A
Anselm33
Guest
As part of my learning curve to give a course on Catholic philosopher/theologians this spring, I’ve been reading about Aquinas. One little book in particular has caught my fancy, by Henry Margenau, a renowned mathematical physicist and philosopher of science, “Thomas and the physics of 1958; a confrontation”. In this he said that before the 20th century both empiricists (those who took everything by the evidence of the senses and then constructed theories to fit those “dial readings”) and idealists (those who constructed mathematical theories and fit the observations to those theories) could find common ground; you could make a transition from one point of view to the other. But now, according to Margenau, by virtue of the mysteries of quantum mechanics, you have to be either an empiricist or an idealist; they don’t automatically merge into each other as they did before 1901.
So that’s the point of this poll: are you (1) an empiricist (only sense data is to be trusted); (2) an idealist (the “Laws of nature are written by the hand of God in the language of mathematics” --Galileo Galilei) ; (3) the whole distinction is silly.
Please respond and comment, if you would, please.
Thanks,
Anselm
So that’s the point of this poll: are you (1) an empiricist (only sense data is to be trusted); (2) an idealist (the “Laws of nature are written by the hand of God in the language of mathematics” --Galileo Galilei) ; (3) the whole distinction is silly.
Please respond and comment, if you would, please.
Thanks,
Anselm