Back to Nick, 

This business of, out of the variety of frames and points of view that could be 
taken on anything, gradually making it clear that a certain PoV is the center 
of a concept, and then requiring that we “get used to” seeing the concept 
through that point of view, is indeed what the sciences should be doing.  Your 
point below is a great point of departure to try to articulate this process.  
There is no respect for our having had categories since antiquity and having 
habits of seeing the world through them.  Sometimes one of those categories is 
usable as it has been; other times a new category needs to come into the world 
of thought and understanding.  At its best, science, like nature, doesn’t care 
whether we happen to be comfortable with something because we have been used to 
it from the past.  So it’s a nice mix of sometimes-it-is, sometimes-it-isn't.
For the case of solids, the way it is currently framed as “the central point” 
is in terms of symmetries, specifically directions in space:

If I have a liquid, I can put a paddle in the liquid.  If I then twist the 
paddle (let’s say, I twist it gradually and in no particular hurry; we can then 
split hairs for hours at a blackboard about how gradually and what depends on 
that; we have math that handles all that just fine), there will be no restoring 
force from the liquid, which if unopposed will return the paddle to its former 
position.  The new position is equally good as a rest position, as the old, and 
it is their equivalence that we term a symmetry under rotations in space.

In contrast, if I have a solid, I can likewise embed a paddle in that (by 
whatever means).  If I twist this second paddle at the local point where it is, 
but leave the extended bulk of the solid unchanged out at remote locations, 
there will be a restoring force moving the paddle back to the position it was 
in when I embedded it and before the twisting.  All directions are no longer 
equivalent, and a symmetry under rotations in space no longer characterizes a 
specific state of the solid, the way it did for the liquid.  There are various 
names for this in the jargon, which do not matter at all.  If I were to use any 
of them, you would latch onto its psychological implications, so I will not do 
that, and rather will just describe in plain language what I actually mean, 
which is the full and entire meaning I intend to render for the concept anyway. 
 

There are consequences that one might not expect from this difference between a 
state’s manifesting a symmetry and a state’s no longer manifesting it.  In a 
liquid, there will be only one kind of sound, which we call “compressional” 
because it involves the direction-un-regarding relation between inertia and the 
pressure of compressing the volume in which some matter is contained.  In a 
solid, there become two distinct modes of sound: the compressional one is still 
there, but now there is a mode of sound that comes from the interaction of 
inertia with the restoring forces against shear deformations, which are related 
(through mathematical constraints) to the restoring forces under twisting 
mentioned above.  This is why earthquakes have P and S waves (Pressure and 
Shear).


I didn’t wade into the traffic on laws a few days ago, because I had stuff I 
had to do and that restrained my behavior, though I did want to.  But what the 
hell, now….

Again, one can choose a jargony plain language that invites all sorts of 
missings of the point, or one can choose plain languages that is meant to 
discourage such missings.  I didn’t know Hewel, but he sounds like he was a 
joyful pusher of catnip to psychologists.

Here is some alternative language for what a physical law is, that is not meant 
to tempt psychologists into going astray (though of course, they are 
responsible for themselves, too):

A law is a description of a pattern that can be framed within a very partial 
description of nature.

Imagine that there were no laws in the conventional sense we have now; what 
would we be left asking from a “science”, if it were even possible?  The most 
we could hope for would be statements of the form “If A then B”, where A and B 
would have to be full and complete articulations of the state of the universe.  
(Whether those would then have to be “at different times” to be 
non-tautological, or whatnot, would raise all sorts of problems.  But since 
they are impossible in any case, at least we don’t have to deal with those 
questions today.)  Such full-and-complete if-then statements would only be 
within reach of the mystics, and ordinary people like me would be completely 
unable to do anything with them, or even know what they were.

What we actually have, in laws, is also statements “If A then B”, but A and B 
can be very limited characterizations.  For instance: 

A might be “If an object is in a state that has a definite momentum (a decision 
we arrive at by various cookbook methods of measurement, experimentation, and 
whatnot), and if there is a symmetry among positions in space,…” 

and then 

B might be “… then the value we can compute for that momentum (by the cookbook 
methods of measurement, experimentation, and whatnot) is the same at all 
moments in its history when we might make such an assignment”.

