01-04-2005, 07:40 PM | #81 (permalink) | ||
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01-05-2005, 06:45 AM | #82 (permalink) |
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Location: Grey Britain
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1) Numbers do not exist in nature, they exist in our heads. any numbers we see in nature are an artefacft of the seeing, not the nature. They are a simple way of describing relations between measurements we make.
2) As Zdragva points out, the set of operations that generate the Fibonacci sequence are so elementary that it would be far better evidence of the existence of God if Phi didn't turn up in our measurements (which to be dimensionless have to be taken as ratios) all over the place. 3) Douglas Adams, a noted atheist, cited earlier, inadvertantly provides us with a perfect example of how you can see whatever you want, wherever you look. FOLLOW THIS LINK to see how.
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"No one was behaving from very Buddhist motives. Then, thought Pigsy, he was hardly a Buddha, nor was he a monkey. Presently, he was a pig spirit changed into a little girl pretending to be a little boy to be offered to a water monster. It was all very simple to a pig spirit." |
01-05-2005, 07:29 PM | #83 (permalink) | |
Psycho
Location: Virginia Beach, VA
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How clear is that?
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01-06-2005, 01:09 PM | #84 (permalink) | |
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Location: Ireland
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01-07-2005, 12:24 PM | #85 (permalink) | |||
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Additionally, why do you think that Phi so appealing to humans on a purely visual level? Conflicting wavelengths of light are not an issue, here. Humans did not evolve alongside pentagrams and golden rectangles, after all; assuming that natural selection programmed this aesthetic into human beings, how do you believe that it did so? What is so interesting to me is that Phi seems to underlie human aesthetics in general, not merely the aesthetics of a single area. I'll expound on this further, but I want to see your response first. --Mark |
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01-07-2005, 01:05 PM | #86 (permalink) |
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Mathematics is a limited way to describe nature - try counting a sub-atomic particle, it's impossible. It might be there, it might not - and as soon as you know whether it was there or not it's gone somewhere else (or has it?).
Physics and mathematics does a very good job of describing the universe in discrete terms that we understand - but we invented those terms, and chose how to define the boundaries between them. A feature of the universe is just that, a feature - something arbitrarily separated from the rest of nature by our minds. Mathematics help describe the relationships between those features we have deemed useful, but it's all invention piled on top of invention. It's real to us, but not necessarily so in the big scheme of things. Why is the ratio aesthetically pleasing? It would help an animal distinguish the diseased from the healthy. A potential mate with limbs not fitting the Phi ratio may well be deformed and hence poor breeding material. It's not to much of a jump to guess that a system evolved to express such a preference might be implemented as a more general liking for things that posses similar proportions. |
01-07-2005, 01:31 PM | #87 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Detroit, MI
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While I myself have zero aptitude for numbers, I appreciate the deep interest and ability some show for Mathematics.
We very well might still be living in caves if it weren't for the enthusiasm and vision of Mathematicians and Engineers. |
01-07-2005, 01:33 PM | #88 (permalink) | ||
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Location: Ithaca, New York
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Riddle me this. How do you know that human aesthetics is underlined by phi? Nono, I don't want a bunch of links, that's not my question. My question is this: Phi is irrational. There are an infinite number of digits in phi. In order to prove that human aesthetics is underlined by phi, you would need to measure "aethetic" qualities (whatever that means) out to an infinite precision. In actuality, I would say that any measurement you make can be argued, and it's accuracy debated. Why do you measure from the fish's eye to it's tail. Where on the eye? The pupil? The center of the pupil? To where on the tail? What counts as the end of the tail? How exact are your measurements? Down to the centimeter? To the milimeter? To the nanometer? It seems kind of ... irational, to me to say that phi exists in nature, when it is impossible to measure such things with the infinite precision necessary to prove the point. Maybe the ratios are acutally 1.61803398. Not a huge difference between that and Phi, but nonetheless, it isn't phi. Quote:
The human cochlea is shaped much like a conch shell. Perhaps the shape of the cochlea is also based on phi, so it makes sense that our music system may in some way also be based on phi.
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And if you say to me tomorrow, oh what fun it all would be. Then what's to stop us, pretty baby. But What Is And What Should Never Be. |
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01-07-2005, 01:48 PM | #89 (permalink) | |
Insane
Location: Ithaca, New York
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Here's an interesting point, from the original post:
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And if you say to me tomorrow, oh what fun it all would be. Then what's to stop us, pretty baby. But What Is And What Should Never Be. |
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01-07-2005, 05:10 PM | #90 (permalink) |
Psycho
Location: Virginia Beach, VA
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Well, if we agree about Phi-harmonic systems, then the recurrence of Phi everywhere is just an emergent property. There may or may not be a particularly good reason for it at progressively larger scales, but because it's Phi based on the lower levels, it's the default starting point.
