Being a herb-a-tician and not a mathematician, I think about various extractions of plants. Take a whole plant such as say a willow tree and extract out all but one of its constituents to make say aspirin, salicylic acid, the pill medicine. The result may thin the blood, but because all the other constituents are missing, stripped away, it may cause an imbalance in the body resulting in say your ankles swelling or Salicylate poisoning, also known as aspirin poisoning, the acute or chronic poisoning with a salicylate such as aspirin. The classic symptoms are ringing in the ears, nausea, abdominal pain, and a fast breathing rate. Early on, these may be subtle, while larger doses may result in fever.
Now, instead of simply extracting the one constituent, you make a medicine out of the whole plant, which contains perhaps hundreds of constituents, only a few of which we have bothered to be aware of and measure. So when you make a more complete medicine from the plant, such as willow tincture from the inner bark, you are including much more of the balancing aspects of the whole plant. See for instance https://practicalselfreliance.com/willow-bark/. Back to math, you can see that as we look at smaller and smaller 'pieces of information' we may get results that reflect less on what we meant to look at and reflect more about what it is we are NOT looking at. The world works synergistically and not in isolation(s).
On the flip-side, you have people using naturally occurring strychnine from the Strychnos-tree to treat cancer.
Which it doesn't do at all. It just gives you strychnine-poisoning on top of the cancer.
There are lots of good plants, medicinal and food-wise - but due dilligence, testing and finding out how the stuff that does seem to work (like rubbing nettle-leafs on mosquito-bites to remove the itch) is just as important with the all-natural stuff as with the unnatural, right?
I mean, just because stenmurkla (Gyromitra esculenta) looks like a brain doesn't mean it makes you smarter. I does however make you dead dead dead if you don't know how to prepare it right.
And don't get me started on hipsters out looking for ramslök (bear's garlic) and winding up picking and eating the leaves of lily-of-the-valley...
Speaking of using willow, don't forget where it grew is damned important. How close is the nearest chemical-spewing industry? What was the lot it grows on used for 50 years ago?
Just imagine what's in a plant growing on soil that used to be a shooting range until the 1970s, before there were any rules at all for collecting all the lead. Lead plus assorted other chemicals now in the soil and seeping into the aquifer.
Not trying to be harsh, mind, I routinely have to battle my MD because I refuse pills "unless they cure the malady without giving me other problems" as I put it to him, but just because it's natural doesn't mean it's any good.
To end on a cheerful note, have you ever tried home-made cough syrup from the spring shoots of spruce (Norwegian spruce, that is - some other kinds are poisonous so make sure which is which)? It's dissolves snot and phlegm like paint thinner on styrofoam. I could link to a recipe but it's in swedish.
Just to be a mite trite, our perception is founded on our senses, and our senses are evolved to perceive that which is immediately important to our survival.
Quantum whatsits aren't, and are thus hard to comprehend - the ole' saw about goldfish and bicycles come to mind.
However, opposed to goldfish (I guess) we can fantasise and think "What if?".
"What if this correlation speaks of an over-/underlying super- or suprastructure of matter/energy itself? If so and if this can be pinned down and quantified, imagine what we could do!"
Instant FTL communication perhaps? Sort of, split a particle in such way both halves can be stimulated as some kind of FTL-Morse signal?
It's no wonder the topic lends itself to fiction. Speaking of, the old game Traveller had a fun way of handling things. Ships could travel faster than light through "jump space" (bear with me), but there was no FTL tech for communications, so fleets, administrations et cetera used couriers.
You and your friends could play as frontier mailmen, delivering messages across solar systems while ducking unfriendly natives ("Ain't no goldurned gubmint census-bureau gonna come measure my ass-deroids!")
If nothing ever comes of the quantum conundrum, at least we got a lot of stories out of it.
This was a great read between sets at the gym! It was motivating to realise that even goals like muscle mass and BMI are also just "potential properties which are manifest upon measurement" and nothing to get impatient about :(
I think you might have gotten the word "queer" from J.B.S. Haldane. "My own suspicion is that the universe is not only queerer than we suppose, but queerer than we *can* suppose."
