Lorraine,
To continue that thought, there are lots of different ways to think about all the enormous complexities of life and it doesn't take ten billion dollars to explore the possibilities.
One of the basic points I keep trying to raise about numbers and simple addition is that when we add, we are adding sets and ending up with larger sets, not the contents of the sets. Say when we add 4 apples and 6 apples, we are taking the two sets and creating a set of 10 apples. If we actually added the apples, we would have a jar of apple sauce.
This seems like a very obvious and nit-picky point, but I think it is part of the thinking that leads physics to currently trying to say everything is discrete.
Think about it in terms of the body; All our organs and cells and thoughts and relationships and physical context, etc. add up to ourselves as a whole person. Then when we step back, there is no real, distinct line where one person ends and the next begins. Yes, we can draw lines, but they are more like horizon lines. More a matter of selective perception. We all exist as each other's context, have the same dna, energy, often share thoughts, etc. The lines we draw are as subjective as we are.
Now on the other hand, when everything is its own entity and we keep looking at smaller and smaller scales, we eventually get down to the quantum level of distinct objects. Even though the lines between them seem pretty fuzzy and there are statistical waves and super positions and non-locality and entanglement and all those other factors that make them seem connected, we are not fooled! We know if we just keep looking and poking, we will find true clarity of distinction and all the parts will be truly separate, even if we have no theory of how they all work together.
We need distinctions, but we also need connections. Like painting a picture, we don't want all the colors to run together, but we still need them to make connections.
' Shut up and calculate" is not even philosophy, but belief, if you can't examine how the factors and functions operate.
Regards,
John M