yeah exactly. like the other commenter said, if you accept quantum physics the laplace demon is outdated because the thought experiment points out a problem/possibility in classical mechanics, but not in quantum, where it's not even about atoms anymore, and knowing things becomes very problematic. even the concept of time becomes different, non-linerar, where idk if you can even talk about past-present-future.
from a very pragmatic position: can a human brain know itself, even disregarding quantum states, just down to an atom? not even that. because to "know" anything a brain requires so many synapses, and those are made of i don't even know how many infinities of atoms
Well I can assure you that that's impossible. For example, there probably were entire cultures whose artifacts were primarily wood or clay-based. We'll never know enough about them because these materials have long decomposed, there's just nothing to compute or extrapolate, yet they existed and influenced future developments. We can know a lot and computers can help too, but it will never be a full picture.
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bc you have to observe it again after changing it to know about its new state, thereby never attaining total omniscience
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yeah exactly. like the other commenter said, if you accept quantum physics the laplace demon is outdated because the thought experiment points out a problem/possibility in classical mechanics, but not in quantum, where it's not even about atoms anymore, and knowing things becomes very problematic. even the concept of time becomes different, non-linerar, where idk if you can even talk about past-present-future.
from a very pragmatic position: can a human brain know itself, even disregarding quantum states, just down to an atom? not even that. because to "know" anything a brain requires so many synapses, and those are made of i don't even know how many infinities of atoms
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This is out of my depth. Is that what people in archaeology say these days, that they just need to do better mathematical models?
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Well I can assure you that that's impossible. For example, there probably were entire cultures whose artifacts were primarily wood or clay-based. We'll never know enough about them because these materials have long decomposed, there's just nothing to compute or extrapolate, yet they existed and influenced future developments. We can know a lot and computers can help too, but it will never be a full picture.
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