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- From: ABPD103@UCSVAX.UCS.UMASS.EDU (John F. Donoghue)
- Newsgroups: talk.origins
- Subject: Re: uniformitarianism doesn't rule out catastrophes
- Date: 21 Jan 1993 14:34:05 GMT
- Organization: UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS - AMHERST
- Lines: 30
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1jmc8tINN9ep@nic.umass.edu>
- References: <schlegel.726906621@cwis^ <206@fedfil.UUCP> <1765@tdat.teradata.COM> <1993Jan21.125825.13667@news.nd.edu>
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- In-Reply-To: scharle@lukasiewicz.cc.nd.edu's message of 21 Jan 93 12:58:25 GMT
-
- In <1993Jan21.125825.13667@news.nd.edu> scharle@lukasiewicz.cc.nd.edu writes:
-
- > In article <1765@tdat.teradata.COM>, swf@tools3teradata.com (Stan Friesen) writes:
- > ...
- > |> The epistemically *correct* formulation - the only one that can be defended as
- > |> a valid assumption, nay, a necessary assumption, of science - is the much weaker
- > |> formulation that the physical laws that describe the processes operating in
- > |> nature have not changed over the past.
- >
- > Isn't it true that certain laws of uniformitarianism, so to speak,
- > are mathematically equivalent to corresponding conservation laws?
- > For example, that the universe is the same over all locations in space
- > (isotopy?) is equivalent to the conservation of energy, or that
- > uniformity over time is equivalent to conservation of ...? Or are we
- > talking about completely different things?
- >
- > --
- > Tom Scharle |scharle@irishmvs(Bitnet)
- > Room G003 Computing Center |scharle@lukasiewicz.cc.nd.edu(Internet)
- > University of Notre Dame Notre Dame, IN 46556-0539 USA
-
- You are close. The equivalence of the laws of physics at all points in
- space and time gives rise to the conservation of four-momentum, or in
- the pre-relativity language, energy and ordinary 3-d momentum. The
- equivalence of all directions is "isotropy" which gives rise to the
- conservation of angular momentum.
-
- Hans Dykstra
- Physics Dept., University of Massachusetts
- abpd103@deimos.ucc.umass.edu
-