Essay Abstract

Mathematics is assumed to be a realm of pure thought, which would make the mathematical system alignment with Physics remarkable. I wish to show that human perception is part of mathematics and mathematics relationship to our current understanding of Physics is not a coincident.

Author Bio

Jeffrey Schmitz has his Masters in Physics from the University of Tennessee. He has taught Astronomy, Physics and Physical Science as an adjunct instructor at seven different colleges in and around Chicago.

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Hi Jeffrey,

Your essay is a good read. You seem to be talking about the existence of a universal language underlying the individual differences in subjective experience of the world. Various animals would interpret the information in different ways, e.g. a dog might understand the moon in terms of smell, and we humans might represent our experience in various ways including mathematically. Is that a correct interpretation of what you are saying?

Lorraine Ford

    The system logs you out very quickly! Above post was from me, Lorraine Ford

    Lorraine,

    Thank you for reading my essay. My point is that there is no true universal language. Mathematics might seem universal, but it is subjective. Choices are made about how we assign values and what rules are in the system. These choices are influence by many things including how we perceive the world.

    Jeff Schmitz

    Jeffrey,

    "The intersection between experiential Physics and Mathematics generates these new rules." Sort of a Ben Franklin "common sense." I feel like your essay is an exercise in heightened perception based on reason and common sense.

    I thought my "Connections of Math, Physics and the Human Brain" was easy to follow but your is simple and elegant.

    Jim

    Jim,

    Thank you for reading my essay. I am looking forward to reading your essay. Age of reason and Ben Franklin, I hope my essay lives up to that high standard.

    Jeff

      4 days later

      Jeffrey,

      "How we count things is the foundation of mathematics" a) before starting to count, you have to accept that each element counted does exist. Without realizing it, you have already accepted that the element passes the logical test of non-contradiction, i.e. it cannot exist and not exist at the same time. So, logic comes before counting. B) Does the universe care how WE count. How about how the universe counts? How does a planet add or acquire mass? By counting? Nope! It gains mass by acquiring matter from afar and by getting it closer to its center of mass. Addition, for the universe is about getting things together, closer. It is much like children learn in school by getting beads together in a pile. It is in fact a geometric operation. When they get older, they learn how to add the money in their pocket with that in their bank account ... which is nothing real. The universe adds substance, not ideas or concepts. Logic without substance can't produce a universe that lasted 13 billion years before we ever showed up ... Nice essay. With logic, look for the substance... and loose some baggage;

      Because of the speed limit of light, no two points of the Moon are at the same moment. That is the time the universe requires to connect those two the points. Consequently, the "Moon" is in fact just an aggregate of matter across time, not even an object! It becomes an object "Moon" only when I see it or conceive it as being there all at once, in a moment of perception. Lots of baggage to leave behind before understanding the underlying reality..

      Good luck,

      Marcel,

      Marcel,

      Thank you for reading my essay out of so many in this topic.

      Could counting exist without logic? Since I do not know how one could speak or think without logic, it seems possible. Because we have no way of going "outside" of logic we cannot know if counting is inside or outside of logic. Could the universe exist without logic? Yes, the universe was doing well long before humans or animals thinking or counting things. My essay was not about the universe it was about how we understand the universe. It was not about "truth", but perception. You are thinking big, but I wrote about the small.

      Jeff

      8 days later

      Dear Dr. Schmitz,

      I have no wish to be disrespectful to you or to your essay, but I think that your statement that "Water", "children and the "Moon" are not universal is incorrect for the following real reason:

      Do let me know what you think about this: This is my single unified theorem of how the real Universe is occurring: Newton was wrong about abstract gravity; Einstein was wrong about abstract space/time, and Hawking was wrong about the explosive capability of abstract NOTHING. Proof exists that every real astronomer looking through a real telescope has failed to notice that each of the real galaxies he has observed is unique as to its structure and its perceived distance from all other real galaxies. Each real star is unique as to its structure and its perceived distance apart from all other real stars. Every real scientist who has peered at real snowflakes through a real microscope has concluded that each real snowflake is unique as to its structure. Real structure is unique, once. Unique, once does not consist of abstract amounts of abstract quanta. Based on one's normal observation, one must conclude that all of the stars, all of the planets, all of the asteroids, all of the comets, all of the meteors, all of the specks of astral dust and all real objects have only one real thing in common. Each real object has a real material surface that seems to be attached to a material sub-surface. All surfaces, no matter the apparent degree of separation, must travel at the same constant speed. No matter in which direction one looks, one will only ever see a plethora of real surfaces and those surfaces must all be traveling at the same constant speed or else it would be physically impossible for one to observe them instantly and simultaneously. Real surfaces are easy to spot because they are well lighted. Real light does not travel far from its source as can be confirmed by looking at the real stars, or a real lightning bolt. Reflected light needs to adhere to a surface in order for it to be observed, which means that real light cannot have a surface of its own. Real light must be the only stationary substance in the real Universe. The stars remain in place due to astral radiation. The planets orbit because of atmospheric accumulation. There is no space.

