
Hmm, while I generally think that the universe is in absolute chaos, I think I'm getting to what you mean...Fist and Faith wrote:I don't agree. The principles exist, regardless of our observations and inferences. I'm convinced they exist, because I don't see how reality could be anything other than absolute chaos if there weren't any.
Sort of a "natural law" or at least, principle of physics, that keeps every electron in its orbit or whatever, down to far past the level that we can see at the moment.Fist and Faith wrote:...I'm talking about at the most fundamental levels possible; deeper than anything we've yet observed. We observe that quarks and gluons and all that jazz behave in certain ways. But why should it be so? Why doesn't a quark do X one day, and Y the next? Because some deeper principle guides it. If, all factors being equal, it randomly did different things at different times, where would we be?
I can understand that, sure. But a principle like that would have to be along the lines of "in every possible case", where, as I (admittedly only sketchily) understand it now, we can only say that we "think" that "usually" X happens because of Y.
Once we understand that "principle", we'll be able to account for the cases where it is not true?
Fist and Faith wrote:True enough.Avatar wrote:The difference between what is, and what we think is, is just another of those questions I guess.

--A