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now I would like to make a number of
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remarks on the relation of mathematics
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and physics which are a little more
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General the first is that the
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mathematicians only are dealing with the
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structure of the reasoning and they do
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not really care about what they're
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talking they don't even need to know
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what they're talking about or as they
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themselves say or whether what they say
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is true now explain that if you state
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the axioms you say such and such a so
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and such and such a so and such and such
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a so what then then the logic can be
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carried out without knowing what the
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such and such words
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mean that is if they if the statements
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about the axim are true I mean are
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carefully formulated and complete enough
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it is not necessary for the man who's
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doing the reasoning to have any
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knowledge of the meaning of these words
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and to be able to deduce in the same
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language new con con new conclusions if
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I use the word triangle in one of the
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axioms there'd be some statement about
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triangles in the conclusion whereas the
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man who's doing the reasoning might not
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know what the triangle is but then I can
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read his thing back and say oh a
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triangle that's just a three side of
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what have you this so and so and so I
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know this new fact in other words
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mathematicians prepare abstract
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reasoning that's ready to be used if you
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will only have a set of axioms about the
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real world but the physicist has meaning
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to all the phrases and there's a very
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important thing that the people who a
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lot of people who study Physics that
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come from mathematics don't appreciate
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the physics is not mathematics and
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Mathematics is not physics one helps the
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other but you have to have some
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understanding of the connection of the
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words with the real world it's necessary
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to at the end to translate what you
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figured out into English into the world
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into the blocks of copper and glass that
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you're going to do the experiments with
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to find out whether the consequences are
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true
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and this is a problem which is not a
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problem of mathematics at
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all I've already mentioned one other
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relationship that of course it's obvious
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how the mathematical reasonings which
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have been developed are of great power
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and use in for
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physicist that the on the other hand
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sometimes the physicist reasoning is
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useful for
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mathematicians mathematicians also like
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to make their reasoning as general as
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possible if you say I have a three
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dimens space the ordinary space I want
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to talk about ordinary space you know
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you're in it that you measure distances
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and there are three numbers you need to
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tell where something is you go breadth
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width and
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height threedimensional space and you
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begin to ask them about theorems then
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they say now look if you had a space of
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n dimensions then here are the theorems
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well I yeah but I only want the case
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three well substitute n equals 3 and
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then it turns
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out then it turns out
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that very many of the complicated
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theorems they have are much simpler
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because it happens to be a special case
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now the physicist is always interested
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in a special case he's never interested
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in the general case he does he's talking
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about
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something he's not talking abstractly
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about any he knows what he's talking
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about he wants to discuss the gravity
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law he doesn't want the arbitrary Force
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case he wants the gravity and so there
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is a certain amount of reducing the
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mathematicians have prepared these
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things for a wide range of problems
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which is very useful and later on it
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always turns out that the poor physicist
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has to come back and say excuse me when
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you wanted to tell me about the four
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dimensions
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now another item that's interesting in
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this
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relationship is the question of how to
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do new
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physics is it important to have a
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feeling a kind of in oh I must mentioned
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one other item when you know what it is
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you're talking about that these things
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are forces and these are masses and this
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is inertia and this is so on then you
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can use an awful lot of common sense
