Mathematics must have been believing in Philosophy's assistance in clarifying the tricky concepts. :snicker:I said math and philosophy have different way of doing things
— Corvus
They certainly do, which is why I’m wondering what a thread on mathematics is doing on a philosophy forum. — Joshs
There is no such a thing as "infinite" number. See this is an illusion, and source of the confusion.Yes, for example as in "infinite number" where "infinite" is a property of "number". — RussellA
I have a few university Calculus and Algebra and Trigonometry books lying around here, and they are full of questions and answers. Studying math means you read the definitions in the books and work on the questions for the answers purely using your reasonings.Umm... that's a school math book. Have you even studied a math course in the University? They are a bit different. — ssu
No. That is not the case. If you study philosophy for the degree, you must read, and write dissertations which you must defend it at a 'viva voce'.And if you study philosophy, you will similarly (hopefully) be given a exam where you have to answer too. — ssu
Have you not read a single math book? If you read any math book, it will have Exercises and Examples after or in the middle of a chapter. The answers for the Exercises will be either at the back of the book, or as a separate Answer Book that you must acquire, if you needed it.Math and Science pursues the answers in the answer book.
— Corvus
What answer book? — ssu
Sure, not denying that at all. They are all parts of each other we could say that. They are all inter-related too. But the methodologies they employ and the ideas of their goals might be different depending on the folks who are doing them.What answer book?
I think mathematics is especially interested in logic. I would dare to say that math is part of logic. — ssu
Never said math is not part of philosophy. That is what you are saying for some reason.Just look at ↪Lionino wrote above. Now I don't know if he is a mathematician, but at least he totally understands that philosophy is part of mathematics. — ssu
From the point of the set N, it looks like it is. But from the point of the set P, it looks like it is only a half set to N. What's going on?We don't. He proved that they are the same size. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Math and Science pursues the answers in the answer book. You are either right or wrong. Philosophy is more into your arguments and logic for the answers, hence there is no such thing as the answers in the answer book i.e. truth and falsity they pursue are different in nature.? :yikes:
I don't get your point here. — ssu
I think you got it wrong too. Philosophers don't care about the truths and falsity as the answers in the answer sheets. Philosophers are more concerned with the truth and falsity in the concepts, propositions, and logic.I think you got it a bit wrong. Those who are obsessed about truth or falsity are mathematicians. Even if they sometimes have different axiomatic systems, then it's about right or wrong in that formal system. — ssu
Yes, Philosophy used to be the parents of all sciences and mathematics. It is the mother of all subjects, and we cannot deny the fact.It's the Philosophers who are interested about a lot more. Things like morals or aesthetics, which obviously aren't about truth or falsity. — ssu
Once you closed eyes and blocked your ears and nose, from the moment, your beliefs and inferences based on your memory of the facts, takes over on the existence of the world outside of you.Sure, we know that at least a world exists, the world being our mind. But we do not know whether there is an outside world (brain in a vat), that is usually what people talk about when we say the world exists or not. — Lionino
Seeing wave of gravity and saying it is time or space time is like saying, an eclipse is God's facial expression. Just a metaphor or simile whatever you call it. :) Are you a French or Greek?Sorry I can't understand, I think this sentence has some words missing. — Lionino
Great post, thanks. How do you prove then N is different size to P?Here is a finite definition of an infinite set: "A given set S is infinite iff there exists a bijective function between S and a proper subset of S." Furthermore, such a bijective function can be stated finitely.
Here is an example. Take the set of natural numbers ℕ = { 0, 1, ··· }. Now take a proper subset of ℕ containing only even the numbers, ℙ = { 0 , 2 , ··· }. These two are equinumerous because there is a bijective function f : ℕ → ℙ, given by f(n) = 2n.
The proof that "f" is bijective is finite. So is the proof that ℙ is a proper subset of ℕ. — DanCoimbra
Could you demonstrate and prove the provability and unprovability of G in real arithmetic sentences in T?We adduce a sentence G that is is true (to be more precise, it is true in the standard model for the language of arithmetic) if and only if G is not provable in T.
