Skepdick wrote: ↑Wed Feb 05, 2025 9:13 am
BigMike wrote: ↑Wed Feb 05, 2025 9:03 am
Skepdick, your entire argument is built on a
false dichotomy—as if understanding conservation laws somehow prevents us from conceptualizing social or economic progress. That’s just nonsense.
OK, cupcake.
BigMike wrote: ↑Wed Feb 05, 2025 9:03 am
The physical world operates under conservation principles, but
value,
innovation, and
social progress are
emergent phenomena within those constraints.
Well, yeah! Emergentism is precisely the escape hatch you need given the failure of reductionist physics in the social domain.
BigMike wrote: ↑Wed Feb 05, 2025 9:03 am
Economics and ethics are not about
creating something from nothing; they’re about
rearranging and optimizing existing resources
Sorry, I don't understand how you can "optimize" something somewhere without "deoptimizing" something elsewhere.
Conservation laws and all that.
BigMike wrote: ↑Wed Feb 05, 2025 9:03 am
conditions, and incentives to improve human well-being.
At the expense of...? You know - conservation laws. +5 here means -5 elsewhere...
BigMike wrote: ↑Wed Feb 05, 2025 9:03 am
The idea that conservation principles make value creation "impossible" is just your own misunderstanding of
how value actually emerges—through efficiency, knowledge accumulation, and systemic improvements.
Well, explain it to us then, genius. How does a nett positive emerge from a zero-sum system?
BigMike wrote: ↑Wed Feb 05, 2025 9:03 am
And let’s address this ridiculous claim that physicists and mathematicians are "social cripples" because they study symmetries. That’s the kind of
ignorant anti-intellectualism that people resort to when they don’t understand a subject but want to dismiss it anyway.
Except, you got that all backwards. I am dismissing precisely the subject I do understand.
I am dismissing it on the basis for its insufficiency and inapplicability to the social domain.
BigMike wrote: ↑Wed Feb 05, 2025 9:03 am
Symmetries don’t make asymmetries invisible—they help us understand when and why asymmetries occur.
Contradiction.
How could an asymmetry possibly occur?!? You keep insisting that conservation laws (symmetries!) are never violated.
BigMike wrote: ↑Wed Feb 05, 2025 9:03 am
You’re not arguing against physics; you’re arguing against a
cartoon version of it that you’ve invented because reality doesn’t fit your narrative.
I am arguing against abuse and misapplication of equational reasoning you have so thoroughly demonstrated.
Forcing the square peg of human affairs into the round hole of reductionist equational reasoning is a perverse form of anti-intellectualism. It's scientism.
Skepdick, your entire approach is just a desperate attempt to misapply conservation laws where they don’t belong. Yes, physical energy is conserved, but
how that energy is used and transformed matters. Almost all energy on Earth is
stored solar energy—the sunlight that powers ecosystems, fuels weather patterns, and, through photosynthesis, provides the foundation for life itself. That energy isn’t just static—it’s
harnessed, converted, and optimized to sustain and improve conditions here on Earth. Life
flourishes within physical constraints. It doesn’t mean we’re stuck in a zero-sum game.
Your "at the expense of what?" argument is just lazy. Efficiency gains, knowledge accumulation, and technological advancements don’t require "deoptimizing" something elsewhere.
Solar panels don’t steal energy from the sun—they harness it better. Scientific progress doesn’t erase old knowledge—it builds on it. Medicine doesn’t heal one person by harming another—it improves human well-being across the board.
You demand an example of how a net positive emerges from a zero-sum system?
Look around you. Civilization itself is proof. Every advancement, from agriculture to antibiotics to electricity, has expanded human potential without "violating" physics. You don’t understand the difference between
physical conservation laws and the
emergence of value from intelligent adaptation.
You’re not dismissing physics because it’s "insufficient"—you’re dismissing it because you
don’t understand how emergence works and it conflicts with your weak, reductionist take. You think physics is "just equations" when, in reality, it describes
why the universe produces complex, non-zero-sum interactions within conservation principles. You’re arguing from ignorance and pretending it’s insight.