Turley is definitely not a "liberal". The article you linked doesn't actually analyze the decision, it just asserts that it is correct, and then procedes to chastize liberals whoCdisagree with the decision. — Relativist
You stuck with me for an incredibly long time, and while I wasn't specifically looking for a sounding board, it turns out that's exactly what I needed. However, we've now reached a point where this discussion requires more than just a sounding board; it needs someone who can truly digest and engage with what I'm saying. Given this, it makes sense for you to disconnect now. This isn't due to a lack of topics to discuss, but rather because you're not interested. As such, I don't foresee us picking up this conversation again in the future, but who knows. Thank you so much for staying with me up to this point. I've gained a lot from our discussions, and I wish you all the best! — keystone
There's a lot that in mathematics is simply mentioned, perhaps a proof is given, and then the course moves forward. And yes, perhaps the more better course would be the "philosophy of mathematics" or the "introduction to the philosophy of mathematics". So I think this forum is actually a perfect spot for discussion about this. — ssu
Of course it would be a natural start when starting to talk about mathematics, just as when I was on the First Grade in Finland the educational system then had this wonderful idea of starting to teach first grade math starting with ...set theory and sets. Ok, I then understood the pictures of sets, but imagine first graders trying to grasp injections, surjections and bijections as the first thing to learn about math. I remember showing my first math book to my grand father who was a math teacher and his response was "Oh, that's way too hard for children like you." Few years later they dropped this courageous attempt to modernize math teaching for kids and went backt to the "old school" way of starting with addition of small natural numbers with perhaps some drawings and references about a numbers being sets. (Yeah, simply learning by heart to add, subtract, multiply and divide by the natural numbers up to 10 is something that actually everybody needs to know.) — ssu
It sure is interesting. And fitting to a forum like this. If you know good books that ponder the similarity or difference of the two, please tell. — ssu
No, Tones was referring to the principle called "the identity of indiscernibles", which is completely different from the law of identity. The law of identity makes a thing's identity the thing itself, the identity of indiscernibles associates a thing's identity with the thing's properties. These are fundamentally different principles. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, you simply fell for the sophistry. Tones is very good at it, and apt to convince others, earning the title "head sophist". — Metaphysician Undercover
So, a set is a mathematical structure. — Metaphysician Undercover
How do you make this consistent with the head sophist's claim that the members of The Beatles is a set, and the particles which make up a rock is a set? The sophist says "the set whose members are all and only the bandmates in the Beatles has 24 orderings". Notice that this is not stated as possible orderings, it is stated as the "orderings" — Metaphysician Undercover
Remember your schoolkid example? — Metaphysician Undercover
You recognized that the objects which bear that name have what you called SOME order, and this is an expression of the condition which they are actually in, at any point in time. I would call this their "actual order". — Metaphysician Undercover
No, Tones was referring to the principle called "the identity of indiscernibles", which is completely different from the law of identity. The law of identity makes a thing's identity the thing itself, the identity of indiscernibles associates a thing's identity with the thing's properties. These are fundamentally different principles. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, you simply fell for the sophistry. Tones is very good at it, and apt to convince others, earning the title "head sophist". — Metaphysician Undercover
So, a set is a mathematical structure. — Metaphysician Undercover
How do you make this consistent with the head sophist's claim that the members of The Beatles is a set, and the particles which make up a rock is a set? The sophist says "the set whose members are all and only the bandmates in the Beatles has 24 orderings". Notice that this is not stated as possible orderings, it is stated as the "orderings" — Metaphysician Undercover
Remember your schoolkid example? — Metaphysician Undercover
You recognized that the objects which bear that name have what you called SOME order, and this is an expression of the condition which they are actually in, at any point in time. I would call this their "actual order". — Metaphysician Undercover
Can you see what the head sophist has done? The sophist has removed any distinction of an actual order, to say that the group, or set, has 24 orderings, and all these orderings are equal, or the same, being in each case a different presentation of the same set. But you and I recognize, that in reality there is "SOME order", an actual order, which is the order that the objects are actually in, at any given point in time. The sophist might talk about 24 orderings, but you and I recognize that if these 24 account for all the possibilities, only one of those possibilities represents the very special "actual order", and, that since these elements are physical objects, there must be an actual order which they are in, at any given time. — Metaphysician Undercover
