| Re: Does String Theory have any value as a TOE? -
02-13-2007, 04:38 PM
You may all be missing something very important about string theory. Though its physical and demensional constructions don't add up, it is a valid meta-math system to use in other places, and its ideas can be cross-corresponded to the sub-quantum advancement of our necessary understanding. If we look over our entire history, we will find many ruminations toward absurd ideas, from the first of the two infinities to the most recent of sub-quantum realities, but are they absurd? Are these the possible fragments of knowledge systems trying to build themselves into new languages, to describe itself? After long contemplation of these ideas, I see the possibility of a new sub-quantum language being developed from the fragments, and pieces of many areas of language. Just take the guage theories of -h, +c, and -0k, now, these are all pieces of a possible new sub-quantum logic language, that has been trying to develop ever since the Upanishads discussions of the primordial atom, to Zeno's paradoxes, to our present day Russell, Whitehead, and Godel schemes, or even Heisenberg and Einstein, etc. There is an entire history of humanity trying to develop and advance new languages, or linguistics, and I say the most important new language, that must be thoroughly developed is a new language of sub-quantum logic, or a new metaphysics, as that's what it is, of physics; then maybe we can describe the new philosophy of a TOE, compatible to the yearnings of all spiritists and scientists.
I say a new sub-quantum metaphysical logic language can be developed, compatible with all parties' yearnings, to unite spirit and science...
Regards,
Lloyd
p.s.
We must learn from all the absurdities, just as much as from all the facts and fads... "To develop the skill of correct thinking is in the first place to learn what you have to disregard. In order to go on, you have to know what to leave out; this is the essence of effective thinking." Kurt Godel "Time and space are modes in which we think and not conditions in which we live." Albert Einstein "The uncertainty principle is an absolute, finite, universal constant." L.G. "The tick-tick-tick of the cesium atom is a sliding-time-scaler constant of all finite universal motion." L.G. |