I can confirm that it does, I was sat in my office alone earlier and let a post lunch stinker rip. I love the smell of my own farts though.
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.
So being a translation of vibration. Is noise, sound? Tinnitus sufferers hear noise in their heads but do they hear sounds? Again when we dream we "hear". You could pass it off as just the imagination but could all sound be this. What you hear could be something completely different to me, our interpretation can be the same due to the way we learn from a young age. Its the same as attempting to describe colour to a person blind from birth.
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.
the sound will still be there - just no one will be around to detect it
Yes, you have kind of got it, but not quite prepared to make that final conceptual leap. Before any living creature existed that tree makes no sound, there is no such thing as sound because all the falling tree creates is vibrations and oscillations through air, liquid or solid. The energy is in the oscillations not the sound. These oscillations only become sound when heard by some kind of organ which processes the information in the brain, or a device that converts the information into an audible output.
Sound does not exist without the ability to hear. The oscillations and vibrations exist, but these are only sound when heard.
Disagree!
Complete absence of any ears will not stop the sound, as a microphone could still detect.
Any vibration of the air is sound - the ear is merely a mechanism to convert the vibration into a signal the brain can translate to "hear" the sound.
Bit like the arguemnet of a dog whistle - does it make a sound? Hell yeah, we [humans] just can't hear it.
And, just because you didn't see something, doesn't mean it didn't happen.
All we are lacking is proof / evidence.
Yes, you have kind of got it, but not quite prepared to make that final conceptual leap. Before any living creature existed that tree makes no sound, there is no such thing as sound because all the falling tree creates is vibrations and oscillations through air, liquid or solid. The energy is in the oscillations not the sound. These oscillations only become sound when heard by some kind of organ which processes the information in the brain, or a device that converts the information into an audible output.
Sound does not exist without the ability to hear. The oscillations and vibrations exist, but these are only sound when heard.
hang on, a few posts above you "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."
Therefore a sound doesn't have to be heard to be a sound
Without the ear, it is just vibration. You only know the dog whistle makes a sound due to the reaction of the dog. Without a dog it doesn't make a sound. Sound is therefore perception. Without perception, you cannot prove it exists.
Light is different as it travels in a wave-particle duality - i.e. photons exist whether someone is there to see them or not. Light is a universal truth, sound exists only because we perceive it.
Of course colour is a different matter, and like sound it is a perception. Light is electromagnetic radiation (EMR) which travels through space carrying radiant energy. Visible light from the EMR is what we are able to perceive. Without our eyes, green doesn't actually exist, it is simply a wavelength of the EMR.
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.
Like sound or smell, without our perception colour doesn't exist.
I've sort of answered that, but visible light is actually a small part of Electro Magnetic Radiation which is a form of energy emitted by charged particles. The important part here, is that EMR will travel in a vacuum at precisely the speed of light. It is a universal constant, it exists regardless of perception.
Our experience of our own visible part of EMR, i.e. what we see, is however what we perceive, hence my post on colour.
A sound is the translation of the vibration. A sound is only a sound when heard.
OK, let's try this from another angle. Light and sound are both forms of energy that can be perceived by humans. Just because no humans are around, doesn't mean there is no light, and by extension, there must be sound present as well - if you catch my drift.
See above.
'within the range of hearing' is the key point as I've said before. The points here are very subtle. In measurable terms inside our existence and knowledge, of course the falling tree makes a sound. We know how to measure sound, we know how it works, what frequencies create notes etc. etc.
But, at a fundamental physical level there is no sound when the tree falls. There is gravity, matter, vibrations, oscillations, but no sound. The sound is only known to exist because of our ability to hear. Without hearing there is no sound. When that tree actually falls it will only be sound when it hits something with the ability to take the energy in the oscillations and turn that information it into sound.
yeah, I think this is just a semantics argument. I would define those vibrations, oscillations etc. as sound, you define sound as our interpretation of those oscillations.
Anyway, who says the tree itself cannot interpret those oscillations as sound, in which case there is always something there to hear it!
Sound does not exist without the ability to hear. The oscillations and vibrations exist, but these are only sound when heard.
all well argued, but you're playing around with technical semantics. the mechanical wave is created whether something is able to perceive that wave or not. "sound" defines the perception, not the physics. the tree falling still makes the waves, and that isnt changed by the presence of a human or other perceptive creature. the question of tree falls making sound is existential, not about perception.
Existentialism is surely all about empiricism and perception, that's what the whole debate is about!
If a question isn't answered, does it cease to be a question?Refused to answer their questions as they wanted to know personal details like address/name etc and our intentions that day
If a question isn't answered, does it cease to be a question?