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/sci/ - Science & Math

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>> No.12697157 [View]
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12697157

Time isn't relative in your everyday life. It's reasonable to assume you'll never as a physical object experience deformation under general, nor special, relativity; only interact with it's effects through technology and physical phenomena.
Also, the objective world question is very /lit/. It's clear for any rational human being that some parts of reality are shared as objective, but there are lot of problems with our empirical, physical inductive inferences. Heck, even Jesus talks about it. Even before that, our deductive foundations of math and formalized thinking is in itself not rigid, even though it rests on a more secure ground. The world is semi-objective, in the sense that every individual's deductive and inductive mechanisms are never directly identical, in the sense of either non-isomorphic mathematical foundations (of which only some are reasonable of course) or interpretations of sensory phenomena for instance.
The fluidity of this isn't too startling, unless you are mentally ill or very stupid for instance.

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