I disagree, Dr. Dick.
Quoting:
"The view of "reality" I present consists of a random presentation of random information (in essence, no rules what-so-ever)."
Randomness is a myth.
As I showed in another post (and my analysis digs deep into your corner-stone of "adding unknown data"), your whole paper hinges heavily on "complementarity"; it is saturated with implicit rules! Whenever you "add "unknown data" to "make something unique": your sets and your added data are required to be complementary in very specific ways. I proved this and I doubt you can refute it!
And I also showed that your sets were internally known to each other by your process (to be uniquely associated with something is surely to "know" it?)
Quoting: "In such a picture, consistency doesn't even have meaning. The consistency is in the explanation of the information, not in the information."
"Information", to exist at all; can not be contradictory (self-anihilating). Or it would not exist. However, a PERSPECTIVE on information may be only partial, and potentially be dismantled when other clarifying information comes to hand.
Quoting: "This picture cannot be force fit into anyone's model; not so long as they believe that reality has "rules"."
Who said "rality" has any rules other than to exist is to exist?
Quote: "No one, save myself, has ever attempted to examine the consequences of such a reality (as to do so is to invite ridicule). Chapter one is an attempt to show that such a picture is not ridiculous. The rest of the paper is an opening attempt to predict the consequences of such a picture of reality. Thus, unless they can follow the math, the rest of the paper is totally beside the point. "
You might be claiming that: when a scientist talks of scientific reality he uses definitions based on the past to predict the "future". And that the laws of physics are inherent in the re-assignment of these definitions, within the allowed-for "future" possibilities of inter-dependence and partial differentiation of those definitions. Such that the scientists belief of actually predicting the future may be an illusion exposed by you as a statistical conjuring trick?
You might not be correct though (the "fallacy of equivocation" haunts your work?)
Quoting:
"For the most part, I have no hope of ever really reaching anyone."
All you need to do is have a sustained conversation in good faith with other people who are interested in doing likewise.
Quoting:
"My thoughts are far to alien to even be considered by others."
They do consider your thoughts; please consider their considerations!
Regards,
dolphin |