And of course this goes for other mathematical entities, too. They are things we do, not things we find. — Banno
Watching philosophers talk is sort of like watching a bird with a broken wing keep flapping it, and trying to readjust, not understanding what's wrong — Snakes Alive
No deductive argument will settle any of these issues: it simply pushes the problem back by introducing new premisses subject to the same issues. Still, the same structure is found in other disciplines. For instance, in mathematics, chains of reasoning ultimately run back to axioms, and the question of their justification eventually arises (Maddy 2011).
I was tempted to ask if anyone still reads Being and Nothingness. But of course no one ever actually read Being and Nothingness. — Banno
. . . questions like "what are these possible paths that Langragians integrate over?" seem to make sense — jkg20
I would love to see all medical training, for doctors, dentists, nurses, aides, and all other healthcare workers to be 100% paid for by the government...with a healthy stipend for people entering the field. — Frank Apisa
So how is starting with preliminary definitions a weakness? — tim wood
In terms of the mean doctrine, I would say that the two vices in opposition are:
- ‘impatience’: one interacts only with the imagined reality; and
- ‘apathy’: one interacts only with the actual, observed reality. — Possibility
Definitions are the Achilles' heel of philosophy. :confused: — jgill
How so? And keeping in mind that Achilleus's heel itself as a heel worked just fine, no complaints. — tim wood
but what would you call the excess of patience? — Lecimetiere
I can imagine the arrow has its momentum during any duration of time however short, but at the point where no time passes? — tim wood
and math crumbles before philosophy. Wouldn't it result in there being only one number? — Gregory
If reality has no common natures,.why should numbers share a nature necessarily? — Gregory
If reality has no common natures,.why should numbers share a nature necessarily? — Gregory
"In mathematics, a dynamical system is time-reversible if the forward evolution is one-to-one" — jgill
Well, your wiki reference gives rather more succinct definitions, though they may require some unpacking. — SophistiCat
This would actually be a weaker version of absolute normality - the property of containing every finite sequence of digits in every base with "equal frequency" (scare quotes because this is more complicated than it sounds). — SophistiCat
QM effects are already non-reversible... — VagabondSpectre
This is distinct from chaotic behavior (which is, in a technical sense, reversible) — SophistiCat