The law of identity is very important to recognize the actual existence of a thing, and its temporal extension. — Metaphysician Undercover
Through time a thing changes, and the law of noncontradiction stipulates that contradicting properties cannot be attributed to the same thing at the same time. So if a specific group has ordering A at a specified time, that is a property of that group, and it surely cannot have ordering B at the same time. The head sophist claims that the specified group has 24 orderings, all the time (as time is irrelevant in that fantasy land of sophistry). Obviously the head sophist has no respect for the law of noncontradiction, and is just making contradictory statements, in that sophistic fantasy. — Metaphysician Undercover
That is what happens when we allow that abstractions such as mathematical structures have an identity. Inevitably the law of noncontradiction and/or the law of excluded middle will be violated. Charles Peirce did some excellent work on this subject. It's a difficult read, and you've already expressed a lack of interest in this subject/object distinction, so you probably don't really care. Anyway, here's a passage which begins to state what Peirce was up to. — Metaphysician Undercover
The relevance of all this to the principles of excluded middle and contradiction is as follows. Peirce wrote that “anything is general in so far as the principle of excluded middle does not apply to it,” e.g., the proposition “Man is mortal,” and that “anything” is indefinite “in so far as the principle of contradiction does not apply to it,” e.g., the proposition “A man whom I could mention seems to be a little conceited” (5.447-8, 1905). If we take Peirce to have meant LEM and LNC, then it appears that he wanted to deny the principle of bivalence (according to which all propositions are true or else false) with regard to universally quantified propositions, and that he meant to claim that existentially quantified propositions are both true and false. But why think that “Man is mortal,” which seems to be straightforwardly true, is neither true nor false? And why think that one and the same proposition, “A man whom I could mention seems to be a little conceited,” is both true and false? Once we see what Peirce meant by “principles of excluded middle and contradiction,” we see that this is not what he was claiming.
— Digital companion to C. S. Peirce — Metaphysician Undercover
This is blatantly untrue, and as demonstrated above, if we assign "identity" to a set, the law of non-contradiction will be violated. — Metaphysician Undercover
The law of identity enables us to understand an object as changing with the passing of time, while still maintaining its identity as the thing which it is. — Metaphysician Undercover
Sets have distinct formulations existing all the time, which would cause a violation of the law of noncontradiction if we allow that a set is subject to the law of identity. Therefore we must conclude that sets are not subject to the law of identity. The type of thing which the law of identity applies to is physical objects. And there is obviously a big difference between physical objects and sets, despite what head sophist claims. — Metaphysician Undercover
You also have no problem with contradiction, it seems. — Metaphysician Undercover
This tells me nothing until you explain precisely what ∈ means. [/math]
is an undefined primitive of set theory. Its behavior is defined by the axioms.
— Metaphysician Undercover
To me, you are simply saying that x is an element of y if x is an element of y. What I am asking is what does it mean "to be an element". — Metaphysician Undercover
If we go with this definition, you ought to se very clearly that sets, as categories, abstract universals, do not have an identity according to the law of identity. A category is not a thing with an identity. — Metaphysician Undercover
Obviously this does not work. As you said already, elements are often sets. Therefore you cannot characterize the set as an abstract universal, and the element as an abstract particular, because they're both both, and you have no real distinction between universal and particular. — Metaphysician Undercover
There's no point in trying to justify the head sophist's denial of reality. — Metaphysician Undercover
If "Cinderella" refers to a particular, an instance of the category "fairy take characters", then that is a physical object. — Metaphysician Undercover
If "Cinderella" refers to a further abstract category, like in the case of "red is an instance of colour", then it does not refer to a particular. The head sophist seems to have convinced you that you can ignore the difference between a physical object and an abstraction, but you and I both know that would be a mistake. — Metaphysician Undercover
No. I'm complaining that things I have never said - and do not know enough mathematics to articulate - have been attributed to me.
All I know is that a link to a message that I did post, on the Infinite Staircase thread, has been added to text and quoted by fishfry in this post ↪fishfry on the Fall of Man thread. Judging by this post ↪fishfry and my exchanges with them on the Fall of Man thread, they did not do this. I don't know who did it and have no way of finding out. The suggestion that it came from keystone came from ↪jgill.
