- #36
OwlHoot
- 9
- 1
I'm not convinced a wrong turn has been made. I think theoretical physicists are, in their various and most likely equally sound ways, struggling with various ramifications of more fundamental and probably embarrasingly simple principles, rather as a number theorist might make heavy weather of some investigation of a polynomial before noticing that it could be factorized and that considering the irreducible factors makes the problem more amenable and perhaps even trivial, or some alien trying to analyze a chess game in its advanced stages without knowing all the basic moves, or even being aware that there is a set of basic moves.
If this is correct then the basic principles should eventually become evident almost inevitably by a process of working backwards and elimination, taking the intersection and common features of various plausible and consistent theories, rather as the basic principle of debugging software is that once sufficient information is available then the reason for the bug becomes obvious.
If this is correct then the basic principles should eventually become evident almost inevitably by a process of working backwards and elimination, taking the intersection and common features of various plausible and consistent theories, rather as the basic principle of debugging software is that once sufficient information is available then the reason for the bug becomes obvious.