rangrz
Bluelighter
^
It is both. Mathematics (esp with regards to physical systems) is simply an abstract, formalized model of our understanding of that physical system. If we don't understand the physical system properly, our model of it (the math) can not be perfect, and hence it will not make perfect predictions.
That is tossing aside the issue where our math tells us that we won't be able to make perfect predictions to begin with. (The Fourier limit? Heisenberg uncertainty? n-body problem in classical mechanics? Observer effect in quantum mechanics? Randomness in Q.M.? All of these say right from the get go that is a upper bound to how accurate our predictions can even possibly be)
It is both. Mathematics (esp with regards to physical systems) is simply an abstract, formalized model of our understanding of that physical system. If we don't understand the physical system properly, our model of it (the math) can not be perfect, and hence it will not make perfect predictions.
That is tossing aside the issue where our math tells us that we won't be able to make perfect predictions to begin with. (The Fourier limit? Heisenberg uncertainty? n-body problem in classical mechanics? Observer effect in quantum mechanics? Randomness in Q.M.? All of these say right from the get go that is a upper bound to how accurate our predictions can even possibly be)