I hope that's clear. I would like the false attribution to be corrected or removed. — Ludwig V
It's very helpful, so that's fine. I get my revenge in this post. — Ludwig V
The system is not helping me here, because it invites me to link to specific comments, but I'll do my best to make clear what I'm responding to. — Ludwig V
Perhaps that's why philosophers keep tripping up on them. It is well known that they don't notice what's on the floor - too busy worrying about all the infinite staircases and the fall of man. — Ludwig V
That was not a very well thought out remark. I would certainly have hated them in the long-ago days when the Pythagoreans kept the facts secret so that they could sort it out before everyone's faith in mathematics was blown apart. But now that mathematicians have slapped a label on these numbers and proved that they cannot be completed, I'm perfectly happy with them. — Ludwig V
Yes. Austin invented them, Grice took them up, Searle was the most prominent exponent for a long time, although he has now moved on to other things now. — Ludwig V
It's a thing in philosophy For me, it's a useful tactical approach, but a complete rabbit-hole as a topic. — Ludwig V
Something like that. The initial point was to establish that there are perfectly meaningful uses of language that are not propositions (i.e. capable of being true or false), in the context of Logical Positivism. I doubt that you would welcome a lot of detail, but that idea (especially the case of the knight in chess) will be at the bottom of some of the later stuff. — Ludwig V
It was very helpful to me. I have doubts about the terminology "potential" vs "completed", but the idea is fine. I particularly liked "don't really find a use in math". — Ludwig V
Too much or not. It helped me. Someone else started talking about bounds and I couldn't understand it at all. I may not understand perfectly, but I think I understand enough. — Ludwig V
I know that. It's not a problem. If I said anything to suggest otherwise, I made a mistake. Sorry.
— Ludwig V
I understand that distinction. — Ludwig V
Many of my notions are naive or mistaken. But this separation is my default position. I'm not making an objection, but am trying to point out what may be a puzzle, which you may be able to resolve. On the other hand, this may not be a mathematical problem at all. — Ludwig V
There are other ways of putting the point. What about "Mathematics is always already true"? Or mathematics is outside time? Or time is inapplicable to mathematics? — Ludwig V
But your example of making a rule in chess. Note that as soon as the rules are made, we can starting defining possibilities in chess, or calculating the number of possible games and so forth. It's as if a whole structure springs into being as we utter the words. So a timeless structure is created by our action, which takes place in time. Isn't that at least somewhat like a definition in mathematics? And the definition is an action that takes place in space and time. — Ludwig V
More difficult are various commonplace ways of talking about mathematics. — Ludwig V
At first sight, these seem to presuppose time (and even, perhaps space) — Ludwig V
Perhaps they are all metaphors and there are different ways of expressing them that are not metaphorical. Is that the case? I recognize that I may be talking nonsense. — Ludwig V
Then you can't argue with me that you can argue with me. — TonesInDeepFreeze
That is my message. It is on the "Infinite Staircase" thread, and does not include any of the passages attributed to me in your quotations. So I have no idea who wrote them. — Ludwig V
Did you try to make sense of my 'elevator pitch'? I wasn't communicating nonsense. It wasn't even my work I was talking about... — keystone
Epsilon, eh? Will a few figures push you over the edge? That's where I need to go to move this forward... — keystone
Perhaps the paper by Milad Niqui. In that case things may get technical and out of the realm of TPF. — jgill
The objects that constitute both Euclidean and non-Euclidean (the unending many of them) spaces are abstract and both exist. Those objects may be applied in our scientific theories because a description of these objects can also describe some phenomenons in the real world. The problem is how do we get knowledge of these objects, if they are not physical? That is Benecerraf's problem. — Lionino
No I'm not. I accept that one of the premises of the thought experiment is physically impossible. That doesn't then mean that we cannot have another premise such as "there are no spontaneous, uncaused events".
You seem to think that because we allow for one physical impossibility then anything goes. That is not how thought experiments work.
It is physically impossible for me to push a button 10100100 times within one minute, but given the premises of the thought experiment it deductively follows that the lamp will be off after doing so. Your claim that the lamp can turn into a plate of spaghetti is incorrect. — Michael
Interesting. I hope I didn't bury the lede. I'm not all up about sarcasm. Rather, what I find important is (1) striving not to misrepresent a poster's remarks and to stand corrected when it is pointed out that one has; and (2) not to argue by ignoring key counter-arguments and explanations; not to just keep replying with the same argument as if the other guy hadn't just rebutted it. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And to answer your question: No, I definitely do not have any interest in "picking fights" and I find no value in fighting for the sake of fighting. But I do find value in posting disagreements and corrections, whether regarding the math and philosophy or regarding the personal specifics of the posting interchanges. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You first claimed that I was offensive to you. So I pointed out that you don't realize how offensive you often are. So I just gave you that info. I don't sweat being offended in posts. But you carelessly misconstrue what I've posted, and claim I've said things I haven't said, and write back criticism of my remarks by skipping their substance and exact points. And that is what I post my objections to.
