Hi Craig,

On Sun, Jan 20, 2013 at 4:37 AM, Craig Weinberg <whatsons...@gmail.com>wrote:

> The whole worldview is built on the mistaken assumption that it is
> possible for something to exist without sensory participation. When you
> fail to factor that critically important physical reality into physics,
> what you get is senseless fields and the absurdity of particle-waves and
> aetheric emptiness full mass.
>

Where does pure sense come from? Did it always exist? If so, how to explain
that?
Is pure sense unitary or plural? How do you explain the observable
complexification of (this) universe?


>
> What this does is push physics into a corner, so that everything beneath
> the classical limit becomes a Platonic fantasy of spontaneous appearance,
> and decoherence becomes the source of all coherence. It's tragically
> obvious to me - faced with a cosmos filled with concrete sensory
> appearances, of meaning and subjectivity, that we reach for its opposite -
> meaningless abstractions of multi-dimensional topologies and multverses.
> It's blind insanity. We are being led by the nose behind circular reasoning
> and instrumental assumptions.
>
> What if emptiness was actually empty? What if there is no such thing as a
> particle-wave? What if decoherence is not a plausible cause for the
> constellation of classical physics? Are the metaphysical assumptions of a
> Universe from Nothing falsifiable?
>

Are metaphysical assumptions ever falsifiable? Wouldn't they become
scientific theories if they were? Are your assumptions falsifiable?


>
> We have to go back to the beginning. What are we using to measure
> particles? What are we assuming about energy?
>
> Craig
>
>
>
> On Saturday, January 19, 2013 5:14:03 PM UTC-5, Brent wrote:
>>
>>  On 1/19/2013 8:48 AM, Laurent R Duchesne wrote:
>>
>> Empty Space is not Empty!
>>
>> http://www.youtube.com/watch?**v=y4D6qY2c0Z8<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y4D6qY2c0Z8>
>>
>>
>> The so-called Higgs field is just another name for Einstein's
>> gravitational aether.
>>
>>
>> No.  There's no gravitational aether.  Einstein never suggested such.
>> And gravity doesn't depend on the Higgs field.
>>
>> Mass is the result of matter's field interactions within itself and the
>> space in which it sits, hence, the Higgs mechanism.
>>
>>
>> You need to remember that it's mass-energy.  Photons gravitate even
>> though they don't have rest mass.  Most of the mass of nucleons comes from
>> the kinetic energy of the quarks bound by gluons, not the Higgs effect.
>>
>>
>> Particles can emerge anywhere and as needed, e.g., particle pair
>> creation, but from where, and what do they feed from, creation ex nihilo?
>> That seems like a physical impossibility. Anyway, why would we have
>> wave-particle complementarity if it were not because matter depends on the
>> substrate? Isn't this the reason why we need a Higgs mechanism?
>>
>>
>> Wave-particle complementarity applies to massless particles too; Einstein
>> got the Nobel prize for explaining the photo-electric effect.
>>
>> Brent
>>
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