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by guygurari
2376 days ago
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In my experience, the reason to “follow the math” is that it is the best and perhaps only way to truly understand a physical theory, especially one as strange as quantum mechanics. One can understand the math first, and then develop an understanding of the context and meaning. But this abstract understanding is anchored in math. This is important because when the meaning gets too obscure, one can return to the math to resolve any confusion. The other way around does not work. |
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The whole problem with the Navier-Stokes equations is that the math seems to work extremely well, but we have no way to be sure it actually captures every aspect of reality (given suitably accurate initial inputs). You can use the equations to generate pretty convincing simulations, but they certainly do not always predict the fine-grained behavior of real-world turbulent systems.
Feynman's lectures repeatedly stress that physical laws (and the math that formalizes them) are, at best, idealized approximations of reality. Here's one, but you can google "feynman approximation laws" for more: https://www.feynmanlectures.caltech.edu/I_01.html