Thats what philosophy does. It’s a crowbar we shove into the cracks in our models of how the world works to prove for weakness.
In the example above all you did was describe the paper better. It doesn’t matter if it’s blue or creased or whatever, the question is about the physicality (or lack thereof) of information. We’re still not sure what happens to the information that passes through a black hole. Philosophy is a blind person’s cane, helping to feel out unfamiliar territory.
Thats what philosophy does. It’s a crowbar we shove into the cracks in our models of how the world works to prove for weakness.
In the example above all you did was describe the paper better. It doesn’t matter if it’s blue or creased or whatever, the question is about the physicality (or lack thereof) of information. We’re still not sure what happens to the information that passes through a black hole. Philosophy is a blind person’s cane, helping to feel out unfamiliar territory.
As in, that territory can never be fully known?