Then we prove that G is not provable in T. So G is a true sentence that is not provable in T. Moreover we show also that ~G is not provable in T. So T is incomplete. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Maybe they did. But whatever they saw, equating it to time or spacetime sounds bizarre.Well, you can see gravitational waves insofar as you observe them by checking the spatial distortion that they cause. Maybe that is what they were getting at but I did not see that thread. Not sure what the connection is with what I said though. — Lionino
It would be a form of totemism in disguise for science. Seeing an eclipse, and saying that must a God annoyed at something. A similar logic.For someone who defends physicalism, they are. — Lionino
The fabrication of the mind is the world. No? I am sure when one dies, his world dies too, because he can no longer fabricate anything anymore.I would say no because those facts could be a fabrication of the mind. — Lionino
How would you know if something is an entity without knowing what it is?There cannot be such a thing as a ‘epistemic entity’ because it is, when taken literally, a contradiction in terms: an entity implies something within the ontology of reality, and epistemology pertains solely to knowledge (and specifically not ontology). — Bob Ross
That is not propositional logic. It is an EL (Epistemic Logic) operator which means, Agent "knows". It could have been "K" for knows in general, but the box implies knowing via observation.Ok, so ‘□∀M -> □∃T’ is ‘it is necessary that every motion is ??? and that entails that it is necessary that there exists a time”. That doesn’t make any sense to me. — Bob Ross
If there was Motion1 to Motion2 with time1 to time2, then the Agent knows Time generated from the Motion via Observation. This is what it means.‘∃M1t1∃M2t2 →□Ag,T,M’ means ‘there exists a motion and time such that there exists another motion and time’ and that entails ‘it is necessary that there is an agento, time, and motion’. Again, I don’t know what this is trying to convey. — Bob Ross
"Let us not forget: mathematician's discussions of the infinite are clearly finite discussions. By which I mean, they come to an end." - Philosophical grammar, p483. Wittgenstein.One can talk about infinity conceptually, as one does in mathematics, without reference to its empirical verifiability. — DanCoimbra
Doesn't infinity mean endless? i.e. unreachable eternal continuation in concept?How would a difference in size be established between them when there is no counting involved? And if there is counting involved, how would infinity be reached? — Philosopher19
It seems like some form of superstition. A couple of days ago in one of the new thread here, the OP was claiming that he witnessed the actual wave of gravity with telescope, and it must be the physical existence of spacetime. It sounded like some religious beliefs of some cult folks claiming the earthquakes and hurricanes are act of the angry God or something.But a physicalist will say that there is only the ink down on the paper, and that any content represented by it exists as chemical reactions in our mind. — Lionino
We are not denying the existence of physicals or substances, but they themselves are not facts or minds.So for physicalists, facts are physical or there are no facts; — Lionino
Wittgenstein said in TLP "The world is the totality of facts.", and it sounds interesting. It also sounds a kind of Solypsism. It cannot be said, but it presents itself. One's perception of the world is limited by one's knowledge of the facts of the world that one knows. The facts includes certain possibilities, impossibilities and logic that operates in the world. Could the facts one knows about the world he faces, and lives in, be the ultimate reason to believe in the existence of the world?otherwise it would depend on whether you are talking about the type or the token, or whether the guy you are asking is an idealist, or what the fact is talking about. — Lionino
Zen would be a knowledge that is impossible to demonstrate due to the nature of the knowledge, which is subjective and intuition based.Zen is known for this, for example the book Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind.
Also, the Tao Te Ching can be read and (somewhat understood) by nearly anyone in an hour.
In mystic Christianity, Jesus’s encouragement to become as children… etc etc. — 0 thru 9
It looks like a good name for a function in A.I. programming. You could write more details of procedure in the function specifying the variables, constants, inputs and outputs for the different external events fed into the function, and the procedures within the function could go through preset calculations and operations based on the set algorithms from the input and outputs from the hardware sensors in the AI agent.I gave some examples and here is a compiled list:
Brain; (thoughts, thinking) — Mark Nyquist
Shouldn't G be in the form of arithmetic calculus propositions for the incomplete theorem to apply?1. G is provable. So G is unprovable
2. G is not provable
So, there is G in the theory T
Have I got it right? — TheMadFool
In that case it would remain hidden from us because it is beyond our abilities to comprehend it. — Fooloso4
When the mysteries are revealed then they are for the initiated no longer mysteries. — Fooloso4
It sounds like a voice from the deepest well of confusion. Will leave you to it. :yawn:No, the observed motion was a change in the fabric of spacetime. — MoK
You are confusing the observation of the wave with time as a substance. Observed motions are not time itself.No, time is a component of spacetime. Spacetime was first claimed to be a substance by the general theory of relativity. It is also confirmed by observation of gravitational wave and lens. — MoK
Nothing is a condition, and something is a condition too. So a condition to a condition means nothing has changed.Because nothing is a condition in which no thing exists. Something is a condition in which at least one thing exists. Therefore, nothing to something is a change as well. — MoK
What do you mean by substance? Is it a physical object you can see and touch?No, time is a substance and nothing is a condition in which no thing exists. Therefore, the premise is correct. — MoK
Until you clearly define what nothing, something, change and time is, the conclusion is nonsense. The first thing wrong is the concept of time, which doesn't exist in the actual world.No, nothing is not something. The conclusion also follows from the premises. No time, no change. Time does not exist in nothing. Therefore, nothing to something, that is a change, is not possible. — MoK
Still doesn't change the fact that it doesn't add any new knowledge or facts into the concept unless it was used with the real world situations or observations.All of the knowledge of the actual world is defined as the stipulated meaning of terms and stipulated relations between terms in an inheritance hierarchy knowledge ontology specified as Rudolf Carnap / Montague grammar meaning postulates. The term Bachelor(x) is stipulated to mean: Adult(x) & Male(x) & ~Married(x) defined in terms of the constituent parts that comprise it. — PL Olcott
That would depend on what you mean by the term. As I understand it, it is knowledge gained through some kind of transcendent experience. It is known only to those who have had this experience. Some attempt to bring about this experience in one way or another by an altered state of consciousness. Others claim that it is something that happens to you without regard to what you do. Not ever having had such an experience I cannot evaluate it. I cannot say whether it reveals something about the world or human beings or the individual. I do not know to what extent it is an interpretation of what happens.
