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- Path: sparky!uunet!comp.vuw.ac.nz!waikato.ac.nz!canterbury.ac.nz!math!wft
- Newsgroups: sci.math
- Subject: An advertisement. ;-)
- Message-ID: <1992Aug20.123347.422@csc.canterbury.ac.nz>
- From: wft@math.canterbury.ac.nz (Bill Taylor)
- Date: 20 Aug 92 12:33:43 +1200
- Distribution: world
- Organization: Department of Mathematics, University of Canterbury
- Nntp-Posting-Host: math.canterbury.ac.nz
- Lines: 46
-
- I warmly recommend a recent article that appeared in the "New Scientist".
-
- Although it has more to do with science in general than math in particular,
- a recommendation will not be out of place here, as the article concerns the
- issue of how far science and math may go toward explaining "everything".
-
- It is....
- "WILL SCIENCE EVER FAIL"
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ by Peter Atkins; New Scientist, 8 Aug. '92
-
- It is written partly in reply to a (slightly) anti-scientific article appearing
- the week before by Mary Midgley. (I only read the first paragraph or so of
- this earlier article, but I may go back and complete it now!)
-
- IMHO, Atkins' article is a must for all who are interested in the limits of
- scientific endeavour, or in the ongoing conflict between science and religion.
-
- Warning: those of a religious disposition may find the contents offensive !
- ======= To whet your appetite I will offer a few quotes.
-
- "There is room for ... fear, for those who seek to found their lives on the
- vapourous precepts so favoured by religion...."
-
- "Religion claims total understanding, but fails to deliver anything but
- sweet words; science claims cautious progress, and is able to demonstrate
- success at every stage."
-
- "Happily, science will continue despite the cantankerous efforts of
- philosophers to thwart its progress. As it does so philosophers will have
- to strike camp every few years and rush along to comment on what has been
- achieved by scientists working in the fray of discovery."
-
-
- Needless to say, not all of the article is so feisty. Although not technical
- in content, it is a thoughtful and authoritative account of the scientific
- endeavour of humankind; an optimistic review, and prognosis, of what has been
- and may be achieved by science, backed by mathematics.
-
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- Bill Taylor wft@math.canterbury.ac.nz
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Free will - the result of chaotic amplification of quantum events in the brain.
- Galaxies - the result of chaotic amplification of quantum events in the big bang.
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