Engineer/Mathematician/Student. I’m not insane unless I’m in a schizoposting or distressing memes mood; I promise.

  • 6 Posts
  • 78 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
cake
Cake day: July 28th, 2023

help-circle


  • Idk if you’re American, but I am, so I’m using as the example.

    There are more empty houses in America than there are homeless people. There is more than enough wasted food to feed those who are starving.

    There are no shortages of our basic needs. There is only unrestricted greed of the rich. People die, not because the resources to keep them alive don’t exist, but because politicians value their wallets over the lives of their citizens.

    Furthermore, to address “other people’s stuff” This proposed scenario isn’t like capitalism, we aren’t forcing people to work so others can leech off their effort. We are building the infrastructure to support everyone by using everyone’s money. This stuff doesn’t belong to someone, it belongs to everyone. You participate in the system because you want the benefits and you get them just like everyone else.

    Lastly, arguments like yours usually come from people who don’t understand that many people actually like helping others. So, I’m here to tell you: lots of people actually like doing things to help others.

    If my government was trying to build infrastructure to help support my fellow citizens, I would volunteer to help. Most of my friends would too. And, if people no longer have to “be productive” on threat of death/destitution, they will be much more likely to do this kind of volunteering.

    On a related note, lots of infrastructure and cool inventions are built by people like that. You know, like this website we’re on right now, and the protocol that makes it work, and the software that most internet servers run on, and the operating system that your phone and computer’s operating systems are based on, etc.

    Most people like making things. We like creating things. Most people like to help others. It feels good to do good things. The limiting factor is not that people do not want to help others, but that, as things stand, taking the time to help others or create is wasting time that could impact your survival. Many people only care about capitalizing on their work because they need money to survive. If you remove that threat, you free millions of people from the chains that prevent them from sharing their effort and creativity with the world freely.



  • Sorry, the point I was trying to make is that we will be able to know if any statement that is testable is correct.

    I just wanted to clarify that your initial comment is only true when you are counting things that don’t actually matter in science. Anything that actually matters can be tested/proven which means that science can be 100% correct for anything that’s actually relevant.


  • Gödel’s theorem is a logical proof about any axiomatic system within which multiplication and division are defined.

    By nature, every scientific model that uses basic arithmetic relies on those kinds axioms and is therefore incomplete.

    Furthermore, the statement “we live in a simulation” is a logical statement with a truth value. Thus it is within the realm of first order logic, part of mathematics.

    The reason you cannot prove the statement is because it itself is standalone. The statement tells you nothing about the universe, so you cannot construct any implication that can be proven directly, or by contradiction, or by proving the converse etc.

    As for the latter half of your comment, I don’t think I’m the one who hasn’t thought about this enough.

    You are the one repeating the line that “science doesn’t prove things” without realizing that is a generalization not an absolute statement. It also largely depends on what you call science.

    Many people say that science doesn’t prove things, it disproves things. Technically both are mathematic proof. In fact, the scientific method is simply proving an implication wrong.

    You form a hypothesis to test which is actually an implication “if (assumptions hold true), then (hypothesis holds true).” If your hypothesis is not true then it means your assumptions (your model) are not correct.

    However, you can prove things directly in science very easily: Say you have a cat in a box and you think it might be dead. You open the box and it isn’t dead. You now have proven that the cat was not dead. You collected evidence and reached a true conclusion and your limited model of the world with regards to the cat is proven correct. QED.

    Say you have two clear crystals in front of you and you know one is quartz and one is calcite but you don’t remember which. But you have vinegar with you and you remember that it should cause a reaction with only the calcite. You place a drop of vinegar on the rocks and one starts fizzing slightly. Viola, you have just directly proven that rock is the calcite.

    Now you can only do this kind of proof when your axioms (that one rock is calcite, one rock is quartz, and only the calcite will react with the vinegar) hold true.

    The quest of science, of philosophy, is to find axioms that hold true enough we can do these proofs to predict and manipulate the world around us.

    Just like in mathematics, there are often multiple different sets of axioms that can explain the same things. It doesn’t matter if you have “the right ones” You only need ones that are not wrong in your use case, and that are useful for whatever you want to prove things with.

    The laws of thermodynamics have not been proven. They have been proven statistically but I get the feeling that you wouldn’t count statistics as a valid form of proof.

