Greta wrote: ↑June 3rd, 2020, 6:07 pmConsul wrote: ↑June 3rd, 2020, 1:41 pmThat's not a given!
Yes, how could I have forgotten the field of universal consciousness that underpins universal energy?
This is my way of asking what else might there be in reality, aside from energy? Even space itself is energy, being virtual particles instantaneously popping in and out of existence.
Space itself may be a physical substance having energy rather than being energy; and it may even be the only physical substance there is. If it is, virtual particles are nonsubstantial sparks of energy whose substantial substratum is space itself.
By the way, you're certainly free to side with Wilhelm Ostwald and his physical energeticism, according to which energy is "the most general substance", and "matter is a complex of different energies"; but this is a speculative metaphysical theory rather than a physical fact.
One of the fathers of quantum physics, Werner Heisenberg, endorsed an energeticist view of physical reality too.
I disagree with him, because even if "we may say that all elementary particles consist of energy", this
mustn't "be interpreted as defining energy as the primary substance of the world." For the primary substance of the world can only be a
materia prima that
has energy without being energy. An energeticist reductionism about elementary particles doesn't entail an energeticist reductionism about prime matter or spacetime (qua substance).
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"[A]ll different elementary particles could be reduced to some universal substance which we may call energy or matter…"
(p. 61)
"We may remark at this point that modern physics is in some way extremely near to the doctrines of Heraclitus. If we replace the word 'fire' by the word 'energy' we can almost repeat his statements word for word from our modern point of view. Energy is in fact the substance from which all elementary particles, all atoms and therefore all things are made, and energy is that which moves. Energy is a substance, since its total amount does not change, and the elementary particles can actually be made from this substance as is seen in many experiments on the creation of elementary particles. Energy can be changed into motion, into heat, into light and into tension. Energy may be called the fundamental cause for all change in the world."
(p. 63)
"Since mass and energy are, according to the theory of relativity, essentially the same concepts, we may say that all elementary particles consist of energy. This could be interpreted as defining energy as the primary substance of the world. It has indeed the essential property belonging to the term 'substance', that it is conserved. Therefore, it has been maintained before that the views of modern physics are in this respect very close to those of Heraclitus if one interprets his element fire as meaning energy. Energy is in fact that which moves; it may be called the primary cause of all change, and energy can be transformed into matter or heat or light. The strife between opposites in the philosophy of Heraclitus can be found in the strive between two different forms of energy.
In the philosophy of Democritus the atome are eternal and indestructible units of matter, they can never be transformed into each other. With regard to this question modern physics takes a definite stand against the materialism of Democritus and for Plato and the Pythagoreans. The elementary particles are certainly not eternal and indestructible units of matter, they can actually be transformed into each other. As a matter of fact, if two such particles, moving through space with a very high kinetic energy, collide, then many new elementary particles may be created from the available energy and the old particles may have disappeared in the collision. Such events have been frequently observed and offer the best proof that all particles are made of the same substance: energy."
(pp. 70-71)
(Heisenberg, Werner.
Physics and Philosophy: The Revolution in Modern Science. New York: Harper & Bros., 1958.)
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