DaveC426913
Valued Senior Member
If one wants to go down the rabbit hole of what constitutes emergent behavior ... all things in nature are emergent from the consituent components of gluons and the four fundamental forces.
We do understand salt, it is what the electrons are doing. The universe wants to be neutral.You seem to be saying that an emergent property can be traced to the combined behavior/properties of its subunits. I'm saying it is more than that, at least in the case of strong emergence. It is more than the mere sum of the parts. My favorite example is salt. The two atomic elements of chlorine and sodium, which in themselves are highly reactive and dangerous, combine to create common table salt. The properties of salt, its distinctive taste, solubility in water, ability to conduct electricity when in solution, and crystal structure, are not present in its two elements either discretely nor in summation. They are entirely new and surprising properties. Do we really understand how this happens? No.. We may certainly say that they are caused by the combination of chlorine and sodium. But we do not understand how salt's emergent properties rationally or necessarily follow, in a lawlike fashion, from this reaction,. That's why I said in the op that this becomes a matter of how we ultimately define understanding something. Is it enough to say they are just the magical combination of their components, without knowing HOW that combination results in the given properties? Or is there more to be discovered?
You seem determined to stick to a wrong idea about what emergent properties are. I've already explained what emergent means twice now. Looks as if I need to do it a 3rd time.You seem to be saying that an emergent property can be traced to the combined behavior/properties of its subunits. I'm saying it is more than that, at least in the case of strong emergence. It is more than the mere sum of the parts. My favorite example is salt. The two atomic elements of chlorine and sodium, which in themselves are highly reactive and dangerous, combine to create common table salt. The properties of salt, its distinctive taste, solubility in water, ability to conduct electricity when in solution, and crystal structure, are not present in its two elements either discretely nor in summation. They are entirely new and surprising properties. Do we really understand how this happens? No.. We may certainly say that they are caused by the combination of chlorine and sodium. But we do not understand how salt's emergent properties rationally or necessarily follow, in a lawlike fashion, from this reaction,. That's why I said in the op that this becomes a matter of how we ultimately define understanding something. Is it enough to say they are just the magical combination of their components, without knowing HOW that combination results in the given properties? Or is there more to be discovered?
Gosh it's hard to put into 22 words. I suppose I would say something like: study of the behaviour and properties of substances and the reactions between them. But of course you will object I've offloaded a lot onto the term "substances".We do understand salt, it is what the electrons are doing. The universe wants to be neutral.
Electron "shells" want to be stable.
That is all chemistry is, electrons forming and breaking bonds.
If it is a very strong bond then they will sit there until a lot of energy comes along.
If exchemist only had 22 words to summarise Chemistry I would like to see his expert view
Even more concise than mine! I have a good one for Physics, fields and their associated particles and forces.Gosh it's hard to put into 22 words. I suppose I would say something like: study of the behaviour and properties of substances and the reactions between them. But of course you will object I've offloaded a lot onto the term "substances".![]()
Not quite fair account of all science, given there are fields like ecology or atmospheric science which often use a holistic approach to understand complex systems. This is also true of behavioral sciences.Science takes everything apart and reduces it down to its most basic components in order to understand it better. Which is essentially like extracting all the ingredients from a delicious homemade stew in order to understand it better. There is a distinctive character and "whatness" in the whole that is missed out on in the reductive analyses of its discrete parts.
Yes, that’s even worse than mine!Even more concise than mine! I have a good one for Physics, fields and their associated particles and forces.
That's not cricket!Yes, that’s even worse than mine!. I get the term “substances” to do a lot of heavy lifting, without defining it, but you go one better and use no fewer than three concepts that need a pre-existing understanding of physics to mean anything!
So I really ought to define what I mean by a substance, but you need to define a force, a particle (that most artificial and dodgy of idealised concepts) and most of all, a field.
Coming up with a definition that is not self-referential is quite tricky, especially for physics. I look forward to your definition of a field, especially!![]()
Not all fields are equal, some fall off with the reciprocal of the distance squared.The Higgs field is different and others, what about the DM Field?for physics. I look forward to your definition of a field, especially!![]()
Dave if you push me down this road trust me, I will come to Toronto and start a MAJOR leaflet campaign.
Perhaps do a few open mike sessions with my acoustic. Is that what you want? Is it?Dave if you push me down this road trust me, I will come to Toronto and start a MAJOR leaflet campaign.
But seriously how do you define what a field is in physics? It takes a least a paragraph, doesn't it?Not all fields are equal, some fall off with the reciprocal of the distance squared.The Higgs field is different and others, what about the DM Field?
I think we should ABBA behind us and move on. We all agree that English is pretty awesome but also spectacularly strange too.
Each point in space has a value (W4U don't you dare) with respect to that particular field at that time.But seriously how do you define what a field is in physics? It takes a least a paragraph, doesn't it?
It's some kind of latent property, spread out in space, with different values at each point. The property is latent as it is only actualised when some entity is placed in the field, which is subject to its influence. Or something. Er......
I took a basic physics class in college. On the first day my teacher defined mass as "stuff".Gosh it's hard to put into 22 words. I suppose I would say something like: study of the behaviour and properties of substances and the reactions between them. But of course you will object I've offloaded a lot onto the term "substances".![]()
A value of what, though?Each point in space has a value (W4U don't you dare) with respect to that particular field at that time.
A number. That relates to the particular field.A value of what, though?
Yes but a number denoting what quantity? What does the number at each point in space signify?A number. That relates to the particular field.