If a tree falls in an empty wood.
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- TANGODANCER
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A "wood" is an area of trees. If it's empty, it can't be a wood. It also can't be empty if there's a tree there. It might be "empty" of people, in which case no one will hear it. It still will make a noise/sound/impact with a solid surface,ground.blurred wrote:FallingTANGODANCER wrote:If it's an empty wood, what's a tree doing there?
Si Deus pro nobis, quis contra nos?
I was being facetious, and well aware of the point you were making.TANGODANCER wrote:A "wood" is an area of trees. If it's empty, it can't be a wood. It also can't be empty if there's a tree there. It might be "empty" of people, in which case no one will hear it. It still will make a noise/sound/impact with a solid surface,ground.

Termed the Heisenberg Uncertainty principle...InsaneApache wrote:Daxter wrote:Just film it.CrazyHorse wrote:Surely if there is no one around to hear/not hear it make/not make a noise then the tree hasn't actually fallen over in the first place? No one witnessed it; therefore we can't prove it ever happened.
The simple act of observing something changes the way that the object behaves.
That is the perception of the sound, not the sound itself.communistworkethic wrote:It makes a soundwave not a noise. The key element inthe hypothesis is "hearing". There's a soundwave but no "crash" "crack" "bang" "boing" or "wallop" "splosh" "splish", "kabam" "kapow" or "skerdump". These are all merely conceptualisations of the differing pitch tone and frequency of the soundwave on the timpanic membrane via the malleaus incus and stapes through the auditory nerve into the brain.
It's that simple.
http://www.physicsclassroom.com/Class/sound/U11L2d.html
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and if it's recorded there would be a receptor, just teh same as if there was a human beingDaxter wrote:Just film it.CrazyHorse wrote:Surely if there is no one around to hear/not hear it make/not make a noise then the tree hasn't actually fallen over in the first place? No one witnessed it; therefore we can't prove it ever happened.

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Ah! But the sound is different and you can hear it here.communistworkethic wrote:and if it's recorded there would be a receptor, just teh same as if there was a human beingDaxter wrote:Just film it.CrazyHorse wrote:Surely if there is no one around to hear/not hear it make/not make a noise then the tree hasn't actually fallen over in the first place? No one witnessed it; therefore we can't prove it ever happened.
"If you cannot answer a man's argument, all it not lost; you can still call him vile names. " Elbert Hubbard.
communistworkethic wrote:and if it's recorded there would be a receptor, just teh same as if there was a human beingDaxter wrote:Just film it.CrazyHorse wrote:Surely if there is no one around to hear/not hear it make/not make a noise then the tree hasn't actually fallen over in the first place? No one witnessed it; therefore we can't prove it ever happened.
















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still a noise, still a receptor.Montreal Wanderer wrote:Ah! But the sound is different and you can hear it here.communistworkethic wrote:and if it's recorded there would be a receptor, just teh same as if there was a human beingDaxter wrote:Just film it.CrazyHorse wrote:Surely if there is no one around to hear/not hear it make/not make a noise then the tree hasn't actually fallen over in the first place? No one witnessed it; therefore we can't prove it ever happened.
No recptor, no noise, just soundwave.
Anyway someone mention observing the system creates interference.. Schrodinger's Cat.

Well the OED says:

So, CWE, definition 1 covers your definition. Definition 2, however, contradicts you on the point that a receptor is necessary, as it only says the thing "can be" heard. Importantly it doesn't say the thing is necessarily heard. If you choose to restrict your definition of the word sound to only the first definition, that's fine too. We're just working from different axioms, though I'd trust the dictionary over you any day!sound n. 1 vibrations which travel through the air and are sensed by the ear. 2 a thing that can be heard

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Oh no! I'll have to to go back to the dictionary!communistworkethic wrote:The original question is not "sound" but "noise". As a definition "sound" is inclusive of the wave, the brain interprets the action of that wave on the eardrum. It goes back to the interference of the observer on a system.
Anyway, I'm not letting you get away with the Schrodinger's cat bollocks. Because if you're using that as a defence, then the original question is paradoxical. The question states that the tree does actually fall. It says "If a tree falls in an empty forest...", therefore there must have been an observer, otherwise (like Schrodinger's cat) it is not determined whether or not the the tree actually fell (the analogue to the cat dying). Therefore the forest was non-empty and there must have been an observer. But the presence of the observer contradicts the premise that the forest is empty, so there is a contradiction and the problem has no solution.
But that's just if you're using the Uncertainty Principle as a defence. I'm no quantum physicist, but I don't even think it applies here, since the kind of measurements we can make of a sound wave will have very little effect on the soundwave (and certainly no measurable effect on the tree) itself.
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ah no, I only raised shrodinger because someone mentioned interference with a system. the original suggestion is that the tree falls but there's nobody around. Now either there is no witness, so has it actually fallen ?- schrodinger applies, or has someone ventured in to the forrest after the event to see a fallen tree, therefore the tree fell at some point and the question is whether a noise was made - no schrodinger.
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