Physh*ts is now fixed.
you're welcome.
Mathematical fields of study like Physics, Statistics, and CS(need a new name) are children of mathematics and mathematicians.
Mathematics essentially means "to learn"
etymonline : mendh
wiktionary : mathematics
>(math?matikós, “fond of learning”), from ?????? (máth?ma, “knowledge, learning”)
meanwhile the classical sense of "science" (read soience)
>etymonline : science
>mid-14c., "what is known, knowledge (of something) acquired by study; information;" also "assurance of knowledge, certitude, certainty," from Old French science "knowledge, learning, application; corpus of human knowledge" (12c.), from Latin scientia "knowledge, a knowing; expertness," from sciens (genitive scientis) "intelligent, skilled," present participle of scire "to know," probably originally "to separate one thing from another, to distinguish," related to scindere "to cut, divide" (from PIE root *skei- "to cut, split;" source also of Greek skhizein "to split, rend, cleave," Gothic skaidan, Old English sceadan "to divide, separate")
is very different from the modern understanding.
Tekhne is the word that is often paired with math?matik? (tékhn?) meaning something like "the art of knowledge" or the art of mathematics.
math deals with divine knowledge such as space, measure/metric, counting, structure, change, systems, etc.
These things given to us by god which we use to divine the formalization of mathematics.
If soience means something more like skei such as classification, categorization, data gathering of different observable phenomena and math is more the art of knowledge, particularly regarding divine elements, then something like experimental physics is the science of physics and theoretical physics is the mathematics of physics.
physika meaning natural things.
you're welcome.
Mathematical fields of study like Physics, Statistics, and CS(need a new name) are children of mathematics and mathematicians.
Mathematics essentially means "to learn"
etymonline : mendh
wiktionary : mathematics
>(math?matikós, “fond of learning”), from ?????? (máth?ma, “knowledge, learning”)
meanwhile the classical sense of "science" (read soience)
>etymonline : science
>mid-14c., "what is known, knowledge (of something) acquired by study; information;" also "assurance of knowledge, certitude, certainty," from Old French science "knowledge, learning, application; corpus of human knowledge" (12c.), from Latin scientia "knowledge, a knowing; expertness," from sciens (genitive scientis) "intelligent, skilled," present participle of scire "to know," probably originally "to separate one thing from another, to distinguish," related to scindere "to cut, divide" (from PIE root *skei- "to cut, split;" source also of Greek skhizein "to split, rend, cleave," Gothic skaidan, Old English sceadan "to divide, separate")
is very different from the modern understanding.
Tekhne is the word that is often paired with math?matik? (tékhn?) meaning something like "the art of knowledge" or the art of mathematics.
math deals with divine knowledge such as space, measure/metric, counting, structure, change, systems, etc.
These things given to us by god which we use to divine the formalization of mathematics.
If soience means something more like skei such as classification, categorization, data gathering of different observable phenomena and math is more the art of knowledge, particularly regarding divine elements, then something like experimental physics is the science of physics and theoretical physics is the mathematics of physics.
physika meaning natural things.
