
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Send us a text
The highest level of philosophy, captured in a podcast episode, and distilled into laymen's terms so all can understand: this episode questions and discusses topics ranging from how we arrive at knowledge to what certainty we can know anything.
Possibly the greatest philosophical discussion since the turn of the century, we discuss whether math is purely logical--and if it is, how can it so closely represent reality? Did Einstein's theory of relativity "break" math and physics? Does quantum mechanics "break" math and physics?
Recent societal trends push the idea that if physics is relative, and our understanding of it for the past 300 years broken--then everything can be relative. But is this the correct takeaway?
5
99 ratings
Send us a text
The highest level of philosophy, captured in a podcast episode, and distilled into laymen's terms so all can understand: this episode questions and discusses topics ranging from how we arrive at knowledge to what certainty we can know anything.
Possibly the greatest philosophical discussion since the turn of the century, we discuss whether math is purely logical--and if it is, how can it so closely represent reality? Did Einstein's theory of relativity "break" math and physics? Does quantum mechanics "break" math and physics?
Recent societal trends push the idea that if physics is relative, and our understanding of it for the past 300 years broken--then everything can be relative. But is this the correct takeaway?