-BECOMING X1 - artykuły innych autorów
... not ultimately "design" but the world itself, any world and, what is more, the Ground is one with such an Absolute as being genuinely if momentarily predicated of it. We will, that is, pass "beyond this position of mere relativity". With the ground, then, we as it were dismantle finite causality in ...
... not ultimately "design" but the world itself, any world and, what is more, the Ground is one with such an Absolute as being genuinely if momentarily predicated of it. We will, that is, pass "beyond this position of mere relativity". With the ground, then, we as it were dismantle finite causality in ...
Anaxagoras 500 - 428, came to Athens in 480
... This is NOT ‘Idealism’ though (Plato, etc); because the One is not necessarily mere thought; Parmenides believes it to be material, and the ‘illusion’ is that the One is plural and differentiated and changing. The Eleatic School is Monistic Materialism. Only reason—not sense—can apprehend the materi ...
... This is NOT ‘Idealism’ though (Plato, etc); because the One is not necessarily mere thought; Parmenides believes it to be material, and the ‘illusion’ is that the One is plural and differentiated and changing. The Eleatic School is Monistic Materialism. Only reason—not sense—can apprehend the materi ...
Quantum Mechanics and the Philosophy of Language
... the mathematical generalization from B H to a C*algebra A, we consider that the dualism (i.e. the spirit of so called Copenhagen interpretation) of quantum mechanics is inherited to measurement theory (Figure 1: ②). Thus, we present the following interpretation (E) [=(E1) – (E3)]. That is, as th ...
... the mathematical generalization from B H to a C*algebra A, we consider that the dualism (i.e. the spirit of so called Copenhagen interpretation) of quantum mechanics is inherited to measurement theory (Figure 1: ②). Thus, we present the following interpretation (E) [=(E1) – (E3)]. That is, as th ...
Password-Capability System
... implemented type managed modules through a sealing mechanism which protected the instance data from being manipulated except via the type manager, but that was an implicit link back to the appropriate code for the type • You have capabilities for the instance and for the type manager • To add some m ...
... implemented type managed modules through a sealing mechanism which protected the instance data from being manipulated except via the type manager, but that was an implicit link back to the appropriate code for the type • You have capabilities for the instance and for the type manager • To add some m ...
On the Essence of Electric Charge
... Note that our definition of “charge density” is axiomatic. This approach is in the spirit of Einstein [1] that: …. the axiomatic basis of theoretical physics cannot be extracted from experience but must be freely invented… We consider charge to be a deformed zone of space, and since the geometry of ...
... Note that our definition of “charge density” is axiomatic. This approach is in the spirit of Einstein [1] that: …. the axiomatic basis of theoretical physics cannot be extracted from experience but must be freely invented… We consider charge to be a deformed zone of space, and since the geometry of ...
Stove`s Discovery of the Worst Argument in the World
... by the same argument for linguistic idealism. Immersion in the semi-idealist tradition long noted in America is sufficient.9 Putnam adduces the Löwenheim-Skolem theorem in symbolic logic in support of that position. The theorem says that a theory, conceived as a set of uninterpreted symbol strings, ...
... by the same argument for linguistic idealism. Immersion in the semi-idealist tradition long noted in America is sufficient.9 Putnam adduces the Löwenheim-Skolem theorem in symbolic logic in support of that position. The theorem says that a theory, conceived as a set of uninterpreted symbol strings, ...
Symmetry Provides a Turing-Type Test for 3D Vision - Purdue e-Pubs
... impossible to be sure of what is actually in someone’s mind simply by observing his behavior. – Take four examples. ...
... impossible to be sure of what is actually in someone’s mind simply by observing his behavior. – Take four examples. ...
and invariance principles Events, laws of nature,
... nature should have such complexity as implied by four or five different types of interactions between which no connection, no analogy, can be discovered. It is natural, therefore, to ask for a superprinciple which is in a similar relation to the laws of nature as these are to the events. The laws of ...
... nature should have such complexity as implied by four or five different types of interactions between which no connection, no analogy, can be discovered. It is natural, therefore, to ask for a superprinciple which is in a similar relation to the laws of nature as these are to the events. The laws of ...
Asouzu`s Critique of Philosophy of Essence and Its Implication for
... Reflection (Ibuanyidanda Philosophy)—a Professor in the Department of Philosophy, University of Calabar in his complementary philosophy (Ibuanyidanda), has fashioned an ideal way and a strategy of understanding a prefect reality in a non-polarized platform, rapt with the capacity of mutual dependenc ...
... Reflection (Ibuanyidanda Philosophy)—a Professor in the Department of Philosophy, University of Calabar in his complementary philosophy (Ibuanyidanda), has fashioned an ideal way and a strategy of understanding a prefect reality in a non-polarized platform, rapt with the capacity of mutual dependenc ...
Modern Physics
... bodies collide, the total momentum remains constant assuming the bodies are isolated (that is, they interact only with each other) • Now suppose the collision is described in a reference frame S in which momentum is conserved. If the velocities of the colliding bodies are calculated in a second movi ...
... bodies collide, the total momentum remains constant assuming the bodies are isolated (that is, they interact only with each other) • Now suppose the collision is described in a reference frame S in which momentum is conserved. If the velocities of the colliding bodies are calculated in a second movi ...
Syllabus
... and is the type of question that needs to be asked in science. The questions is basically, why are we studying this and does the reason justify the time and expense being allocated to the research? In applied science the time and expense can be more directly compared to the expected outcome. Pure re ...
... and is the type of question that needs to be asked in science. The questions is basically, why are we studying this and does the reason justify the time and expense being allocated to the research? In applied science the time and expense can be more directly compared to the expected outcome. Pure re ...
