Category Archives: Fields of Science

The One-Body Problem

The traditional One-Body Problem is solving the equation of motion for a single body in space, often where the space has an energy potential, described by an equation, that affects the body. What’s artificial about this is that space and the potential surface are taken as one unified thing. Or the potential surface is changing slowly vis-a-vis the body motion. These are relatively tractable situations.

In reality the potential surface is determined by the interaction of the test body and all outside objects, with the material of space as the intermediary transmitting those interactions. So separate the potential surface from space itself, then are the solutions absolute in space or only relative to other outside objects (which together with the test particle, create the potential surface)?

The One-Body Problem, Classical Version: given an object/particle in space, can we know and/or does it have an absolute position and momentum (not merely relative to the rest of the objects out there)?

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The Paradox of Sports and Free Will

The paradox of sports

The paradox of sports is this: you need to believe you have a 100% chance of winning in order to have a 50% chance of winning. If you don’t believe in your heart that you’re going to win – not that it’s automatic, but that you have the right combination of talent, practice and divine favor – then you have little chance of winning.

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Does Free Will Exist?

According to classical physics, everything is causal. Though classical physics always allowed that spirituality, and possibly some aspect of life, were outside the realm of physics. To the extent those were part of thing, it was pretty much assumed that people had free will. That we could make decisions independent of physics, which was causal, or spiritual forces like good and evil, which were driven by supernatural beings or forces. Sure we were influenced by them, yet we had the ability to make free will decisions, and a thing called free will existed.

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The Soft Anthropic Principle

Question: Is there a reason the universe is the way it is, or is it just arbitrary?

A few of these attributes are: number and topology of dimensions (like space is 3-dimensional, not 2- or 4-dim), conservation of energy (energy can’t wax and wane, either arbitrarily or according to some rule), four forces and their properties (why not more or fewer forces; why gravity not both attract and repel, electricity only attract, etc), has the particles w/properties that it does.

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