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seat of the pants feeling about the
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world you've seen various things you
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know more or less how the phenomenon is
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going to behave well a poor
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mathematician he translates it into
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equations and the symbols don't mean
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mean anything to him and he has no guide
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but precise mathematical rigor and Care
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in the argument whereas a physicist who
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knows more or less how the answer can go
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is going to come out can sort of guess
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part way and go right along rather
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rapidly the ma the mathematical rigor of
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great Precision is not very useful in
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the physics nor is the modern attitude
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in mathematics to look at axians now
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mathematicians can do what they want to
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do one should not criticize them because
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they are not slaves to physics it is not
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necessary that just of course this would
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be useful to you they have to do it that
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way they can do what they will it's
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their own job and if you want something
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else then you work it out
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yourself the next point is the question
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of whether we should guess when we try
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to get a new law whether we should use
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the seat of the pants feeling and
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philosophical principles I don't like a
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minimum principle or I do like a minimum
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principle or I don't like action of the
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distance or I do like action the
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question is to what extent models help
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and it's a very interesting thing very
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often models help and most physics
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teachers try to teach how to use these
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models and get a good physical feel for
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how things are going to work
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out but the greatest discoveries it
00:05:46
always turns out abstract away from the
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model it never did any good Maxwell's
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discovery of electrodynamics was first
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made with a lot of imaginary wheels and
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idlers and everything else in space if
00:05:56
you got rid of all the idlers and
00:05:57
everything else in Space the thing was
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okay dur discovered the correct laws of
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of quantum mechanics for relativity
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quantum mechanics simply by guessing the
00:06:08
equation and the method of guessing the
00:06:10
equation seems to be a pretty effective
00:06:12
way of guessing new laws this shows
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again that mathematics is a deep way of
00:06:18
expressing nature and attempts to
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express nature in philosophical
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principles or in seed of the pants
00:06:24
mechanical feeling is not an efficient
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way
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I must say that there is possible and I
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know I've often made the hypothesis that
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physics ultimately will not require a
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mathematical statement that the
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Machinery ultimately will be revealed
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it's just a Prejudice like one of these
00:06:41
other prejudices it always bothers me
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that in spite of all this local business
00:06:47
what goes on in a tiny no even no matter
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how tiny a region of space and no matter
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how tiny a region of time according to
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the laws as we understand them today
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takes a Computing machine an infinite
00:06:57
number of logical operations to figure
00:06:59
out now how can all that be going on in
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that tiny
00:07:04
space that why should it take an
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infinite amount of logic to figure out
00:07:08
what one stinky tiny bit of SpaceTime is
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going to
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do and so I made the hypothesis often
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that the laws are going to turn out to
00:07:17
be in the end simple like the
00:07:19
checkerboard and that all the
00:07:21
complexities is from size but that is of
00:07:24
the same nature as the other
00:07:25
speculations that other people make it
00:07:27
say I like it you don't like it it's not
00:07:28
good to be too prejudiced just about the
00:07:32
thing to
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summarize I would use the words of genes
00:07:37
which says that who said that uh the
00:07:40
great architect seems to be a
00:07:44
mathematician and for you who don't know
00:07:48
mathematics it's really quite difficult
00:07:51
to get a real feeling across of to the
00:07:53
beauty of the deepest beauty of
00:07:56
nature CP snow talked about two cultures
00:07:59
I really think that those two cultures
00:08:01
are people who do and people who will do
00:08:04
not have had the Su who people who have
00:08:06
had and people who have not had this
00:08:07
experience of understanding mathematics
00:08:09
well enough to appreciate nature
00:08:12
once it's too bad that it has to be
00:08:15
mathematics and that mathematics for
00:08:16
some people is hard when one of the it's
00:08:18
reputed I don't know if it's true that
00:08:20
when one of the Kings was trying to
00:08:21
learn geometry from ukl he complained
00:08:24
that it was difficult and ukl said that
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there's no Royal Road to geometry and
00:08:29
there's no Royal Road it's not the JW we
00:08:33
cannot as people who look at this things
00:08:35
as a physicist cannot convert this s to
00:08:37
any other language you have if you want
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to discuss nature to learn about nature
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and to appreciate nature it's necessary
00:08:45
to find out the language that she speaks
00:08:47
in she offers her information only in
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one form we are not so unhumble as to
00:08:53
say theand that she changed before we
00:08:55
pay any
00:08:57
attention it seems to me
00:09:00
that uh that it's like
00:09:03
the all the intellectual arguments that
00:09:06
you can make would not in one in any way
00:09:09
or very very little will communicate to
00:09:11
deaf ears what music the experience of
00:09:14
Music really is and all the intellectual
00:09:17
arguments in the world will not convince
00:09:19
those of the other culture the
00:09:22
philosophers who tried to teach you by
00:09:24
telling you qualitatively about this
00:09:26
thing me who's trying to describe it to
00:09:28
you is it's not getting across it's
00:09:30
impossible I'm talk we talking to deaf
00:09:33
ears and it's when they it's perhaps
00:09:38
that the horizons are limited which
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permit such people to imagine that the
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center of the universe of interest is
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man