Meanwhile, what you say about my posting style is rot. You say it's too long. But you also say it doesn't explain enough. Can't have it both ways. And I do explain a ton. But, again, I can't fully explain without having the prior context back to chapter 1 in a text already common in the discussion. And l explain somewhat technically because being very much less technical threatens being not accurate enough. Meanwhile, your own posts are usually plenty long, so take that tu quoque. — TonesInDeepFreeze
My response was to 'what's wrong with you tonight?', not so much to 'wut?'.
Convenient for you now to self-justify by highlighting 'wut?' and not 'what's wrong with you tonight?'.
There was nothing wrong with what I posted that night. You just lashed out at as if there were, when actually the problem is that you, as often, reply to your careless mis-impression of what is written rather than to what is actually written. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Does the axiom of identity mean Ludwig V = keystone ? — jgill
This is yet another instance of you lashing out against something that I wrote without even giving it a moment of thought, let alone maybe to ask me to explain it more. Your Pavlovian instinct is to lash out at things that you've merely glanced upon without stopping to think that, hey, the other guy might not actually being saying the ridiculous thing you think he's saying. Instead, here you jump to the conclusion that "there's something wrong" with him. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I wasn't clear; I didn't mean a URL link; I meant a reply link. Does the link in this post do what you want? — TonesInDeepFreeze
I explain in detail. And it's a stupid thing to say that I just type stuff. But in post or even a series of them, I can't fit in an explanation all the way back to the basics of the subject, so if one doesn't have the benefit of a context of adequate knowledge, it's not my fault that I can't supply all that needed context in even several posts. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Now that we got the axiom of extensionality straightened out, it's apropos to get the rest of the dissension worked out.
It starts with these good posts: — TonesInDeepFreeze
OK, so here we have the issue. Remove the examples of real world objects (schoolkids etc.) as "the elements", and what exactly is an element? — Metaphysician Undercover
It cannot be a particular thing, because it does not obey the law of identity, so it is some sort of universal, an abstraction. — Metaphysician Undercover
But what type of abstraction is it, one which we pretend is a particular? — Metaphysician Undercover
Why is it pretended that these are particulars? Maybe so that the set can be subjected to bijection, and have cardinality. The question then is whether the elements are truly individuals, or just pretend individuals. — Metaphysician Undercover
Isn't that exactly what meaning is, obeyance of some rules? — Metaphysician Undercover
Now, we know what a set is, something which obeys the rules of set theory, the real issue though is what is an element of a set. — Metaphysician Undercover
It seems you are having problems understanding the inherent difficulty of the empty set. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think we'd better have clear agreement on what an element is before we approach that more difficult problem of the empty set. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, but you also claim that sets have no meaning. — Metaphysician Undercover
An abstraction with no meaning is contradictory. That's why I can't understand your teachings about set theory. — Metaphysician Undercover
Any abstraction is a universal because its applicable to more than one particular set of circumstances. Whatever it is that any multitude of particulars has in common, is a universal. — Metaphysician Undercover
You appear to be suggesting a third category other than particular and universal, an abstraction which is not a universal. Care to explain? — Metaphysician Undercover
Bijection is a problem, because it requires that the elements are individuals, particulars, — Metaphysician Undercover
which I argue they are not. This is why we need to clear up, and agree upon the ontological status of an "element" before we proceed. — Metaphysician Undercover
Niqui arithmetic: Niqui's method allows you to take as input a symbol and a pair of locations in an unlabelled tree and it returns a corresponding location in the tree. It does not presuppose any mathematics other than Peano arithmetic. — keystone
My interpretation: It just so happens that if you label the nodes of the tree according to Stern-Brocot then those symbols correspond to the familiar operators of arithmetic.
