Why? It's symbol system with a grammar and axioms. That's language. Ask a mathematician.But math must involve some separate cognitive faculties than language use as in, doing some technical math work need not involve ordinary language at that level of technicality. — Manuel
Yes, I merely need a list of every object you think does, can, or must exist.Ah. The easy question. — Manuel
Aside from the way an explanation that 'mathematics isn't metaphoric' only further demonstrates the utility of analogy, in this case metaphor, in translating between languages and framing their contents as required, including mathematics, logic and whatever other formal system you care to define, mathematics does in fact have syntax, semantics, and whatever other equivalent you care to mention. The elements of our frameworks (in this case verbs, sentences and whatever else) are not particularly relevant for their comparative analysis; I can just simply define them as a set, or a set of functions perhaps, and then eventually we would be speaking the same language -- a mathematical one -- in which eventually my arguments become sufficiently acceptable. I don't happen to know your ontology, though, so I don't know which words you find to be the most 'factive' -- I have to guess from the center. And even if we decide this wasn't the case, the objects of mathematical study have no meaning without definitions (or direct demonstration, which is obviously not always possible), which are ultimately stated in natural language.Mathematics being a language is metaphoric. It doesn't have the same properties of natural languages such as syntax, tenses, verbs, etc. as well as most aspects of ordinary language use. It's similar to calling cooking a "science". — Manuel
I don't know who says that. And mathematics is just a language. It's certain to itself by definition.Who says that someone can be completely justified in believing X? A person can be more or less justified in believing a proposition or an event, but absolute certainty is not attainable, with (perhaps) the exception of mathematics. — Manuel
The absolutely is sarcastic for everyone except absolutists. I'm sort of implying that they are redundant because, as usual, it's only for their 'specialness' that this sentence needs to exist.Statements of the form, "a is justified to believe x", express a proposition where it's absolutely true or false that a is justified to believe x according to some certain z or the z that a is committed to. — Zophie
So what's the difference?As I understand it, science is provisional, always subject to further revision. Common sense is different. .. But common sense can also change, as it has done in history. — Manuel
Not a lot. I honestly often find mathematics to be irrelevant because it doesn't model things realistically.What does this mean to you in basic terms? — Shawn
It's unrealistic. Propositions may be true/false but any actual proposition is defeasible.what is wrong with the argument that has the horns of the Trilemma as its premises and “Therefore no claim is justified” as it's conclusion? — Amalac
I don't know, why should they? Because they do? Because they can?why should the sceptic accept them then? — Amalac
At face value, no. I would say it needs another element to make it properly analyzable, though.Surely you'd say that sceptical arguments such as the argument that uses Agrippa's Trilemma to conclude “therefore there are no proofs” is invalid. — Amalac
I didn't. It's set by the definitions of every well-defined system.How did you come to that conclusion? — Amalac
Ye'. This is known. I think there is a chance you may be getting ahead of yourself.the actual nature of matter is ultimately indeterminate. — ernest meyer
I'm merely suggesting that the method of deductive proof is generally trivial. In my humble opinion a skeptic may be better served by moving to a relativist model since that allows the following phrasing:I should clarify that the argument in the OP is not one for the conclusion that “proof does not exist” — Amalac
If so, does this not just further demonstrate what he said was true? He would be the one to know.Chomsky was a prolific user of media in saying that media deliberately falsifies explanations as propaganda, making himself a propagandist. — ernest meyer
So what are they? And why do I need to know? More realistically, why do you know that I need to know?about 50% of respondants could not name the disease's major symptoms. — Tim3003
How is this relevant to what I said? In any case I assume you're not interested in the process-oriented ontology which supposedly fixes the superposition.Most of the chemical bonding energy of atoms is contained in relatively small concentration within electron orbitals, and this density of energy combined with the equation wt=d/f implies that since 'd' is extremely small while the 'f' value comprises most of matter's energy, 't' probably becomes minuscule also, and energetic matter apparently links up in a system of pervasive synchronicity at the nanoscale. To put it simply, much of atomic motion is coordinated almost instantaneously. — Enrique
It is?The brain is an extremely concentrated ball of high energy electricity — Enrique
It exists?It participates in the same dynamic as atoms but on the macroscopic scale — Enrique
Are you just picking theoretical components?Consciousness thus transcends principles belonging to the four dimensional substrate of motion called spacetime. — Enrique
I see. So it's like some supremely spicy quantum consciousness thesis.Spacetime-based concepts model certain macroscopic phenomena such as light and extremely large mass, but consciousness and quantum entanglement might surpass the parameters of these models according to 19th and early 20th century science. — Enrique
But I believe on some level he is begging the question. — John Chlebek
No.For the mathematically inclined, does the following manipulation of equations suggest that quantized matter lacks a speed limit traditionally gauged as the velocity of light? — Enrique
No.So are values of time, distance, frequency and wavelength completely without intrinsic parameterization in the context of current physics? — Enrique
Pardon?Do basic equations intimate an absence of dimensional constants, whether of space, rate or acceleration? — Enrique
I understand this is an argument from gradualism but I do believe it can be applied to any definition. In which case don't see the problem with starting from basics. 'Rational' can be coherently communicated. 'Sensible' can be physically grounded. If there is any implication that we 'must' refer to proper references like dictionaries to define our terms then I doubt this is necessary for most discourses.what do we do with terms like "irrational" or "sensible", etc.? Sure, you can pick out edge cases and say that is irrational, but outside these cases, one of these words are easy to develop. — Manuel