PSI
Blog 20211011 Are Extra-Euclidean dimensions falsifiable?
This week's book prize goes to Steve Puetz for his question
on Extra-Euclidean dimensions:
“Hi Glenn,
Regarding a "Dimensionality"
assumption - All matter and space within the universe has three dimensions
(3D), generally referred to as length, width, and height. (It's opposite is
non-3D, multidimensional.)
{This might be close, but I don't see where
religions propose non-Euclidean dimensions. I think those are ad hocs, which I
don't see as appropriate for fundamental assumptions.}
The problems that I foresee are twofold:
1) In fact, many theoretical physicists
propose that the universe has 4, 6, 8, or 11 dimensions, etc. Just perform a
Google web-search on "dimensions of the universe" and you will find
141 million items.
2) More importantly, none of the original 10
assumptions prohibit these non-3D theories, as far as I can tell. We need
some way (either from the 10 assumptions, or a new assumption) to prohibit
these theories, when embracing the neomechanical worldview.
Regards,
Steve”
[GB: The
fundamental assumption that forbids extra-Euclidean dimensions is the
First Assumption of Science, materialism (The external world
exists after the observer does not). Its opposite is the First Assumption of
Religion, immaterialism (Material things have no objective existence,
strictly being products of consciousness). This dichotomy is so stark that most
philosophers find ways to soften the blow. Another way of stating this
irrevocable opposition is through the concepts of reality vs. ideality.
Reality vs. Ideality
Reality concerns the external world and ideality
concerns the inner world. As Einstein characteristically said “Imagination is
more important than knowledge.”[1] Realists
assume only the external world exists, containing material things (i.e., XYZ
portions of the universe), while idealists assume their dreams and imaginings
exist. Thus, while materialists and realists are constrained by the three
dimensions supported by observing or experimenting with everyday objects,
immaterialists and idealists are not. They can have as many “dimensions” as their
math or thoughts can manage. As long as these imaginings remain microcosmic,
that is, present only in brains, they are not amenable to falsification.
However, whenever these are communicated to the macrocosm (outside world) they
are subject to falsification just like any other claim made about the external
world. That is why scientific tests of prayers always result in falsification.[2] On
the other hand, scientific idealizations can escape that fate because they may
give some semblance to things that actually exist in the universe. For
instance, ideally the Moon is spherical, while in reality it is an oblate
spheroid just like Earth. The match between scientific idealization and reality
is never perfect because the universe is infinite. Scientists expect slight
variations like that, while the non-scientist imbued with the Ninth Assumption
of Religion, absolutism (Identities exist, that is, any two things may
have identical characteristics) might not.
Falsifiability and Myth
Here is an interesting blog entry by David Galston on
falsifiability and religion:
http://www.questcentre.ca/blogs/view/falsifiability-and-religion
“Does falsifiability apply to religion? Philosophers
of religion have loved this question, and have loved to answer this question
with both a "yes" and a "no." On the yes side are those who
will say that evolution does indeed prove creation is false. Or, in another
way, the theory of creation is falsifiable and has been demonstrated to be false.
We can verify that the earth is about 4.5 billion years old and this
verification falsifies the claim that the earth was created about 6,000 years
ago.”
“There is, however, a problem with claiming that
creation like evolution is falsifiable. The problem is that on this level
creation and evolution are both accepted as science. So, philosophers of
religion will also answer our question with a “no.” Creation is not subject to
falsification because it is a myth that belongs to a religious belief system.
Creation-language is a separate language-game from scientific evolution. It’s
not possible to apply the rules of science to a myth.”
Extra-Euclidean Dimensions as Symptoms of the Coming
Demise of Regressive Physics
Similarly,
extra-Euclidean dimensions, being
purely imaginary, cannot be falsified because they are not properties of real
objects. There have been attempts to bring those imaginings into the external
world through “reification” or “objectification,” that is, by considering motion
as matter. That was Einstein’s most important mistake.[3]
Time is motion. Time is not an object; it is what
objects do. It does not exist, it occurs. The "4th dimension" in GRT
stems directly from Einstein's sleight of hand substituting "l"
(length) for "t" (time) in SRT. That has nonetheless been acceptable
to idealists not concerned with illegal category switching--as long as it
confirms their long-standing imaginings. "String Theory," which
involves up to 26 so-called "dimensions" has not been, nor will it
ever be, supported by observation and experiment. Even regressive physicists
such as Lee Smolin have doubts that it will ever result in objective
predictions.[4]
The upshot: Extra-Euclidean dimensions are imaginary. Like
gods, heaven, and hell, they are not testable parts of the external world. They
are not falsifiable because they do not exist.]
[1]
Viereck, G.S., 1929, What life means to Einstein:
The Saturday Evening Post, October 26, p. 17, 110-117.
[2]
Masters, K.S., Spielmans, G.I.,
and Goodson, J.T., 2006, Are there demonstrable effects of distant intercessory
prayer? A meta-analytic review: Annals of Behavioral Medicine, v. 32, no. 1, p.
21-26. [10.1207/s15324796abm3201_3]. See also: Borchardt, Glenn, 2020,
Religious Roots of Relativity: Berkeley, California, Progressive Science
Institute, 160 p. [https://go.glennborchardt.com/RRR-ebk].
[3]
Borchardt, Glenn, 2011, Einstein's most important
philosophical error, in Volk, Greg, Proceedings of the 18th Conference
of the Natural Philosophy Alliance: College Park, MD, Natural Philosophy
Alliance, Mt. Airy, MD, v. 8, p. 64-68 [10.13140/RG.2.1.3436.0407].
[4]
Smolin, Lee, 2007, The Trouble with Physics: The
Rise of String Theory, the Fall of a Science, and What Comes Next, Mariner
Books; Reprint edition, 420 p.
1 comment:
a fundamental philosophical position, I believe, is that one cannot prove or disprove something unknown at this time. It could happen in the future if no proof or disproof at this time.
George
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