I want to find a concept that disproves this, but I can't as of yet.
It's an interesting debate.
Perception is a great thing. If I give you a box, and tell you there's a pound coin in there, but you cannot perceive the matter to be a pound coin, is it really something, since you cannot see it?
Anyway back to the senseless banter, please. Police...
In layman's terms, what makes LIGHT the exception to this rule? Surely if it cannot be seen, it cannot be proved to be there?
In layman's terms, what makes LIGHT the exception to this rule? Surely if it cannot be seen, it cannot be proved to be there?
Colour is basically matter the absorption all the other wavelengths of the EMR. A leaf is green because it has absorbed all other EMR wavelength frequencies of the visible light spectrum other than green which has bounced off. Black is the absorption of all light.
We can't of course continue without reference to Schrodinger's Cat....
hmmmm. dog whistles make sound to the dog, but not to the person. Likewise a tree falling on the forest may be heard by me 1 mile away, but not by you (or vice versa, depending who has the more sensitive ears). Therefore it is argued that whether it is sound or not depends on the receiver. That's not a very satisfactory way to resolve this, and relies on a completely human-centric approach to the universe, whereas sound is surely a physical property of the vibrations themselves. A vibration is a vibration, whether or not it is observed, so therefore a sound is a sound is a sound, whether or not we have the tools to hear it?
A sound is the translation of the vibration. A sound is only a sound when heard.
But doesn't that fall apart when two people are present, and only one can hear it because his ears are better.
"Listen to that amazing sound".. "I can't hear it, therefore it is not a sound and you are talking bollocks".."but I can hear it and it is beautiful".. "There is no sound, therefore you are mad"... and so on
If someone farts and no one else is around, does it smell?
No, it doesn't.
A sound is the translation of the vibration. A sound is only a sound when heard.
Wrong.
Moving particles only become sound when there is an ear to receive them and transmit them to the brain to recognise it. The falling of the tree will ONLY produce vibration of the air. If there be no ears to hear, there will be no sound.
It's simple science.
Nope, a quick grab from Wiki says "sound is a mechanical wave that is an oscillation of pressure transmitted through a solid, liquid, or gas, composed of frequencies within the range of hearing and of a level sufficiently strong to be heard, or the sensation stimulated in organs of hearing by such vibrations.[1]"
Note it doesn't say "that is then heard" but strong enough. So the tree would create a sound because the oscillation would still be there.