Essay Abstract
Most physicists claim Physics is free of Metaphysics. I question this fundamental assumption and argue this is not so. Ignoring The Metaphysics of Physics may be physicists' biggest mistake. The use of models (whether axiomatic or curve fitting) to describe what is the Universe is metaphysical in essence. Models have lead physicists to create a 'house of horrors' more phantasmagorical than any Metaphysics in the past [28]. With our minds twisted to believe in the reality of the unreal and the unreality of the real. Though the language and methods may differ, the fundamental assumptions of Physics are metaphysical. And all metaphysical descriptions of the Universe ultimately fail. Collapsing under their own unreality. To avoid such fate Physics, I argue, should be based only on measurement and mathematical identities (not models) applied to measurement. Whereas a model is a postulated theory of what is, an identity is a proven theorem applied to measurements1. Such mathematical identity, for example, is the Pythagorean Theorem that can be used to describe measurement of lengths under right triangle conditions. I show Planck's formula for blackbody radiation is also such a mathematical truism and not a Physical Law [2, 10]. Like a Rosetta Stone, this result has lead to mathematical derivations of Basic Law in broad areas of Physics [2, 8]. Sensible insights open up as to the true meaning of entropy and time [2, 6]; the meaning and existence of Planck's constant h [2, 7]; the meaning and nature of the wavefunction ψ [2, 9]. And many other fundamental results. The Second Law of Thermodynamics I show to state "every physical event takes some positive duration of time to occur" [2, 6]. And I further prove the inconsistency between the CSL Postulate and the Photon Hypothesis [2, 18].
Author Bio
In my retirement from teaching math I am pursuing lifetime interests. These included my FQXi 2010/11 essay "A World Without Quanta?"[3], the chapter "The Thermodynamics in Planck's Law" in the book Thermodynamics: Interaction Studies [2], and some 15 papers in the now defunct Google knols. Shame on you, Google! I have also proposed a natural agency explanation for Stonehenge in"The un-Henging of Stonehenge" [4] and in Brian John's blog Stonehenge Thoughts [38] and Robert Langdon's blog Prehistoric Britain [37].