Kind: captions Language: en what's the difference between math and physics to you to me you know very very roughly math is about the logical structure of all possible worlds and physics is about our actual world and it just feels like our actual world is a gray area when you start talking about interpretations of quantum mechanics or no I'm certainly using the word world in the broadest sense all of reality so I think that reality is specific I don't think that there's every possible thing going on in reality I think there are rules whether it's the Schrodinger equation or whatever so i think i think that there's a sensible notion of the set of all possible worlds and we live in one of them the world that we're talking about might be a multiverse might be many worlds of quantum mechanics might be much bigger than the world of our everyday experience but it's still one physically contiguous world in some sense but so if you look at the overlap of math and physics it feels like when physics tries to reach for understanding of our world it uses the tools of math to sort of reach beyond the limit of our current understanding what do you make of that process of sort of using math - so you start maybe with intuition or you might start with the math and then build up an intuition or but this kind of reaching into the darkness into the mystery of the world would math well I think I would put it a little bit differently I think we have theories theories of the physical world which we then extrapolate and ask you know what do we conclude if we take these seriously well beyond where we've actually tested them it is separately true that math is really really useful when we construct physical theories and you know famously Eugene Wigner asked about the unreasonable success of mathematics and physics I think that's a little bit wrong because anything that could happen any other theory of physics that wasn't the real world with some other world you could always describe it mathematically it's just it might be a mess the surprising thing is not that math works but that the math is so simple and E see that you can write it down on a t-shirt right I mean that's what is amazing that's an enormous compression of information that seems to be valid in the real world so that's an interesting fact about our world which maybe we could hope to explain or just take as a brute fact I don't know but once you have that you know it there's this the indelible relationship between math and physics but but philosophically I do want to separate them what we what we extrapolate we only extrapolate math because there's a whole bunch of wrong math you know that doesn't apply to our world right we extrapolate the physical theory that we best think explains our world you