can you relate a real life phenomena with mechanics
Answers
Answered by
1
Mechanics ? What this word means ? If you ask your teacher or just flap through some heavy books of physics there you came up with the answer .
The branch of science which deal with the motion and its consequences .
if we consider others mind better than ours we just read and whenever someone ask us we just tell them that mechanics is this and we satisfy .do we Really satisfy with someone others answer or others definitions like everyone do . make your own definitions .
well, phenomena related to mechanics are force , friction a body pushed by you u applied a force on it and it resist the motion that's what we call friction . the opposing force like these there are lots of phenomena out there just see through your own eyes .
The branch of science which deal with the motion and its consequences .
if we consider others mind better than ours we just read and whenever someone ask us we just tell them that mechanics is this and we satisfy .do we Really satisfy with someone others answer or others definitions like everyone do . make your own definitions .
well, phenomena related to mechanics are force , friction a body pushed by you u applied a force on it and it resist the motion that's what we call friction . the opposing force like these there are lots of phenomena out there just see through your own eyes .
Answered by
0
Answer:
Mechanisms have become much‐discussed, yet there is still no consensus on how to characterize them. This chapter starts with something everyone is agreed on–that mechanisms explain–and investigate what constraints this imposes on our metaphysics of mechanisms. The chapter examines two widely shared premises about how to understand mechanistic explanation: (1) that mechanistic explanation offers a welcome alternative to traditional laws‐based explanation and (2) that there are two senses of mechanistic explanation that the chapter calls ‘epistemic explanation’ and ‘physical explanation’. The chapter argues that mechanistic explanation requires that mechanisms are both real and local. The chapter then goes on to argue that real, local mechanisms require a broadly active metaphysics for mechanisms, such as a capacities metaphysics.
Similar questions