rather problematic. The realization of this issue appears somewhat contrary to the common sense expectation that direct transition from the – more complicated, as it is – 2D domain ℂ of complex numbers to ... , Mathematical gateway to complementary hidden variables in macrophysics. International Letters of Chemistry, Physics and Astronomy 50 (2015) 117-142 -68- World Scientific News 144 (2020) 56-69
of an approximately classical, macroscopic, 3 + 1-dimensional world that corresponds to the common-sense history of our phenomenal world, and M2∗ a similar representation of the fantastical history ... exactly the same sense in which it contains a representation of our common-sense history M1∗. If the only conditions on the extraction of a phenomenal or quasiclassical world from the wavefunction are
achieved through the balance between gravity and pressure, for anisotropic EoS, the largest/smallest radius is obtained in the direction of the highest/smallest pressure. Even though our common sense could ... microphysics as well as the macrophysics, i.e., the observables, of compact objects. At a microscopic scale, the magnetic field can always be considered locally uniform and constant. Although the consequences of
defiance of logic, and frequently with open disregard for scientific common sense. As long as the supreme goal of genuinely scientific papers is unambiguous presentation of accurate and quite unequivocally ... Scientific News 80 (2017) 207-238
am I endorsing such overlap here. Thanks to an anonymous referee for help in clarifying this point. 2. By an ‘integral part’ of a substance, Aristotelians mean a material part, in an ordinary, common ... -sense parlance. A hand is an intergral part of a body, the top half of a sphere is an integral part of the sphere. A non-integral part of a substance would be a metaphysical constituent, like a