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502.31
The difference between synergetics and conventional
mathematics is that it is
derived from experience and is always considerate of
experience, whereas conventional
mathematics is based upon "axioms" that were imaginatively
conceived and that were
inconsiderate of information progressively harvested
through microscopes, telescopes, and
electronic probings into the nonsensorially tunable
ranges of the electromagnetic
spectrum. Whereas solids, straight lines, continuous
surfaces, and infinity seemed
imaginatively obvious, i.e., axiomatic; physics has
discovered none of the foregoing to be
experimentally demonstrable. The imaginary "abstraction"
was so logical, valid, and
obviously nonsolid, nonsubstantial in the preinstrumentally-informed
history of the
musings of man that the mathematician assumed abstraction
to be systemic conceptuality,
i.e., metaphysical absolutely devoid of experience:
He began with oversight.
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