      Warm regards,

      Joe Fisher

        Joe,

        Thank you for reading my essay and thank you for incorrectly addressing me as doctor (I just have my Master's degree). I agree there is no space, because I can never find a parking space and you should see my office. Yes, everything is unique. My essay is about communication and how the physical world is represented. People who speak other languages do not use the same words for proper nouns as English. Yes, I am looking forward to reading your essay.

        All the best,

        Jeff

        Dear Jeff,

        Thank you for not reporting to Fqxi.org that my comment was inappropriate and by doing so have the Administrator classify it as Obnoxious Spam and remove it.

        Joe Fisher

        5 days later

        Dear Jeff,

        You begin by noting just what a strange and limited language is mathematics, with examples 'pass the salt' and 'watch out', etc. Your examples of Roman versus Arabic numerals somewhat parallels Donald Palmer's essay, where he points out that modern science and technology would not be feasible (possible?) without the decimal number system. Typically the actual numeric system in use is glossed over.

        I fully agree that counting (the physical implementation of Peano Axioms) leads to mathematics, producing the natural numbers and, per Kronecker, allowing man to build 'all the rest' of math. In my essay I elaborate on 'counters as key'. In one comment you ask "could counting exist without logic?" You seem to think yes, but in my essay I tend to think no. I view 'logic' not as mathematical argument, but as the basic fact of nature that allows AND and NOT gates to exist at every scale as fundamental physical structure, whether implemented at the level of protein, neuron, or silicon.

        What I really enjoyed was your speculation about "language" in terms of other species or senses, from echolocation to dog's sense of smell. You make a fascinating point, re dogs use of 'smell' to communicate 'Moon', that "the Moon does not have a smell, but Democrat and Republican states are not actually red and blue."

        Also like your statement "science cannot find truth, but can find understanding, and failure is an important tool in understanding."

        I invite you to read my essay and welcome your comments.

        Best regards,

        Edwin Eugene Klingman

          Mr. Klingman,

          I am looking forward to reading your essay, I am currently far behind on my reading. Thank you for reading my essay. There is no way to tell if counting can exist without logic since my would need logic to prove (or disprove) this point. Counting without logic seems impossible, but can you prove it?

          The idea that the Universe is built on "logic" or "mathematics" is the same as saying the Universe is built on the English language or images we see. You can not start with the assumption that the model is the thing itself. The model must be outside the system to prove the system. We might never be able to prove the Universe, but a useful model is a wonderful thing. You cannot map a forest while chained to one tree in that forest.

          All the Best,

          Jeff

          The date on this post is April fool's day and I am sure you posted this to all the other essays, but it did make me feel good. I wish I had as good of a review from a "real" post.

          Hi Jeff--

          I enjoyed reading your essay. You must have the best title of any essay in the contest. It is humorous and yet perfectly coveys the point of your message. Your distinction between mathematical and physical proof is exactly correct, in my opinion. As for non-logical communications, my guess is that's what Madhyamaka Buddhists (and others) think that they are doing when they meditate.

          All-in-all, congratulations!

          Best regards,

          Bill.

            Bill,

            Thank you for reading my essay. Too many essays to read and too little time to read them all. My essay is about our limits of understanding, which many find as a sad thing, but I think limits are interesting. Perhaps you have found a case of non-logical communication (one hand clapping), now prove it. I see your essay is climbing the ratings, best of luck.

            All the best,

            Jeff

            actually I had commented naturally, but the compliment to you in your view actually happened it to be a prank!

            Which I think a "real" april fool to you!

            - Best Regards,

            Miss. Sujatha Jagannathan

            5 days later

            Dear Michael,

            I think Newton was wrong about abstract gravity; Einstein was wrong about abstract space/time, and Hawking was wrong about the explosive capability of NOTHING.

            All I ask is that you give my essay WHY THE REAL UNIVERSE IS NOT MATHEMATICAL a fair reading and that you allow me to answer any objections you may leave in my comment box about it.

            Joe Fisher

            Jeff,

            Time grows short, so I am revisiting essays I've read to assure I've rated them. Some of us in retirement have the luxury of time. I find that I rated yours on 3/13, rating it as one I could immediately relate to. I hope you get a chance to look at mine: http://fqxi.org/community/forum/topic/2345.

            Jim