Absent any physical theory, logic says non-existent and non-physical things don't have any cause and effect relation. — Mark Nyquist
- Brazillian Jiu jitsu;
- Drums, voice, guitar, bass, keys.. few others, including Irish Whistle!;
- Songwriting in light of the above - 23 albums and counting;
- Free Running/Parkour (mostly handstands and other power moves);
- Writing comedy for television and other stand-ups;
- Writing battle raps that will never see the light of day (though, there is footage of me doing several battles out there on the internet... )
- Collecting/enjoying Whisky/ey and fine Wine;
- Currently Learning Spanish and Arabic;
- Trying to solve the origins of the Voynich manuscript;
- Visiting puppy litters; and
- Writing science fiction (two pieces, thus far.. but one is a Trilogy for which i've only begun the first volume). — AmadeusD
even though the world has moved on, long covid still has me by the throat: — 180 Proof
I believe it makes perfect sense to say set x is only a member of itself in its own set — Philosopher19
There used to be a force of gravity. Now mass curves space and that produces what acts like a force, but explains the details better — Gary Venter
a little like MWI except alternate worlds (in Hilbert space) — noAxioms
We see a lot of interest in
physics and the other sciences, but it seems new ideas in
maths are rare . . .What am I really saying? Is research mathematics just
a pointless pastime... — Christoff Montnielsensons
Don't know that book, but
Ax x*0 = 0 is an axiom of first order PA, so it's easy to prove x*0 = 0 — TonesInDeepFreeze
I believe the solution to Russell's paradox is in here:
http://godisallthatmatters.com/2021/05/22/the-solution-to-russells-paradox-and-the-absurdity-of-more-than-one-infinity/ — Philosopher19
Honestly, I am having trouble dissecting the arguments used here.
Thoughts, jgill ? — Lionino
For me, as a kid, New Math was wonderful — TonesInDeepFreeze
I say the US education system does a massive disservice to the field of mathematics due to the fact that it divorces the philosophy of mathematics away from the applied version. — Vaskane
the philosophy of mathematics in the 20th century was characterized by a predominant interest in formal logic, set theory (both naive set theory and axiomatic set theory), and foundational issues.
The "math boys" here at the forum tend to respond with 'go read some math texts' to anyone who disagrees with them on fundamental principles — Metaphysician Undercover
Relevant: Lawvere's fixed point theorem. — Lionino
is there real math behind the north pole of the riemann sphere? — Mark Nyquist
Although the Casimir effect can be expressed in terms of virtual particles interacting with the objects, it is best described and more easily calculated in terms of the zero-point energy of a quantized field in the intervening space between the objects.
That said, I actually find this place to be populated by above average intelligence. — L'éléphant
Virtual particles pop out of a vacuum attached to a QM universe. Moreover, they have physical causes. — ucarr
So what semantic are mathematicians using when they use the world/label "infinite"? — Philosopher19
I don't see the point in saying that mathematics such as analysis doesn't use infinite sets, when plainly, at the very outset, to even start in the subject, we see that we are using infinite sets. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I'm not sure, but I think bread and butter analysis might touch on the cardinality of the power set of the set of reals (?), but I don't have enough information to dispute that even higher cardinals don't come up much. — TonesInDeepFreeze
As for transfinite math, it rarely if ever comes up in classical analysis. — jgill
Depends on what is meant by 'transfinite math'. 'transfinite' is just another word for 'infinite', and, of course, analysis uses infinite sets. Moreover, there are mathematicians who work (and not in obscurity) with higher cardinals vis-a-vis analysis, though that work might not be prominent in the bread and butter mathematics you have in mind. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And that's why I make a great analyst because I have an ability to understand concepts without even knowing of them — Vaskane
But from what I've seen of mathematicians, they either have no part for infinity, or they're using infinity wrongly. I believe they're doing the latter which leads to the former (which I think is why I have heard it said before that "maths is incomplete") — Philosopher19
I believe no one until today has brought Weierstrass to my attention. — Metaphysician Undercover