Sujet : Re: 25 Classic Books That Have Been Banned
De : ram (at) *nospam* zedat.fu-berlin.de (Stefan Ram)
Groupes : rec.arts.sf.written alt.usage.englishDate : 25. May 2025, 18:09:01
Autres entêtes
Organisation : Stefan Ram
Message-ID : <physics-20250525180332@ram.dialup.fu-berlin.de>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6
Paul S Person <
psperson@old.netcom.invalid> wrote or quoted:
This is after the creation of the New Heaven and New Earth. Who can
say what their physics may look like?
From a philosophy angle, miracles are possible, since all the
laws of nature come from stuff we have seen before and just
describe what happened back then. We can only guess those same
laws will hold up down the road, but we do not actually know for
sure. But for now, we have to stick with Occam's razor;
there is no real point in guessing about miracles happening later on.
Science laws are called "laws" because they describe the past,
not because they lay down rules for what has to happen next.
Still, so far, betting that the old laws keep working has
always paid off. Technically, the universe could just blink out
of existence at any moment. That would not really bother anyone.
|Quantum field theory (QFT) provides an extremely powerful set
|of computational methods that have yet to find any fundamental
|limitations. It has led to the most fantastic agreement between
|theoretical predictions and experimental data in the history
|of science. It provides deep and profound insights into the
|nature of our universe, and into the nature of other possible
|self-consistent universes.
|
M. Schwartz (2014)