Any suggestions for other truths which could turn out to be local?
I don't think "truth" is a good term here. How about, "widely applicable models" falsified outside of their usual domain?
Just about every approximation, ever. The further you are from math, the more of these there are, and you don't need to go far (all physics other than fundamental physics) to be loaded with them.
Simple harmonic oscillators? In 99% of cases, that's locally true around the minimum.
PV = nRT? Ideal gases are an approximation that is often strong, but right around condensation points or if there are long-ranged forces in the gas, it isn't.
So on, so on.
(all physics other than fundamental physics)
You don't even have to leave fundamental physics. Firstly the existing equations are (presumably) approximations to the underlying unified theory; secondly, we can't solve them exactly anyway, and even in the relatively tractable electroweak case we use the approximation of a truncated sum. As for the strong force, where that technique doesn't converge, don't even ask.
I'm quite frankly disappointed in this one. The idea that you could get unusual compounds at pressures high enough to distort the outer electron orbitals should be more than trivially obvious to anyone with even a smidgen of P-chem, and further should be modelable with computers these days. This is what happens when you need to get papers published to advance your career, instead of doing research that's actually important.
[edit] And classical chemistry? This guy is talking about 'classical' chemistry in a 3 million PSI environment? There is nothing at...
At the most trivial level, look at wikipedia's article on diamond, the phase change diagram in particular. Diamond starts to be thermodynamically preferred over graphite at around 100k atmospheres, and has been known about for a century.
For a 2012 paper, there's this. Note that the first thing in the paper is the unquestioned statement "High pressure can fundamentally alter the bonding patterns of light elements and their compounds, leading to the unexpected formation of materials with unusual chemical and physical properties."
Here's a 2006 paper from Germany that directly looks at how high pressures affect the chemistry of alkalai metals, including sodium.
And a 1998 reference book containing five hundred pages of high pressure chemistry notes, including a handful of sodium compounds.
Seriously, nothing new here. Vastly overblown and irresponsible hype.
Some random 'truth' grouped by discipline:
Math:
Mathematics is explained by reduction of propositions to axioms.
There are no interesting consistent and complete axiom systems (recently discussed here by probabilistic approches).
Physics:
Dark matter exists.
The universe started with the big bang.
There is a universal arrow of time.
There is no cold fusion.
Chemistry:
Meteorology:
Biology:
DNA defines cell behavior.
D
There are hints in cosmological observations that the speed of light may not be constant over sufficiently long timescales, and that the gravitational constant may vary over sufficiently long distances. (NB, both are speculative!)
Sir Karl Popper suggested reality is objective, our description of reality (conjectures) only provisionally true and subject to further inquiry (refutations). I can see that as truth being local in time, true for now. Most or all conjectures will be refuted over time, at minimum by being added to and clarified.
I think some of what we know about nutrition will endure (humans prosper when we drink clean water in some amount and with some regularity) but much of it seems in great flux. What constitutes nutrition in different nations today differs, whatever the objective truth might be. And nutrition within a single nation isn't for all (what an infant needs versus an adult, for example).
I'm hoping for more specificity about where a generalization might break down.
That being said, I might include some mere noodling.
No one that I've asked seems to know much about how mathematicians choose axioms-- there's got to be some process of choosing axioms which are likely to generate interesting mathematics.
There are important parts of mathematics which don't get explored because they're too boring for mathematicians to want to work on.
There may be truths about the universe which are complex beyond the human ability to manipulate ideas. It might even follow that there are truths which are too complex even for any conceivable augmented intelligence. Reductionism has taken people a long way and will take us farther, but it might have limits.
I'm fond of the idea that life on earth might be on the receiving end of some alien meddling. This doesn't undercut evolution in general, but it adds some history to what seemed like a relatively simple story of physics and chemistry.
Vegetables are not healthy for everyone-- some people have digestive tracts which can't handle them. Exercise isn't necessarily good for people.
Optimizing nutrition and exercise for basically healthy people might not do that much good.
Politics/economics: People don't have much sense, whether they're in business or government.
Organized crime is a significant part of economies and governments, and ignored by most theories.
Most of the economy isn't measured or considered-- I'm not just talking about organized crime, I'm including what people do for themselves and each other that doesn't involve money.
Politics/economics: People don't have much sense, whether they're in business or government.
I'm not sure whether this is meant as a proposal for a 'local truth' or some reply/explanation to something else.
Organized crime is a significant part of economies and governments, and ignored by most theories.
You mean most economic theories I take it. I'd guess that from an econimicsts point of view (organized) crime is not different from other economic transactions only that it involves a penalty of (temporarily) exclusion from trade or other costs that co...
New Salt Compounds Challenge the Foundation of Chemistry
The title is overblown (it depends on what you think the foundation is), but get a load of this:
And here's the philosophical bit:
The obvious example of local truth is relativistic effects being pretty much invisible over the durations and distances that are normal for people, but there's also that the surface of the earth is near enough to flat for many human purposes.
Any suggestions for other truths which could turn out to be local?