You seem to be missing most of the points being made by everyone. He was saying that because we know it to be true (regardless of how) it stands to reason that there is logic behind it and therefore possibly logically derivable.
Well I agree, of course, that it is not illogical and inferences and conclusions we make from observations should not unnecessarily violate logic - but that does not mean it’s derivable by pure logic without observation and I deny the possibility that it is so. I don’t know any way of doing that and neither do you. As he himself said, his argument has an *empirical *foundation
That is exactly what AnAtheist already said.
Yes – he and I agree that the fact that the speed of light is finite is an observation, not a question which can be settled by pure logic.
Asking for a number to represent infinity is a meaningless question and reveals a lack of mathematical knowledge.
And if the “universe were like this”, it wouldn’t be understandable at all, because it couldn’t exist at all. Light is made of the same substance as everything else. If it could travel at infinite speed, so would every other wave.
You really don’t get it, do you? We only know something about the nature of light, for example that it has wave-like properties because we have *observed *it to be the case. There is no purely logical reason absent observation why it must be so. You are relying on (misunderstandings of) physical optics and special relativity to come up with your argument, but neither of these are purely logical metaphysical pursuits. They are science and thus based on empirical evidence.
Why is it that people like you declare that because YOU cannot see the logic, “there is no logic”?
Why is it that people like you have difficulty in understanding what you read. I didn’t say there was no logic. I said that the things you claimed to know by
pure logic (ie that light must have a finite speed and what it is) *cannot *be known by pure logic. Everything, *everything *that we *know *about the nature of light has its roots in observations that we have built on with logical inferences and tested empirically. Without an empirical basis, we couldn’t begin to know anything at all about light.
I’m pretty confident that you wouldn’t read the book even if I already had it written, just out of utter disrespect
Well, I have to say that I have very little respect for people who know nothing about a subject, who don’t even know that they don’t know what they don’t know, but who adopt a patronising and didactic tone, and ridicule those who do know. For example, your absurd tirade against quantum mechanics on this thread is absolutely ill-informed, you reveal no knowledge of the subject at all, you don’t know why it was developed, you have no conception of the beautiful, useful, surprising, disturbing and accurately predictive discoveries and concepts in it, you misrepresent probability, quantum uncertainty and entanglement (Schroedinger, Bell and Aspect mean nothing to you) - and you have the gall to satirise someone like Leonard Susskind for giving an undergraduate course on quantum mechanics. Your failure to understand him is your failure - not his.
Alec
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