jlf1961
Posts: 14840
Joined: 6/10/2008 From: Somewhere Texas Status: offline
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ORIGINAL: NookieNotes quote:
ORIGINAL: jlf1961 Many of us who had the good fortune or luck to receive a higher education are familiar with thought experiments, although usually limited to physics. Not interested in your thought experiment. Just found it interesting that you added "usually limited to physics." Can you give any sources suggesting that thought experiments are somehow usually limited to physics in any way? The reason I ask is because I grew up with academics, and there were thought experiments everyfuckingwhere. And while one was in physics, the thought experiments he took part in while I was around were not related to physics at all. Now, I realize this is my personal experience, so I typed "thought experiment" into google. In wikipedia, it was suggested that, "Thought experiments have been used in a variety of fields, including philosophy, law, physics, and mathematics. In philosophy, they have been used at least since classical antiquity, some pre-dating Socrates. In law, they were well-known to Roman lawyers quoted in the Digest.[6] In physics and other sciences, notable thought experiments date from the 19th and especially the 20th century, but examples can be found at least as early as Galileo." Which, to me suggests that more thought experiments have been held in philosophy than in physics, and uphold my experience that they are not usually limited to physics in higher education or elsewhere. Perhaps I'm wrong. I stand corrected, although, the most prevalent ones I am familiar with are limited the field of physics, most notably, the plane on the conveyor belt. Although, I would say the group in a life boat might be considered one as well, where you have to pick who goes in the water due to limited supplies (never understood why rationing was not considered an option though.) As for thought experiments in other fields, I admittedly, never heard that term applied to them. In mathematics, for example, I have seen many referred to as non-solvable equations. My primary field is history, and similar problems are more of a riddle than anything else, and linked to 'out of place' artifacts discovered by archaeologists, such as the Baghdad battery, or the hieroglyph that, according to ancient alien theorists, depict an electric light bulb. quote:
ORIGINAL: WhoreMods I think Jack Kirby, Chris Claremont and Grant Morrison (among many others) have indulged in quite a bit of speculation about how such a situation might play out. (It's one that turned up in prose SF before comics started getting interesting in the '60s as well, of course: Childhood's End by Clarke and Agent Of Vulcan by St Clair both spring to mind for a start.) Actually, there were a few others, although, few and far between, although most did not go with the idea of separating humans in two groups.
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Boy, it sure would be nice if we had some grenades, don't you think? You cannot control who comes into your life, but you can control which airlock you throw them out of. Paranoid Paramilitary Gun Loving Conspiracy Theorist AND EQUAL OPPORTUNI
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