About the simplicity of the description of facts

By Pablo MP

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We often ignore the simplest way, perhaps only to be surprised when we take it. It is often so trivial that rejection is unconscious. We decide unintentionally, that multiple disjointed explanations of facts are more satisfactory than the underlying platitudes of the set of phenomena that we attempt to understand. It happened some days ago that a group of acquaintances came to me alarmed and astonished by the fact that two lemons, that several minutes ago had been thrown to the sea with a gap of a few inches between them, still remained floating with the same separation. There was a debate about the mysterious force that could be holding them apart. It needed to be of such a nature that it cancelled the tireless tendency of the citrus fruits to joint. Nature was becoming unpredictable and it was challenging the common sense of the alarmed audience of another one of her games. It was causing surprise to those who could only be amazed by a novelty, of those who had forgotten very soon that things such as fruits, pens and planets keep doing whatever they were doing until something interferes in their way. The lemons’ path was only disturbed, almost equally, by some gusts of wind and some waves that were not breaking. It was impossible that they could have approached or moved away in a noticeable distance. That would have been surprising and alarming.

I have run into the challenge, in numerous occasions, of ascertaining what underlying and more general explanation clarifies the collection of phenomena that often arises, that is connected in a suspicious way, but it is also wisely disguised. From the most humane problems to the most natural mysteries, they all conceal, from my own personal experience, a simpler and more general explanation that makes life a more rational and understandable experience for those of us who don’t have the slightest idea of what is all about. Examples such as the fact that bulbs, microwaves, common ovens, the resistance of a bridge, the transparency of a glass, fires, chemical reactions, magnets, electricity, car engines, aircraft engines, sound, computers, the Internet, prisms and springs, all of them so different apparently, have their fundamental description based on three very simple actions: a photon goes from one place to another, a charge goes from one place to another, a photon is absorbed or emitted by a charge, is one more proof of how simple things seem to be the machinery of complex things.

 

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I will not keep on going giving demonstrations of how simple ideas can explain a collection of different phenomena, for it is a fact so habitual that it is not worth investing either your time or mine in reasserting it; it is more convenient that you observe for your self what is going on out there. Nevertheless, I would like to encourage you to try to be as imaginative as you can, to ask yourself as much things as you can and to not stop being curious as to what happens in front of your eyes when you are looking somewhere else, because it is life and as I have already told you, it is not as complicated as it seems to be.

7 Responses to “About the simplicity of the description of facts”

  1. Rach Says:

    Hola Pablo!
    Qué bien que publiques un nuevo artículo, ya quiero leerlo.

    Necesito un favor. Recuerdas una frase de Feynman que me dijiste que estaba escrita en su pizarra? me la escribiste en inglés, y luego en castellano. Hablaba me parece que de las cosas que ya estaban descubiertas y las que quedaban por descubrir. Me encantaría tenerla guardada, pero no la recuerdo, y la he buscado pero no la encuentro…

    Ojalá te acuerdes =S

    Muchas gracias, nos vemos! un besazo!

    Raquel

  2. Rach Says:

    Hola de nuevo xD Diosa que pesada soy xDD

    Ya la he encontrado, era esta:

    >>Know how to solve every problem that has been solved.

    =) un beso!

  3. Pablo MPA Says:

    Hola Raquel.

    Efectivamente, esa era la frase :) Estoy preparando el artículo lentamente, porque casi no tengo tiempo. ¡Espero que te guste!

  4. Yebeny Says:

    Leyendo este artículo se me ha venido a la mente la Teoría del Caos (ya sabes que me encanta), y esque un hecho insignificante, microscópico, incluso a veces inmaterial (por ejemplo, una intuición, una decisión oportuna, un sentimiento, etc.) puede desencadenar, a lo largo de un complejísimo sistema de acontecimientos contiguos, en un hecho/efecto/acción/… de escala macro, superior.
    Y creo que ahí reside la magia de todo: en la UNION.

    Un saludo

    Att: Isita

  5. Cattttt! Says:

    Hola Pabs!
    Soy Cat! ¿me hechas de menos? desde que te fuiste he aprendido español…
    me gustó mucho leyendo tu articulo y voy a ir al mar a tirar limones a ver lo que pasa!
    ¿tienes alguna otra experimiento que puedo hacer?
    adios!

  6. pablompa Says:

    Hahahahaha, you’re doing very well with your spanish. Who’s teaching you?

    There are lots of experiments you can do… for example you can make a video camera with a single shiny spoon and a small piece of paper. It doesn’t record anything I have to say, but you can see the image of the real world projected! You can understand how it works as well, which is much more fun than performing the experiment. Or you could… see where a piece of transparent plastic is going to break only by shining reflected light onto it and then, insted of looking at the piece directly, look somewhere else where the light from the plastic is being reflected again (a triple reflection). You’ll find out that the former transparent plastic is now coloured like a rainbow. This time, understanding how it works is once again much more fun. To finish with, you can try discovering where the blind spot of your own eye retina is located by closing one eye with one hand, puting one of your fingers in front of you as far as you can, then focusing something beyond the finger (trying not to think about the finger) and then moving it slowly from one side to the other. At a certain place, it will disapear and you’ll have discovered your blind spot!

    Hope this helps!

    See you soon!!!!

  7. Caaaaat Says:

    I will have to give it a go. Funnily enough I’ve done the thing with the plastic before, in physics at school. We also lit up a light bulb by holding hands! Unfortunatly nowadays I am much more committed to economics and can only tell you how to do stupid stuff like make millions of pounds/euros. Oh well…
    adios!

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