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Khandro | 17:11 Fri 04th Oct 2019 | Religion & Spirituality
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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?
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Sounds full of wind.
Nature is nature... I guess it depends what you mean by "God "? They seem to be opposites.
Given that Coleridge was usually high on opium, it might not be too wise to take anything he proclaimed too seriously!
Nature is energy, how you interpret that is personal to you.
Naaaaah! What language would dat be den?! BTW, has PP been on here lately?
He is still recuperating so not posting often.
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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?
I'd be inclined to wager someone will disagree with this but mathematics is measurement.
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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?"
Grecians and Egyptians used lots of mathematics construction as did the Romans.
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In fact some mathematicians can wax lyrical too;

"When God sings to himself, he sings algebra."

Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz
Khandro at 21:46 Fri, Mamyalynne didn't ask a question. She gave her opinion.

No, I wouldn't agree that 'God' is speaking to us through nature which is what your question appears to suggest. Who or what is 'God'?
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.
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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.
Khandro, your example is not an isosceles triangle, it's a right-angled triangle. I'm not sure why its existence implies the existence of a god.
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Correct, sorry
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The right isosceles triangle is half of a square bisected diagonally - another universal law.
K, I'm not sure that drawing a diagonal across a square to produce two isosceles triangles is somehow related to a law. It's surely a simple fact arising from the definitions of a square and an isosceles triangle. A law implies a law-giver, a fact simply exists.
K you will end up with another right angled triangle.
Tony, yes, and both are isosceles.

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