Masses of Formal Philosophy `Interview`
... Canberra. So whereas a physicist asks about the chance that a given atom decays in some period of time, or a chemist asks about the chemical properties of some compound, or an astronomer asks what causes black holes to form, a philosophers asks “What is chance?”, “What is a property?”, “What is caus ...
... Canberra. So whereas a physicist asks about the chance that a given atom decays in some period of time, or a chemist asks about the chemical properties of some compound, or an astronomer asks what causes black holes to form, a philosophers asks “What is chance?”, “What is a property?”, “What is caus ...
being a Christian in physics
... Physics as a Calling Physics is not so much a ‘calling’ as an expression of our God-given desire for understanding. The knowledge of Nature that it provides forms the foundation of technology that transforms human life as well as giving us insights into the fundamental nature of reality. People have ...
... Physics as a Calling Physics is not so much a ‘calling’ as an expression of our God-given desire for understanding. The knowledge of Nature that it provides forms the foundation of technology that transforms human life as well as giving us insights into the fundamental nature of reality. People have ...
Personal Identity
... necessary or sufficient (or both) for one to persist. You are that future being that in some sense inherits its mental features—personality, beliefs, memories, and so on—from you. You are that past being whose mental features you have inherited.” b. In what psychological relation might our identity ...
... necessary or sufficient (or both) for one to persist. You are that future being that in some sense inherits its mental features—personality, beliefs, memories, and so on—from you. You are that past being whose mental features you have inherited.” b. In what psychological relation might our identity ...
Notes on Hume`s And Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding
... If we are to satisfy ourselves concerning the nature of that evidence by which we assume matters of fact, then we must inquire how we arrive at the knowledge of cause and effect. The knowledge of that cause and effect is not a priori; it comes entirely from the senses. If we come into contact with s ...
... If we are to satisfy ourselves concerning the nature of that evidence by which we assume matters of fact, then we must inquire how we arrive at the knowledge of cause and effect. The knowledge of that cause and effect is not a priori; it comes entirely from the senses. If we come into contact with s ...
creating a universe, a conceptual model
... distance in dissimilar ways. For example, the strong force strength increases with distance but only acts over an extremely short range; the weak force also acts over a short range but decreases with distance, the electromagnetic and gravitational force strengths decrease inversely with distance squ ...
... distance in dissimilar ways. For example, the strong force strength increases with distance but only acts over an extremely short range; the weak force also acts over a short range but decreases with distance, the electromagnetic and gravitational force strengths decrease inversely with distance squ ...
The Capacitance Theory of Gravity
... Look what happens to the force of attraction as the magnets are brought close to each other. In this example, the magnetic properties on the above equation are equal to a random number I picked...25. All I did to make this graph was to use the equation on the previous page. Starting from the right s ...
... Look what happens to the force of attraction as the magnets are brought close to each other. In this example, the magnetic properties on the above equation are equal to a random number I picked...25. All I did to make this graph was to use the equation on the previous page. Starting from the right s ...
Nel Noddings Chapter 8: Ethics and Moral Education
... situations. Those who argue for relativity ask why, if there is absolute truth, its advocates disagree with one another about what it is. TWO CHOICES: • Believe in absolute universal moral truths that are valid for everyone everywhere. Or • Believe that morality is relative to the situation, so that ...
... situations. Those who argue for relativity ask why, if there is absolute truth, its advocates disagree with one another about what it is. TWO CHOICES: • Believe in absolute universal moral truths that are valid for everyone everywhere. Or • Believe that morality is relative to the situation, so that ...
View as PDF
... first case, while given an initially ordered state it is not too difficult to describe the transition to a less ordered one, the question of why the initial (rather than the final) state has a tendency to be ordered is not at all a simple one, and (contrary to an impression given in some of the popu ...
... first case, while given an initially ordered state it is not too difficult to describe the transition to a less ordered one, the question of why the initial (rather than the final) state has a tendency to be ordered is not at all a simple one, and (contrary to an impression given in some of the popu ...
Descartes’ Skeptical Observations
... such thing as (what philosophers call) material substance. ...
... such thing as (what philosophers call) material substance. ...
Chapter 19: Electric Forces and Electric Fields
... the same sign. (b) Objects A and C possess charges of opposite sign. (c) All three objects possess charges of the same sign. (d) One of the objects is neutral. (e) We need to perform additional experiments to determine the signs of the charges. Answer: (a), (c), and (e). The experiment shows that ob ...
... the same sign. (b) Objects A and C possess charges of opposite sign. (c) All three objects possess charges of the same sign. (d) One of the objects is neutral. (e) We need to perform additional experiments to determine the signs of the charges. Answer: (a), (c), and (e). The experiment shows that ob ...
Chris Krause
... Entities and events (without an intrinsic classical reality) can only be defined by their dependently originated elements. This does not suggest nihilism (or the philosophy that nothing exists) but on the contrary simply observes phenomena as the only distinguishable experience. Dependant Originatio ...
... Entities and events (without an intrinsic classical reality) can only be defined by their dependently originated elements. This does not suggest nihilism (or the philosophy that nothing exists) but on the contrary simply observes phenomena as the only distinguishable experience. Dependant Originatio ...
Cosmology and Science - Gurdjieff and the Fourth Way: A Critical
... energy, all of outer space is in reality a plenum of force that is largely invisible to us, yet life-giving. To set our minds reeling, it is enough to contemplate the bare distances that astronomy has measured. Light traveling at 186,000 miles a second takes 800,000 years from the galaxy Andromeda t ...
... energy, all of outer space is in reality a plenum of force that is largely invisible to us, yet life-giving. To set our minds reeling, it is enough to contemplate the bare distances that astronomy has measured. Light traveling at 186,000 miles a second takes 800,000 years from the galaxy Andromeda t ...