Why this is important: If one can informally say that Peano defined the natural numbers according to discrete ordered positions along a line then that is no different than me saying that Niqui defined the fractions according to discrete ordered positions along a tree. — Ludwig V
I mentioned this only to suggest that my view may not be pre-axiomatic. I think Peano arithmetic is very important and Niqui took that to the next level. I also don't care to converse about proof assistants. — Ludwig V
Sorry, I meant to say "an infinite number of natural numbers" as in "ℵ0
ℵ
0
natural numbers". I can see how this was misleading because when I later wrote "arbitrary natural numbers" I was referring to placeholders that can be populated by any natural number you come up with. — Ludwig V
I'm just looking at things from the perspective of a computer. A computer doesn't access infinite sets, it always works with the finite set of finite inputs provided to it - so why not only assert the existence of those inputs (and whatever abstract objects it actually manipulates to deliver an output) and see how far this restricted math can go? — Ludwig V
What I'm proposing is not entirely philosophical. — Ludwig V
I think we got stuck in the weeds because I began to justify how fractions can exist in my view but that justification doesn't interest you. — Ludwig V
I think temporary suspension of disbelief is probably the best path forward so that we can jump to the good stuff before you decide to quit...or have you already decided... — Ludwig V
I thought that might be your answer. Perhaps we shouldn't pursue the jokes, though. — Ludwig V
It's called a performative speech act. Do you know about them? — Ludwig V
Very roughly, the saying of certain words is the doing. The classic example is promising. A particularly important - and complicated - variety of speech act is a definition. Particularly interesting cases are the definition of rules. (Well, definitions are always regarded as rules, but there are cases that are a bit tricky.) — Ludwig V
The relevance is that I'm puzzled about the relationship between defining a sequence such a "+1" and the problem of completion. — Ludwig V
Each element of the sequence is defined. Done. (And an infinite number of tasks completed, it seems to me). — Ludwig V
But apparently not dusted, because we then realize that we cannot write down all the elements of the sequence. — Ludwig V
In addition to the rule, there is a distinct action - applying the rule. That is where, I think, all the difficulties about infinity arise. — Ludwig V
We understand how to apply the rule in finite situations. But not in infinite situations. — Ludwig V
Think of applying "countable" or "limit" to "+1". The concept has to be refined for that context, which, we could say, was not covered (envisaged) for the original concept. — Ludwig V
(By the way, does "bound" in this context mean the same as "limit"? If not, what is the difference?) — Ludwig V
Oh, yes, I get it. I think. — Ludwig V
Forgive me for my obstinacy, but let me try to explain why I keep going on about it. I regard it as an adapted and extended use of the concept in a new context. (But there are other ways of describing this situation which may be more appropriate.) — Ludwig V
My difficulties arise from another use of the "1" when we define the converging sequence between 0 and 1. It seems that there must be a connection between the two uses and that this may mean that the sense of "limit" here is different from the sense of ω in its context. In particular, there may be limitations or complications in the sense of "arbitrary" in this context. — Ludwig V
I thought so. So when the time runs out, the sequence does not? Perhaps the limit is 42. — Ludwig V
So we say that all limited infinite sequences converge on their limits. — Ludwig V
Believe it or not, that makes sense to me. Since it is also an element of the sequence, it makes sense not to call it a limit. — Ludwig V
I have completist tendencies. I try to resist them, but often fail. — Ludwig V
Going back to the OP and the article given there, perhaps in the future it will be totally natural (or perhaps it is already) to start a foundation of mathematics or a introduction to mathematics -course with a Venn diagram that Yanofsky has page 4 has. Then give that 5 to 15 minutes of philosophical attention to it and then move to obvious section of mathematics, the computable and provable part. — ssu
I don't understand your question. — Michael
Asking me why I'm using P1 as a premise is as nonsensical as asking me why I'm using P2 as a premise. They are just the premises of the thought experiment. The intention is to not allow for the lamp to be off, for the button to be pushed just once, turning the lamp on – and then for the lamp to be off. — Michael
We are trying to understand what it means to perform a supertask, and so we must assert that nothing other than the supertask occurs. There are no spontaneous, uncaused events. If we cannot make sense of what the performance of the supertask (and only the supertask) causes to happen to the lamp then we must accept that the supertask is metaphysically impossible. — Michael
What I do not like about the SCOTUS ruling - I read it (quickly) - is that they appear to have completely sidestepped common sense — tim wood
I know you're kidding. But underneath there lies an actual point for me, which is that I don't think you know how insulting you are in certain threads when you read (if it can be called 'reading') roughshod over my posts, receiving them merely as impressions as to what I've said, so that you so often end up completely confusing what I've said and then projecting your own confusions onto me. — TonesInDeepFreeze
But I do appreciate that you quoted Cole Porter's so charming and magical lyric. And there was another special musical moment for me today, so my evening was graced. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I am hopelessly behind composing posts in at least a few threads. Even years behind in threads that I just had to let go because I really should be spending my time on other things more important than posting. — TonesInDeepFreeze
