Mathematics can explain some things well, some things not so well, and some things not at all. Why is it that we all just assumed that everything is reducible into mathematics? Who came up with that idea? And why have we all accepted it without questioning it?
Humanity has made a serious logical error in assuming mathematics describes reality. Just because it describes some things well does not mean that it can describe all things. This is the fallacy of unwarranted extrapolation, and extrapolating is almost always wrong. A clear analogy of this erroneous thinking might be to say just because my bicycle can transport me from my house to the store, it can take me anywhere, even to the moon.
When physicists use mathematics to “prove” theories that can never be proven by experiment, why should we believe them? After all, they are basing their proof on an incorrect root postulate that mathematics can prove their theory. Some have based their life’s work on this postulate, only to fool themselves and anyone who believes them.
So, I want you to recognize that science, which in many people’s minds represents the truth and is the basis of their understanding of the world, is nothing like truth. Scientific “truths” are merely tools we use to represent reality; they are not necessarily right