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Nature
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Coleridge thought that everything that is meant by 'nature' - wind, sea, light, darkness, natural shapes etc. - is a form of God's language to us.
Would you agree?
Would you agree?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Mamya; //Nature is energy, how you interpret that is personal to you.//
Sorry but I don't understand that question, would you please re-phrase it.
Open question;
Does this 'Language' (if that is what it is) exist outside of humanity?
Is say, mathematics a mental invention, or does it exist in another order of reality independently outside of the human mind?
Sorry but I don't understand that question, would you please re-phrase it.
Open question;
Does this 'Language' (if that is what it is) exist outside of humanity?
Is say, mathematics a mental invention, or does it exist in another order of reality independently outside of the human mind?
mib. //mathematics is measurement.//
Of course that is one aspect of how it is used by us, but Roger Penrose - who is as good a mathematician as you can get - believes that mathematics is in someway embedded in the natural order of the universe, he believes it exists independently.
He doesn't go as far as Coleridge's poetry, in fact he's a (sort of) atheist, but asks, "is it all chance?"
Of course that is one aspect of how it is used by us, but Roger Penrose - who is as good a mathematician as you can get - believes that mathematics is in someway embedded in the natural order of the universe, he believes it exists independently.
He doesn't go as far as Coleridge's poetry, in fact he's a (sort of) atheist, but asks, "is it all chance?"
Maths would still exist if no intelligence was around to realise it. Why wouldn't it be ? On a planet with no animal life, just plants, a hill which has three trees growing on it and which experiences a storm where a lightning bolt hit one and burns it out of existence still leaves two trees (3-1=2) regardless that no mind is there to cause it. And so forth up towards the more complex maths.
OG; I think it goes a bit deeper than that; e.g. if you take 3 sticks. one 3 units in length, one in 4 and the other in 5, lie them on the ground conjoined, you will form a isosceles triangle which contains an angle of 90 degrees - not approximately, but exactly 90 degrees, which is also a quadrant at the centre of a circle, & so on & so on.
These laws exist universally not only for us now, but did so when Dinosaurs roamed the planet, these are the mathematics embedded in our world, in geometry & in patterns of growth in nature, the Fibonacci spiral in shells etc.
Penrose thinks so, & so, humbly do I.
These laws exist universally not only for us now, but did so when Dinosaurs roamed the planet, these are the mathematics embedded in our world, in geometry & in patterns of growth in nature, the Fibonacci spiral in shells etc.
Penrose thinks so, & so, humbly do I.