Being a herb-a-tician and not a mathematician, I think about various extractions of plants. Take a whole plant such as say a willow tree and extract out all but one of its constituents to make say aspirin, salicylic acid, the pill medicine. The result may thin the blood, but because all the other constituents are missing, stripped away, it may cause an imbalance in the body resulting in say your ankles swelling or Salicylate poisoning, also known as aspirin poisoning, the acute or chronic poisoning with a salicylate such as aspirin. The classic symptoms are ringing in the ears, nausea, abdominal pain, and a fast breathing rate. Early on, these may be subtle, while larger doses may result in fever.
Now, instead of simply extracting the one constituent, you make a medicine out of the whole plant, which contains perhaps hundreds of constituents, only a few of which we have bothered to be aware of and measure. So when you make a more complete medicine from the plant, such as willow tincture from the inner bark, you are including much more of the balancing aspects of the whole plant. See for instance https://practicalselfreliance.com/willow-bark/. Back to math, you can see that as we look at smaller and smaller 'pieces of information' we may get results that reflect less on what we meant to look at and reflect more about what it is we are NOT looking at. The world works synergistically and not in isolation(s).
On the flip-side, you have people using naturally occurring strychnine from the Strychnos-tree to treat cancer.
Which it doesn't do at all. It just gives you strychnine-poisoning on top of the cancer.
There are lots of good plants, medicinal and food-wise - but due dilligence, testing and finding out how the stuff that does seem to work (like rubbing nettle-leafs on mosquito-bites to remove the itch) is just as important with the all-natural stuff as with the unnatural, right?
I mean, just because stenmurkla (Gyromitra esculenta) looks like a brain doesn't mean it makes you smarter. I does however make you dead dead dead if you don't know how to prepare it right.
And don't get me started on hipsters out looking for ramslök (bear's garlic) and winding up picking and eating the leaves of lily-of-the-valley...
Speaking of using willow, don't forget where it grew is damned important. How close is the nearest chemical-spewing industry? What was the lot it grows on used for 50 years ago?
Just imagine what's in a plant growing on soil that used to be a shooting range until the 1970s, before there were any rules at all for collecting all the lead. Lead plus assorted other chemicals now in the soil and seeping into the aquifer.
Not trying to be harsh, mind, I routinely have to battle my MD because I refuse pills "unless they cure the malady without giving me other problems" as I put it to him, but just because it's natural doesn't mean it's any good.
To end on a cheerful note, have you ever tried home-made cough syrup from the spring shoots of spruce (Norwegian spruce, that is - some other kinds are poisonous so make sure which is which)? It's dissolves snot and phlegm like paint thinner on styrofoam. I could link to a recipe but it's in swedish.
Just to be a mite trite, our perception is founded on our senses, and our senses are evolved to perceive that which is immediately important to our survival.
Quantum whatsits aren't, and are thus hard to comprehend - the ole' saw about goldfish and bicycles come to mind.
However, opposed to goldfish (I guess) we can fantasise and think "What if?".
"What if this correlation speaks of an over-/underlying super- or suprastructure of matter/energy itself? If so and if this can be pinned down and quantified, imagine what we could do!"
Instant FTL communication perhaps? Sort of, split a particle in such way both halves can be stimulated as some kind of FTL-Morse signal?
It's no wonder the topic lends itself to fiction. Speaking of, the old game Traveller had a fun way of handling things. Ships could travel faster than light through "jump space" (bear with me), but there was no FTL tech for communications, so fleets, administrations et cetera used couriers.
You and your friends could play as frontier mailmen, delivering messages across solar systems while ducking unfriendly natives ("Ain't no goldurned gubmint census-bureau gonna come measure my ass-deroids!")
If nothing ever comes of the quantum conundrum, at least we got a lot of stories out of it.
This was a great read between sets at the gym! It was motivating to realise that even goals like muscle mass and BMI are also just "potential properties which are manifest upon measurement" and nothing to get impatient about :(
I enjoy reading this QM / stats stuff; it make me think and yes, sometimes thinking does hurt. :) :)
I think you might have gotten the word "queer" from J.B.S. Haldane. "My own suspicion is that the universe is not only queerer than we suppose, but queerer than we *can* suppose."
https://www.powerquotations.com/quote/my-own-suspicion-is-that