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Any other tips for interdisciplinary research in general?
it's too complex to begin with?
I'm interested in how intelligence emerges
If the human brain were so simple that we could understand it, we would be so simple that we couldn’t.
how logos emerges from intelligence
I mean it, I believe, in as broad a sense as it could be meant. All discourse, anything drawn, written or said. Tough, for me, to boil it down to a single articulation. Rationality would be a major, if not the major, tentpole. Perhaps it can be considered as the expression of intelligence? The voicing of order? Does it necessarily have to do with communication?Particularly, how logos parcels itself out into domains and subdomains, each taking a unique topic(s) and a unique mode of understanding. What kind of function can we map onto this parcelling? And where would such a function aim? Do these domains close in on perfection, or do they endlessly proliferate into subdomains?
do they endlessly proliferate into subdomains?
Quote from: constant escapedo they endlessly proliferate into subdomains?One of the more complex areas to analyse is the area of turbulence.- Turbulence has eddies- Which spawn smaller eddies- Which spawn even smaller eddies- Which all becomes horribly complexBut in essence, the behaviour on very tiny scales affects the overall behavior on large scales.- This is one of the unsolved problems in physics- And there is a $1 million prize hanging on a solution to one part of the problem (around the Navier-Stokes equations)See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turbulence#Examples_of_turbulence
Not that I want to shift the conversation in that direction, but are you using logos in the manner of Heraclitus to mean the principle of order and unity? Or the Stoics as the active principle of reason underlying the universe?I am not looking to discuss philosophy. I just want to get a better feel for what you are looking for in terms of useful material.
Bigger whorls have little whorlsThat feed on their velocityLittle whorls have lesser whorlsAnd so on to viscosity
The Millennium Problem I would love to see solved is Yang-Mills and the Mass Gap. It would tell us more about how the universe works and make it less messy and more orderly.
Quote from: Malamute Lover on 22/07/2020 17:03:28The Millennium Problem I would love to see solved is Yang-Mills and the Mass Gap. It would tell us more about how the universe works and make it less messy and more orderly.Possibly off topic but maybe worth considering:The inherent intellectual discomfort of the Big Bang is the idea of "something from nothing", that all the mass and energy of the universe appeared spontaneously with no precursor. Cyclic universes have some appeal but still seem to involve uncomfortable singularities that don't fit with observed physical laws. But suppose there are truly complementary entities with negative mass. We then have a "true universe" T with zero mass/energy, consisting of the observable universe U and an equivalent complement V. U particles ua, ub.... interact as observed, but the interaction of a u and a v particle is very different. They cannot coalesce because ultimately the gravitational force Gmumv/r2 is negative and unlimited, so unlike "conventional" uelectron and upositron antimatter interactions, for instance, they cannot mutually annihilate. But they can force each other apart, and the presence of any v particle between two u particles will result in the observable dispersal of the u's.Hence the inevitable observed expansion of U. We cannot observe any v, even though we can hypothesise its behavior. A v electron will have the same charge as a u electron, so will move in the same direction in an electric field, but as it will not interact with any u particle, we cannot detect it with U instruments!
positive mass-energy matter and negative mass-energy antimatter of the corresponding type would interact.
Quote from: Malamute Lover on 24/07/2020 16:56:43positive mass-energy matter and negative mass-energy antimatter of the corresponding type would interact.Only if they could approach and coalesce, which is prevented by their mutually repulsive gravitation.
The existence of black holes is evidence that "positive" gravitation ultimately dominates electrostatic repulsion, so it is reasonable to assume that negative gravitation will equally prevent the coalescence of electrically attractive particles of opposite mass.