Difference between revisions of "Physics Has its Principles"
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Physicists and mathematicians have fundamentally different approaches to describing reality. The essential difference is that physicists adhere to certain logical principles, any violation of which would amount to a miracle, whereas the equations of mathematics generally are oblivious to physical constraints. This leads to drastically different views of what is, and what is not, possible for cosmology and the reality we live in. | Physicists and mathematicians have fundamentally different approaches to describing reality. The essential difference is that physicists adhere to certain logical principles, any violation of which would amount to a miracle, whereas the equations of mathematics generally are oblivious to physical constraints. This leads to drastically different views of what is, and what is not, possible for cosmology and the reality we live in. | ||
− | [[Category:Scientific Paper]] | + | [[Category:Scientific Paper|physics principles]] |
Latest revision as of 10:54, 1 January 2017
Scientific Paper | |
---|---|
Title | Physics Has its Principles |
Author(s) | Tom Van Flandern |
Keywords | Principles, cosmology |
Published | 1999 |
Journal | None |
Pages | 87-102 |
Abstract
Physicists and mathematicians have fundamentally different approaches to describing reality. The essential difference is that physicists adhere to certain logical principles, any violation of which would amount to a miracle, whereas the equations of mathematics generally are oblivious to physical constraints. This leads to drastically different views of what is, and what is not, possible for cosmology and the reality we live in.