I'm fairly sure early cultures didn't just have 1,2, many. How would you know a fair dowry for your daughter, or how many cabbages a chicken was worth?
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Originally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishing -
Physicists often use many more dimensions than this - e.g. when considering phase space.Hilbert spaces are (countably) infinite dimensional, and they're used in physics as well.Originally posted by istvan View Post...Well, scientist agree that there are more then 3, some go all the way to 11. Mathematics can however describe umpteen million dimensions. It is an abstraction. ...Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!Comment
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It is still a model, albeit helpful in science, engineering, etc. We do not know how many dimensions are in real world. Think of it, I am starting to be puzzled, what is real world...Originally posted by NotAllThere View PostPhysicists often use many more dimensions than this - e.g. when considering phase space.Hilbert spaces are (countably) infinite dimensional, and they're used in physics as well.
My mind has gone blank. I wonder if it was always that way.
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Physicists don't agree there are more than 3 physical dimensions. They (mostly) agree that the maths to explain observed behaviour seem to require extra dimensions. They are concerned with what makes things add up, not what actually IS (and many say the latter isn't really important).Originally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishingComment
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A decade or more and we will live mostly in a virtual reality, holodeck etc...Originally posted by d000hg View PostPhysicists don't agree there are more than 3 physical dimensions. They (mostly) agree that the maths to explain observed behaviour seem to require extra dimensions. They are concerned with what makes things add up, not what actually IS (and many say the latter isn't really important).
My mind has gone blank. I wonder if it was always that way.
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There is a school of thought among physicists that the equations are the reality.Originally posted by d000hg View PostPhysicists don't agree there are more than 3 physical dimensions. They (mostly) agree that the maths to explain observed behaviour seem to require extra dimensions. They are concerned with what makes things add up, not what actually IS (and many say the latter isn't really important).Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!Comment
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Many physicists have a formalism fetish. But that's taking it to ridiculous extremes.Originally posted by NotAllThere View PostThere is a school of thought among physicists that the equations are the reality.
In principle, equations are only a codified and abbreviated form of prose or conversation.Work in the public sector? Read the IR35 FAQ hereComment
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