kind of a mess but I'll keep it there anyway for context.
I think what I'm asking fundamentally is what is math and what is its relationship with reality?
Nowadays science precedes technology. Wasn't always the case as in the beginning, before Newton et al, there wasn't really any science to speak of in the mathematical, empirical sense of the word.
Will it continue this way? Is it possible now to come up with some technology that makes stuff work but that we have no scientific (in terms of mathematical/empirical models) explanation for?
P.S. Try to keep all that pseudoscientific/wishywashy stuff away from this thread if possible please, thanks.