Whether the object is a hockey puck, or an Evangelical Who Knows the Glory of 
God, or a heathen, or a psychologist, doesn’t need to be entered into A or B, 
if their scope is properly captured in the way they are said.

Some of the If A then B statements are about different times, and have 
different conditions of (B conditionally independent of other things given A) 
structure, to which we attach different categories of causation.

But others need not be about different times, but can be about articulating 
what makes a certain pattern its kind of pattern and not some other.  For 
instance:

A might be “if an object is of the kind we want to refer to as an atomic 
nucleus…”

and then 

B might be “… then that object is a condensed state of quarks and leptons, with 
various more-or-less-evanescent order in terms of nucleons (protons and 
neutrons), pi mesons, etc., which is characterized in such-and-such a way by 
some mathematical descriptions of the strong forces and the quarks and leptons.”

This statement isn’t particularly about differences in time, though it has 
implications for differences in time; it is equally about “any nucleon 
anywhere”, so it is an assertion about the nature of matter anywhere matter 
might be existent in the universe, and (through the way the math is built out) 
its relation to whatever we mean by “the vacuum” of “spacetime”.  

For this second one, we aren’t even talking about “cause” in the ordinary 
senses in which the term is used for dynamics.  Whether one might want, in any 
given conversation, to say that the laws of the strong interaction “cause” the 
nature of nuclei to be what it is seems like a spurious attachment that adds 
nothing to the descriptive account of what one means by “nucleus” within the 
general system of things computed from the laws of the strong interaction.  I 
prefer, in such cases, not to inject terms like “cause” that do no constructive 
work in the law, so that I can reserve the terms for other more specific uses, 
in the way Judea Pearl does in his book on causation, where he wants to refer 
to a specific structure of conditional independences as the pattern for the 
term.

And so on.  

My point in the above tedious articulation (with apologies) is that, while 
various psychologistic language could be used to try to gesture at one or 
another law to give metaphorical access to it, the law doesn’t need the 
psychologistic language, as attested by the possibility to choose other 
language not employing any one or another combination of psychologistic terms 
and frames.

I would contrast those cases above, which avoid the agentive terms that were in 
some of the earlier traffic, with characterizations of patterns we might want 
to make in psychology or at many other levels in biology, where the nature of 
the pattern seems to need some distinct term to refer to it, and agentive terms 
are very good ones to use for the way they embed into the system of our other 
characterizations of patterns.  The agentive terms do quite specific and 
irreplaceable work in the characterization of the pattern.

All best, 

Eric



> On Aug 16, 2024, at 22:46, Nicholas Thompson <thompnicks...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> I feel like, to you guys, my mind is like an old coil of sticky fly paper 
> that has gotten dusted over. It has a bunch of dead flies stuck to it, and 
> they are gray and dry, but it is incapable of capturing any  new flies. 
> Anyway, I fear that that is the case.
> 
> So, in the spirit of scraping up one of my dead flies, I would like to point 
> to something in Eric’s discussion of the difference between being a fluid and 
> being a solid. To the extent that I can entertain essentialism, I would say 
> that the essence of being a solid is not the molecular lattice, but how 
> solids behave. That the behavior solidity is harder to define then the 
> description of a molecular lattice, or whatever, doesn’t make it any less the 
> essence of the concept of solid. Since I am not an essentialist, i can 
> concede that the essence of solid can migrate through discourse and time from 
> the behavior of solids to the lattice — the hankering beyond the facts can 
> get displaced. The only thing I would hang onto with old flypaper stuckitude 
> is that the lattice cannot be at one time and in one sentence what it is to 
> be a solid and what explains solidity.  You can either have the satisfaction 
> of defining solids by their latticity or explaining them because they are 
> lattices, but you cannot have both. Everything else is negotiable.  Nick.
> Sent from my Dumb Phone
> 
> On Aug 15, 2024, at 12:54 PM, Jon Zingale <jonzing...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> cannot.
> 
> I spent a bit of time in my early twenties hitchhiking throughout North 
> America, which often led to traveling between American festival culture loci. 
> While I feel my orientation/attitude traveling was a bit misguided and overly 
> ascetic, I witnessed enough to recognize how the awe-filled spiritual
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