    Fortunately, engineers don’t care what you think, and with those laws as axioms, engineers have proven that there cannot be any perpetual motion machines. Furthermore, Carnot was able to prove that there is a maximum efficiency heat engine and he was able to derive the processes needed to create one.

    All inventions typically start as proof based on axioms found by science. And often times, science proves a model wrong by trying to do something, assuming the model was right, and then failing.

    The point is that if our scientific axioms weren’t true, we would not be able to build things with them. We would not predict the world accurately. (Notice that statement is an implication) When this happens, (when that implication is proven false) science finds the assumption/axiom in our model that was proven wrong and replaces it with one or more assumptions that are more correct.

    Science is a single massive logical proof by process of elimination.

    The only arguments I’ve ever seen that it isn’t real proof are in the same vein as the “you can’t prove the world isn’t a simulation.” Yep, it’s impossible to be 100% certain that all of science is correct. However, that doesn’t matter.

    It is absolutely possible to know/prove if science dealing with a limited scope is a valid model because if it isn’t, you’ll be able to prove it wrong. “Oh but there could be multiple explanations” yep, the same thing happens in mathematics.

    You can usually find multiple sets of axioms that prove the same things. Some of them might allow you to prove more than the others. Maybe they even disagree on certain kinds of statements. But if you are dealing with statements in that zone of disagreement, you can prove which set of axioms is wrong, and if you don’t deal with those statements at all, then both are equally valid models.

    Science can never prove that only a single model is correct… because it is certain that you can construct multiple models that will be equally correct. The perfect model doesn’t matter because it doesn’t exist. What matters is what models/axioms are true enough that they can be useful, and science is proving what that is and isn’t.


  • hihi24522@lemm.eetoScience Memes@mander.xyzscience never ends
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    15
    arrow-down
    2
    ·
    5 months ago

    This is false. Godels incompleteness theorems only prove that there will be things that are unprovable in that body of models.

    Good news, Newtons flaming laser sword says that if something can’t be proven, it isn’t worth thinking about.

    Imagine I said, “we live in a simulation but it is so perfect that we’ll never be able to find evidence of it”

    Can you prove my statement? No.

    In fact no matter what proof you try to use I can just claim it is part of the simulation. All models will be incomplete because I can always say you can’t prove me wrong. But, because there is never any evidence, the fact we live in a simulation must never be relevant/required for the explanation of things going on inside our models.

    Are models are “incomplete” already, but it doesn’t matter and it won’t because anything that has an effect can be measured/catalogued and addded to a model, and anything that doesn’t have an effect doesn’t matter.

    TL;DR: Science as a body of models will never be able to prove/disprove every possible statement/hypothesis, but that does not mean it can’t prove/disprove every hypothesis/statement that actually matters.



  • hihi24522@lemm.eetotumblr@lemmy.worldRight? RIGHT?
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    10
    ·
    5 months ago

    For fun I’m going to try listing as many Greek deities as I can from memory, this will pale in comparison to the real total but it will be fun nonetheless (I’ve probably made many spelling mistakes)

    1. Zeus, king of pantheon of the gods who rules the sky and weather etc.
    2. Hera, wife of Zeus… one of the goddesses of fertility? And peacocks?
    3. Poseidon, god of water and horses and earthquakes
    4. Hades, god of the underworld who has a helm of invisibility
    5. Persephone, daughter of Demeter and wife of Hades goddess of spring
    6. Demeter, goddess of agriculture
    7. Hermes, god of messengers and thieves, has winged shoes
    8. Dionysus, god of wine and festivities
    9. Aphrodite, goddess of beauty (born of the corpse of the father of the titans… Ourous?)
    10. Artemis, goddess of strategy …and the moon?(multiple weird birth stories but all from Zeus’s body if I recall)
    11. Apollo, god of the sun, son of Zeus
    12. Ares, god of war
    13. Phobos, demigod or lesser god of fear, related to Ares
    14. Demos, same as above but for “terror”
    15. Hephaestus, god of machines and husband of Aphrodite
    16. Hestia, goddess of the hearth
    17. Lethe, river in Hades and god of sleep
    18. Eris, goddess of chaos
    19. Prometheus, titan who defied Zeus to give humanity fire and got his liver ripped out by eagles indefinitely
    20. Helios, titan of the sun (having multiple deities for the same thing happens a lot)
    21. Kronos, titan of time
    22. Gaia, Mother Earth and mother of titans
    23. Nyx, goddess of poison? Treachery?
    24. Charon, ferryman/guide of the dead (id call him a deity since people give him “offerings”)
    25. Hercules, half human, became a god via golden apples after completing tests intended to kill him
    26. Europa, titan, i don’t remember, exploration? She’s the namesake of Europe though, also I think she’s the one who fucked Zeus when he was a cow or something.
    27. Vulcan, titan of fire? Volcanos?

