My favorite is when someone tells me that they are too old to learn about new technology, or that they can’t use a device because they aren’t very tech-y. No, you just refuse to learn.
My favorite is when someone tells me that they are too old to learn about new technology, or that they can’t use a device because they aren’t very tech-y. No, you just refuse to learn.
I’d argue that quantum physics is genuinely difficult, but also not very applicable to most people’s daily life. The stuff that computer illiterate people struggle with tends to be both relatively easy and very applicable to daily life, and many of these people aren’t as dumb about all other parts of their lives.
Anybody who claims to understand quantum physics … doesn’t. If you think it’s easy to understand, then you have a very superficial and incorrect understanding of it. Actual quantum physicists, the foremost experts in the field … they may know the math behind it and be able to figure some of it out … but they’ll be the first to tell you that they don’t understand most of it, though they’re constantly trying.
What is the distinction you are making between knowing the math and understanding it?
Quantum physicist: “This is the equation that describes the phenomenon and has so far done a very good job of predicting the outcome.”
“Cool. Why does it work like that?”
Quantum physicist: *shrug* “Hopefully maybe someday we can figure that out.”
“Why” implies an underlying ontology. Maybe there is something underneath it but it’s as far as it goes down as far as we currently know. If we don’t at least tentatively accept that our current most fundamental theories are the fundamental ontology of nature, at least as far as we currently know, then we can never believe anything about nature at all, because it would be an infinite regress. Every time we discover a new theory we can ask “well why does it work like that?” and so it would be impossible to actually believe anything about nature.
I have a hypothesis about it and its evolution isn’t as slow as the majority of people think, something that will happen in hundreds of years you know. I think 100 years could be enough for something to change, maybe it is just younger generations are already genetically adapted to new technology but as it advances the next generations will be even better adapted or less adapted as the way technology evolves. But take this with a big grain of salt because it’s just my hypothesis.
About people being dumb or no I said, not everyone is capable of the same things. All people are different, someone can be good at something but dumb at other things. Just as we are not playing in the NBA or being experts in quantum physics. I understand it is an extreme example but you can get the point.
I don’t agree with your take on evolution, I don’t see a natural selection mechanism that prevents reproduction if you don’t adapt to new technologies. Some will even claim it’s the opposite. I think maybe modern medicine has pretty much halted human evolution.