The term mystical is also used to mean what lies beyond both experience and explanation, that is to say, beyond knowledge. The arche of existence or that there is anything at all. — Fooloso4
Problems with analytic expressions are possible tautology. They tend to repeat what is already contained in the subject of the expressions e.g. "A bachelor is an unmarried male." viz. they don't increase or add new knowledge.An analytic expression x is any expression of language verified as completely true (or false) entirely on the basis that x (or ~x) is derived by applying truth preserving operations to other expressions of language that are stipulated to be true thus providing the semantic meaning of terms. — PL Olcott
An ambiguous statement disguised as a paradox.Yes, my reaction exactly. The most intriguing thing about this paradox is that a lot of people don't mind reasoning with something that is empty of meaning... Probably because they did not check that it actually has meaning prior entering this logic loop. — Skalidris
But Fooloso, wouldn't you agree if mystical knowledge is demonstrated, then it would be no longer a mystical knowledge?If someone claims to have mathematical knowledge it can be demonstrated. Can the same be said of someone who claims to have mystical knowledge?
— Fooloso4
:nerd: :up: — 180 Proof
It says what it means. It is a simple and clear statement which reflects the nature of time. I am not sure if it needs explanation.Time is not ontological entity. Time is epistemic entity.
That doesn’t make any sense, unless you are just conveying that time is just the form of experience. — Bob Ross
M = Motion□∀M -> □∃T
∃M1t1∃M2t2 →□Ag,T,M
I don’t know what this is supposed to be conveying. — Bob Ross
Your pseudo-syllogism doesn’t produce a logical contradiction and, thusly, doesn’t prove the logical impossibility of nothing becoming something. Your argument, in its form (as best as I could infer), is:
P1: T ↔ C
P2: E → C
P3: N → !T → !C
C: E → (C & C!) — Bob Ross
Time doesn't exist in the actual world. Time is a priori condition for perception and experience in Kant, and I believe it is correct. Changes take place totally unrelated to time. Time has nothing to do with changes. Human mind perceives the duration or interval of something starting and ending, and that is all there is to it.P1) Time is needed for any change — MoK
A change is from something to something else. Why is it nothing to something?P2) Nothing to something is a change — MoK
An ambiguous statement. This cannot be accepted as a premise for its ambiguity. Time is a concept and a priori condition for perception and experience. Nothing is a concept to denote a state of non-existence. You must define what "nothing" means before making the statement for consideration.P3) There is no time in nothing — MoK
Can nothing be something? Then it can be possible for nothing to something. Hence the conclusion would be wrong. Because "Therefore, nothing which is something is logically possible." would be right.C) Therefore, nothing to something is logically impossible. (From P1-P3) — MoK
It must have had been some type of Astrological prediction they had. I don't know the details of the methods, but here is the Wiki article on it.Could be, but still does not explain how they had predicted the upcoming solar flares years in the future. — Ege
If 'This sentence is false.” is true, then since it is stating that the sentence is false, if it is actually true that would mean that it is false, and so on.
Language conveys information and I can’t extract relevant information from this sentence, this is why I do not understand why people manage to reason logically with it. — Skalidris
The statement is unclear to be true or false. "This sentence" doesn't indicate which sentence it is describing or declaring about. From the statement, it is implied that there must another sentence before it, for the statement to be qualified to conclude "False", but it is not clear, whether it is the case, or "This sentence" means the sentence itself.For example, the liar paradox “this sentence is false” simply appears meaningless to me and I do not enter the logic of: If 'This sentence is false.” is true, then since it is stating that the sentence is false, if it is actually true that would mean that it is false, and so on. — Skalidris
:up: I was going to write the similar content of the post long before, but yes that is the crucial point.A "first cause" is "first" in relation to a specific chain. There may be a multitude of different chains. The "first" of one chain may be prior in time to the "first" of another chain. Therefore the assertion "there can be no cause prior to a first cause" is illogical. — Metaphysician Undercover