"No one has ever seen or touched energy . . ." Davies and Gribbin, The Matter Myth.
Irrelevant. Nobody has seen or touched a neutrino either. But both are natural and detectable.
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"No one has ever seen or touched energy . . ." Davies and Gribbin, The Matter Myth.
State your argument like this:
P1: [. . . ]
P2: [. . . ]
C: Therefore, everything that exists is "natural".
Read it again. I didn't suggest this discussion is dangerous.If you think this discussion is dangerous then I question your ability to judge "dangerous".
One can detect neutrinos. There is no instrument that detects the conserved quantity known as energy.Irrelevant. Nobody has seen or touched a neutrino either. But both are natural and detectable.
So, you can't state an argument for the thesis of "naturalism"--but just aren't honest enough to admit it. You've got virgin Mary written all over your posts.See posts #162 and #177.
One can detect neutrinos. There is no instrument that detects the conserved quantity known as energy.
So, you can't state an argument for the thesis of "naturalism"--but just aren't honest enough to admit it. You've got virgin Mary written all over your posts.
Energy is calculated, not detected.Of course we detect energy! How do you think we figured out that it is conserved???
Calories are not a conserved quantity.Look up calorimeters sometime.
Like this:I just did. Look at the posts I mentioned. They give all the propositions required for the demonstration.
Energy is calculated, not detected.
Calories are not a conserved quantity.
Your saying knowledge of determinism can beat determinism, which I tend to agree, it can but knowledge isn't always enough.
Perhaps you are just deficient in information. Neutrinos have been detected:So are neutrinos.
Calorimeters detect heat, which is not a conserved quantity:So? The calorimeters still detect energy.
Perhaps you are just deficient in information. Neutrinos have been detected:
Cosmic neutrinos
Raymond Davis, Jr. and Masatoshi Koshiba were jointly awarded the 2002 Nobel Prize in Physics. Both conducted pioneering work on solar neutrino detection, and Koshiba's work also resulted in the first real-time observation of neutrinos from the SN 1987A supernova. These efforts marked the beginning of neutrino astronomy.[28] As of today SN 1987A represents the only verified detection of neutrinos from a supernova.
Neutrino - Wikipedia
Calorimeters detect heat, which is not a conserved quantity:
A calorimeter is an object used for calorimetry, or the process of measuring the heat of chemical reactions or physical changes as well as heat capacity. [. . .] A simple calorimeter just consists of a thermometer attached to a metal container full of water suspended above a combustion chamber.It is very helpful in the study of thermodynamics and the law of heat transfer but the value that comes from the calorimeter is always an approximated value because there is a slight loss or gain of heat during operation or through the wall of calorimeter.
Calorimeter - Wikipedia
BTW, we've been over all this before. You couldn't substantiate your claims then, and you still can't.
A person with nerve damage won't feel or see matter either, depending on which nerves."No one has ever seen or touched energy . . ." Davies and Gribbin, The Matter Myth.
Neutrinos have mass, and meet the definition of "matter". If you wish to argue that neutrinos are not "matter," it obviously won't help defend that thesis of materialism.And how, precisely, were the neutrinos detected? If you do a bit of reading, you will find that what we *actually* detect is a flash of light from a positron annihilating an electron.
No one denies that photons can be detected.In other experiments, we can detect the energy of the electrons or positrons and perhaps their paths.
The neutrino properties are *calculated* from the observations of the light and paths of the charged particles.
Now, I agree that this is a detection of the neutrinos. But in this case, we also detect the energy of reactions.
Correct. That's how we know that energy is not reducible to heat. Energy is a conserved quantity; heat is not.Heat is a form of energy.
Quote what I've actually said.Your claim that energy is something separate from matter
Energy is a conserved quantity; "matter" is not. Right?"Energy" is tied with "matter"
The fact that no one has seen or touched energy has nothing to do with nerve damage. Energy is a quantity.A person with nerve damage won't feel or see matter either, depending on which nerves.
Neutrinos have mass, and meet the definition of "matter". If you wish to argue that neutrinos are not "matter," it obviously won't help defend that thesis of materialism.
Are they matter? Besides, the question was whether neutrinos can be.No one denies that photons can be detected.
Correct. That's how we know that energy is not reducible to heat. Energy is a conserved quantity; heat is not.
Quote what I've actually said.