As for why we'd use Phi based music rather than, say, e. Presumably, our ears are Phi based, so Phi based chords might set up nodes and standing waves at all the right places in our Phi based ears. e based music would also set up nodes and standing waves, they just wouldn't be in the right places, as far as out Phi based ears are concerned. It's a bit of a chicken and egg problem, honestly. And I don't actually know if Phi shows up in the structure of our ears. As for "Why Phi?" It could have some empirical advantage over e or 2^0.5 (haven't a clue how to go about evaluating that) or it could just be Phi was the first out of the gate, and the others, if/when they finally showed up, never really caught on or couldn't compete in the Phi-based environment. On to visual appeal... if we ignore the question of why Phi shows up in various biological ratios, and merely note that it does... Than a beautiful human, for example, one that was perfectly formed, would have Phi this and Phi that. So on some deep instinctual level Phi just looks right, because it means someone developed pretty healthily, has good genes, etc. And, being the smart apes we are, apply the same asthetic to our manufactured items. It could also be simple ergonomics. If the ratio of your thigh to your shin is Phi, then the ratio of a comfortable chair's seat depth to its height will also be Phi.
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01-08-2005, 06:48 AM | #91 (permalink) | ||
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Location: Grey Britain
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While the symbols are not the number, the number is not the dimension and the dimension is not the object. Consider a table upon which there is a bowl of water with a goldfish swimming in it. How many objects are there on the table? Is there one goldfish bowl, to show that there is only one God? Or do we have a bowl of water with a fish in it to show how God relates to us? No. Of course! There is a bowl, some water and a fish, to represent the Holy Trinity! Feh! Quote:
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"No one was behaving from very Buddhist motives. Then, thought Pigsy, he was hardly a Buddha, nor was he a monkey. Presently, he was a pig spirit changed into a little girl pretending to be a little boy to be offered to a water monster. It was all very simple to a pig spirit." |
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01-15-2005, 12:50 AM | #92 (permalink) | |||||||||||
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Truth be told, I think that sexual attraction and aesthetics are two functionally different things. I prefer bold, sharp corners, blacks, blues, and violets, and harsh contrasts in visual art, and the music I prefer (and compose) does not use lyrics. If aesthetics were merely sexual attraction, then I would prefer soft, round forms, pale peaches, magentas, and whites, and the sound of people talking to instrumental music. Why is music more aesthetically appealing to me than the sound of a woman's voice? To the best of my knowledge, the mechanism underlying sexual attraction is the same mechanism for hunger, and it is based on health, but this is different from Phi. The mechanism underlying artistic appreciation is different, and I think it is a by-product of our developing intelligence; you can read This Essay for a more thorough explanation of my position. --Mark |
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01-18-2005, 01:00 PM | #93 (permalink) | |
Tilted
Location: Fairbanks, Alaska
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I believe math to be everywhere as much as anything else is. The greeks and romans beleived that numbers were holy also and it prevented them (most often times) from exploring the extensions of mathematics. I am an Atheist I could care less if there was a god, for if there is one, he is natural and therefore not god to top it off if he is, he doesn't want us to know so it shouldn't relate to us eitehr way, if there isn't then it doesn't matter. Saying there is a god, it would make more sense that this is a blind study where he doesn't want us to act as if he's there. He wants us to act of our own voalition. To be honest many of the worlds greatest mathematicians and physics professors were religious. There is also a big difference between the scientific method and mathematical definitions. Math is not defined on what we see, merely on it's pre-ordained (or posibly soon revised) axioms. Then often times science can relate to math for help with verification. To be honest however I believe that it is entertaining that we are arguing the physical existence of Phi. There are many irrational numbers and often times they are found in very beautiful ways, this beauty though is not inherent, it is what we apply to it in trying to comprehend the idea of the value. Infinity is a difficult comprehension. I would also like to argue that infinity is not impossible in reality. I do not recall who claimed that an infinite amount of particles in a particle which are infitely smaller is not infinite. While it leads to the relation of infinity/infinity it could also be looked at as a 'simple' irrational number, could it not?
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Success is not the key to happiness. Happiness is the key to success.-Albert Schweitzer, philosopher, physician, musician, Nobel laureate (1875-1965) |
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01-18-2005, 04:15 PM | #94 (permalink) | |||||
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Oh, that's a shame; I let this sit for a few days, but there's been only one response.
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Religion, Science, and Rationality Field / % Religious Math-statistics 60% Physical Sciences 55% Life Sciences 55% Social Sciences 45% Economics 50% Political Science 51% Sociology 49% Psychology 33% Anthropology 29% (For the full table and discussion, see the URL) Fundamentalism and Liberalism: towards an understanding of the dichotomy There are also some similarities between what psychologists call the convergent style of thinking and fundamentalism while divergent thinking corresponds with liberalism. Convergent thinking focuses down from the general to the particular, dissecting and analysing. It prizes rational, deductive thought and aims towards certainty. It tends to be found among certain types of scientists and engineers in particular. Interestingly, we find that when scientists (especially from the physical sciences) and engineers become religious, they often tend towards fundamentalist religion. Quote:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agnosticism Agnosticism is the philosophical and theological view that the existence of God, gods or deities is either unknown or inherently unknowable. I am myself a proud Agnostic. Quote:
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--Mark |
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