Category Archives: Philosophical

Q: Do we have free will?

Physicist: If you want to get into an argument that drags on forever, you can frame a question like this in terms of consciousness, and the nature of choice, or any number of other ill-defined ill-understood ideas.  So consider only … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Paranoia, Philosophical, Physics, Quantum Theory | 13 Comments

Q: Is there a formula for how much water will splash, most importantly how high, and in what direction from the toilet bowl when you *ehem* take a dump in it ?

Physicist: If it weren’t for imponderables like this, we’d have finished science years ago.  During an “impact event” water generally moves outward to the sides.  What you really need to worry about is the dreaded “water spike”. Ejecta, spike, ejecta, … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Paranoia, Physics | 4 Comments

Q: What is the meaning of the term “random”? Can thinking affect the future?

The complete question was: 1 – When probability is invoked it commonly implies or states that something “will probably” or “is likely” to happen. Doesn’t this suggest that we can predict the future or just by thinking about it effect the … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Philosophical, Probability | Leave a comment

Q: Which is better: Math or Physics?

Physicist: Physics. Mathematician: Math, of course. Can physics do this? Physicist: Lasers, dude. Mathematician: Lasers, shmasers.

Posted in -- By the Mathematician, -- By the Physicist, Math, Philosophical, Physics | 65 Comments

Q: What’s the relationship between entropy in the information-theory sense and the thermodynamics sense?

Physicist: The term “Entropy” shows up both in thermodynamics and information theory, so (since thermodynamics called dibs), I’ll call thermodynamic entropy “entropy”, and information theoretic entropy “information”. I can’t think of a good way to demonstrate intuitively that entropy and … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Entropy/Information, Equations, Math, Philosophical, Physics | 12 Comments

Q: What the heck are imaginary numbers, how are they useful, and do they really exist?

Mathematician: Imaginary numbers arise quite naturally when you start asking certain basic mathematical questions. Probably the best example is the following: Once we know how to multiply and add, we might ask ourselves “are there any numbers x that satisfy … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Mathematician, Math, Philosophical | 19 Comments