EDIT: After posting this I realized that there might be some confusion about Niqui Arithmetic. I have since posted another message entitled NIQUI ARITHMETIC. Please read that first. — keystone
Peano arithmetic can be formalized in Coq. — keystone
Similarly, Niqui arithmetic on the SB tree, which builds on Peano arithmetic, has been proven in Coq. There's an unquestionable structure to natural numbers and fractions that we both agree on. What we disagree on is the ontology related to these necessary truths. You believe that Peano arithmetic applies to infinite natural numbers, — keystone
whereas I believe it applies to arbitrary natural numbers. By this, I mean that Peano arithmetic corresponds to an algorithm designed to take as input any arbitrary pair of natural numbers and output the expected natural number. My ontology does not require the existence of any number. I only need numbers when I want to execute the algorithm, and I only need two numbers at that, not an infinite set. — keystone
\Although the above focuses on Peano arithmetic, the same applies to Niqui arithmetic. While the actual computations of Niqui arithmetic involve the manipulation of symbols or electrical signals, an elusive structure emerges in our mind when studying the algorithm—the SB-tree. Nobody has ever envisioned the complete tree, but we have seen the top part, and when I say 1/1 occupies a particular node, that top part is all I need to see. I don't need to assert the existence of an unseen complete tree; after all, it is merely an illusion that helps us understand the underlying algorithm (Niqui arithmetic). — keystone
I'm trying to establish parallel ontologies: Actual vs. real. At this point, we have actual numbers (fractions) and real numbers. We have actual points (k-points corresponding to fractions) and real points (k-lines corresponding to real numbers). This distincting is rather bland in 1D but it becomes much more consequential in 2D when establishing a foundational framework for geometry and calculus. — keystone
The Philosophy Forum appears to be quirky. I tried quoting this multiple times, sometimes including the spaces surrounding it, sometimes not, and about half the time it puts a column of 1-character lines. — keystone
As per P1, the lamp cannot spontaneously and without cause turn into a pumpkin, — Michael
It seems that from you I get extremely good answers. — ssu
Yes, Lawvere's fixed point theorem was exactly the kind of result that I was looking for. It's just typical that when the collories are discussed themselves, no mention of this. I'll then have to read what Lawvere has written about this. — ssu
And that not necessary is important for me. This is what TonesInDeepFreeze was pointing out to me also. I'll correct my wording on this. — ssu
Quite so. Except I thought that it had actually been done. — Ludwig V
Quite so. That's why I specified "convergent sequences". (I don't know what the adjective is for sequences like "+1" or I would have included them, because they also have a limit.) "0, 1, ..." is neither. Does the sequent 0, 1, ... have a limit - perhaps the ωth entry? — Ludwig V
If you mean that it would help for my posts to link to yours, then I'll hope not to forget doing that each time. — TonesInDeepFreeze
My preference regarding you is that you don't gloss my posts and jump to conclusions that I've said something I didn't say but that you think I must have said in you own confusions or lack of familiarity with the concepts or terminology. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Without sarcasm I say that it gives me a good feeling that reason, intellectual curiosity and communication have won the day finally. — TonesInDeepFreeze
That is where he gives the semantics for '=', as I mentioned that '=' is given a fixed interpretation. — TonesInDeepFreeze
So in set theory Ax x=x is redundant. — TonesInDeepFreeze
(x = y & y = z) -> x = z — TonesInDeepFreeze
I reply to your posts, then I see your replies back, to which I then reply back ...
I don't use any other protocols. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And you can look at the SEP article 'Identity' where you'll see:
Leibniz’s Law, the principle of the indiscernibility of identicals, that if x is identical with y then everything true of x is true of y. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I hope you know that 'the crank' does not refer to you. If that was not clear in the context, then I should have made it clear. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I'm giving you a lot of the same information and explanation over and over, since you skip over it over and over. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I said that the indiscernibility of identicals is formalized in identity theory. I didn't say that any particular formalization mentions it with the phrase 'the indiscernibility of identicals'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The principle was enunciated by Leibniz. But in mathematics, it's often called 'the principle of substitution of equals for equals'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And in modern logic, it is an axiom schema in the manner I've posted, which is equivalent (though notation and details differ) to Enderton and Shoenfield, for example. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I don't propound the notion that that approach could be adapted for natural languages too, but it doesn't seem unreasonable to me. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Seeing just that one phrase from the great song made my night. Such a soul satisfyingly beautiful song by a gigantically great composer. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Exactly. — TonesInDeepFreeze