I didn't say baseless, axioms are seldom that, they are usually so intuitive as to be considered self-evident, so I can't imagine a good reason for you to insert that word into the conversation.BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Nov 25, 2024 3:14 pmFlash, it’s not axiomatic; it’s hypothetic, based on centuries of empirical observation and scientific theory. The conservation laws—energy, momentum, charge—are not arbitrary assumptions but hypotheses rigorously tested and never falsified in any known context. If they were falsified, physics as we know it would collapse, so the framework is not baseless but empirically grounded.FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Mon Nov 25, 2024 2:57 pmThat's a statement of axiomatic assumptions. Nobody who is remotely versed in philosphy can take you seriously if you persist in denying this obvious fact.BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Nov 25, 2024 2:27 pm Before diving into any philosophical discussion with those who ask me questions and expect answers, I must ensure we're operating on the same foundational understanding of reality. I adhere to the scientific principle that everything that happens in the universe is caused by the exchange of conserved physical properties (such as energy, momentum, charge, etc.) through the application of the fundamental forces of nature—whether we currently identify them as four, five, or even six.
You are asking people to prove a negative.BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Nov 25, 2024 2:27 pm If you do not agree with this causal framework, I kindly ask you to present evidence refuting it before we proceed further. This is not meant to shut down dialogue but to establish a baseline for meaningful conversation. Without shared assumptions, we're likely to talk past each other, wasting both my time and yours.
As I have already mentioned, I am not particularly a phil of sci sort of person, but even I can see you lack sophistication in this area. It is now long past time for you to wake up to the idea that other people sometimes know stuff.
Here's a video about this subject matter. Somewhere in the middle he even mentions your precious conservation theories. It's only 5 minutes long, if you don't get it, find a longer video until you do. Leslie Allan - Assumptions Masquerading as Axioms But please don't misrepresent me, I am not relying on any of your axioms being untrue here, I can grant the conservation stuff if need be.
Not only is it easily possible for the axioms of science that you hold dear to be incomplete, but it is to be expected that they are. There is no reason at all not to suspect that among the many things for which you are yet to account can be something that explains choosing engines without recourse to spooky immaterials. It would be pure hubris to accuse me of undoing all of science by noting this when all I am doing is challenging the completeness of your axioms.
If you put me on your ignore list for this, then you are just weak.BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Nov 25, 2024 3:14 pm I’m not asking anyone to “prove a negative.” If someone rejects the causal framework of conserved physical properties, they’re free to provide evidence or reasoning showing where it fails. That’s the nature of science—it builds hypotheses, tests them, and refines understanding based on new evidence. What I’m doing is holding the discussion to a standard of evidence, not entertaining unsupported contradictions for their own sake. If you can show where conservation laws or causal principles fail, I’m all ears. Otherwise, this is just rhetorical noise. Refusal to comply with my terms will be considered yet another application to be transferred to my ignore list. If you can't engage with the premises I've laid out or provide evidence against them, there's no point in continuing the discussion.