"What appear to be the most valuable aspects of the theoretical physics we have are the mathematical descriptions which enable us to predict events. These equations are, we would argue, the only realities we can be certain of in physics; any other ways we have of thinking about the situation are visual aids or mnemonics which make it easier for beings with our sort of macroscopic experience to use and remember the equations."

8 likes

Source: The Lost Cause: Causation and the Mind-body Problem. Book by Celia Green, 2003.

About the author

Celia Green

Psychologist

Celia Green was a British philosopher known for her work on consciousness and the nature of reality, particularly through her book 'The Human Evasion'.

All quotes by Celia Green →

Same author

More quotes by Celia Green

See all →
Celia Green Psychologist

"Society expresses its sympathy for the geniuses of the past to distract attention from the fact that it has no intention of being sympathetic to the geniuses of the present."

Read quote
Celia Green Psychologist

"The chief difficulty of modern theoretical physics resides not in the fact that it expresses itself almost exclusively in mathematical symbols, but in the psychological difficulty of supposing that complete nonsense can be seriously promulgated and transmitted by persons who have sufficient intelligence of some kind to perform operations in differential and integral calculus."

Read quote