    I don’t remember if Orion the hunter is just a hero/demigod or if he is a god. Same for Perseus.

    Damn. That’s less than I thought. Can I name all nine muses still?

    1. Calliope (voice)
    2. Erato (you know)
    3. Uterpe (joy? Also I feel like there’s another name but I only remember this one because it’s weird)
    4. Thalia (song? )
    5. Urania (poets?)
    6. Clio (history?)
    7. Polyhymna (geometry?)
    8. Melpomene (tragedy)
    9. … I want to say turpentine which is definitely wrong, but I think it does begin with turp- and she’s the muse of dance?

    Idk like half the muses are muses of song and there’s significant overlap in all of them if I recall correctly.

    Anyway it’s late so I’m going to bed, I’ll see how wrong I was when I woke up lol

    Oh also I have never played the game you mentioned but I have siblings who were very into the Percy Jackson books lol


  • Okay, so I’m definitely not the most knowledgeable hacker, but the issue with an active AI hunter, to hunt and kill instead of setting tarots, is that you’d have to actually create an AI capable of of hacking the scraper.

    This would mean tracing it back to the actual source and then hacking that source to destroy the scraper, and I’d bet that’s not an easy task even for a human.

    But yeah honestly, creating an AI capable of hacking and fucking up certain systems and then setting it loose on the net really could cause a Datakrash like event if it can replicate itself like a virus on the hardware it infects.

    Even better if you could find some way to have it mutate as it goes along but that’s pretty far fetched even for this already far fetched hypothetical.



  • Okay but see, in the case of CleanFlicks, that makes sense. It’s terrible because someone purposefully butchered it, not because it was a terrible film to begin with.

    Coincidentally, the family member I mentioned in my rant is still very Mormon and is the kind that wants VidAngel so they can watch movies like that.

    I remember watching Iron Man with them on it and yeah, you couldn’t really follow the movie at all. Plus, Iron man isn’t even that “inappropriate” to begin with, I can’t imagine how short an R-rated movie would be with the “filth” removed.



  • I definitely relate. I also kind of have this obsession with using only open source software which also tends to hinder my creativity because some of the open source alternatives to things have steep learning curves.

    Anyway, I think this is one of the things that makes me great at math but terrible at learning math. If something is complicated, I have to chew it down to the bone and then rebuild back to the original complicated thing.

    As such, I’m really good at doing all sorts of math and even have some of my own weird identities/constants memorized, but it takes me a lot of time and effort to learn new math from a textbook instead of (re)inventing it myself.


  • hihi24522@lemm.eetoAutism@lemmy.worldSo often...
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    23
    ·
    6 months ago

    Them: “Hey you seem a little unfocused today is something wrong?”

    Me using 90% of my focus to not say random thoughts out loud or pace or make weird faces because everyone will think I’m insane: “yeah I’m fine, just a little tired is all”


  • My family looks very white but my siblings and I joke that we must have got some our great grandfather’s Native American DNA because we don’t burn at all compared to our dad or other people we know.

    Strangely enough we don’t get very tan either, and if we do get tan it tends to flake off. I realize that does sound like a sunburn, but there’s no pain or redness, and it takes a while. Like we get slightly tan and then a week later we have dry skin that very slowly goes away and takes the tan with it lol



  • Out of curiosity what was the intent of this comment?

    1. To joke about it being irrelevant for most people to know how to fillet a fish
    2. To make a troll joke about filleting something ludicrous (like saying “can you post how to fillet a unicorn next?”)
    3. To make a sadistic joke about killing something that people empathize with more than a fish
    4. To make a vegan statement about how killing a fish and killing a dog should be seen as equally distasteful (no pun intended) as the murder of a sentient thing
    5. To ask a question because you legitimately would like to know how to fillet a dog

    No judgement, I’m just fascinated by the fact there are so many different reasons someone might post a comment like this.