the physicists' bill of
rights
we hold these postulates to be intuitively
obvious,
that all physicists are born equal,
to a first approximation, and are endowed by their creator with certain
discrete privileges, among them a mean rest life, n degrees of freedom,
and the following rights which are invariant under all linear transformations: |
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| 1 - |
to
approximate all problems to ideal cases.
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| 2 - |
to use
order of magnitude calculations whenever deemed necessary (i.e. whenever
one can get away with it).
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| 3 - |
to use
the rigorous method of squinting for solving problems more complex than
the addition of positive real integers.
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| 4 - |
to dismiss
all functions which diverge as nasty and unphysical.
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| 5 - |
to invoke
the uncertainty principle when confronted by confused mathematicans, chemists,
engineers, pschologists, dramatists und anderen Schweinehunden.
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| 6 - |
when pressed
by non-physicists for an explanation of (4] to mumble in a sneering tone
of voice something about physically naive mathematicans.
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| 7 - |
to equate
two sides of an equation which are dimensionally inconsistent, with a
suitable comment to the effect of, "well, we are interested in the
order of magnitude anyway."
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| 8 - |
to the
extensive use of "bastard notations" where conventional mathematics
will not work.
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| 9 - |
to invent
fictitious forces to delude the general public.
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| 10 - |
to justify
shaky reasoning on the basis that it gives the right answer.
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| 11 - |
to cleverly
choose convenient initial conditions, using the principle of general triviality.
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| 12 - |
to use
plausible arguments in place of proofs, and thenceforth refer to these
arguments as proofs.
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| 13 - |
to take on
faith any principle which seems right but cannot be proofed. |
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