Thursday, February 18, 2010

What Happened To Denise Milani Com?

The theory influences observation

Heisenberg said, "What we observe is not nature, but nature exposed to our method of research."
Kant, moreover, states that the noumenon or be itself remains beyond our knowledge because we can only know through a priori forms ordering the material of sense impressions.

is important to note, that there is no confusion, neither Kant nor Heisenberg are at a psychological standpoint. Both speak of knowledge itself or the object known.
In mechanics quantum, this idea has been formalized as the "Copenhagen interpretation" of quantum action: "A probability function does not prescribe a certain event, but describes a continuum of possible events until a measurement interferes with the isolation of a single system event is updated. " The Copenhagen interpretation eliminates the correlation one-on-one between theory and reality, which does not mean or anything, that reality exists independently of the observer, but our perceptions of reality are influenced by the theories with that we examine.
This is something we have all experienced and we need to Kant or quantum physics to see for ourselves. If you look at how we function in everyday life, we will find a multitude of anecdotes to prove it.
To put a historical and well documented example: When Columbus arrived in America thought that came to Asia. We know that one of the most sought after in his expedition were the spices, so as he came into contact with the Indians (also this term is an example of what we speak) taught cinnamon to tell them I was interested in her . Then they showed him a crust that smelled like cinnamon, leaving him convinced that it was cinnamon when it was not; and so many other plants. The theory was that Columbus was in Asia and then his comments confirmed it. To that extent the theory is powerful. But not to the point of turning ishpingo yarinacu or in cinnamon.

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