where to put the diamond that indicates the thing that is K only exists contingently? — Banno
some pseudo-philosopher posters are limited in their thinking to finite physical Reality : no place for metaphysical Ideality. Consequently, intimations of anything outside the physical/material system of Cause & Effect amounts to blasphemy against their personal belief system (their creed). — Gnomon
Formalization is the way for an idea to be treated seriously. — keystone
huge investment of time and money — keystone
If ZFC is consistent then there's no cake and eating it too. — keystone
No, set theory shows how the paradoxes with the naive notion of sets are avoided.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
We've been down this road already. — keystone
Given that everything fits nicely together for you and in your view the paradoxes are addressed, I can see how you're not motivated to pursue a potential infinity solution. — keystone
Let's not debate my motivations. — keystone
Let's leave it at that. — keystone
TonesInDeepFreeze
Sometimes all you can do is laugh and walk away. — Aristotle
— Banno
Amen! — Gnomon
I don't know what set Tones off on his "Gnomon said" rant. — Gnomon
Gnomon didn't say or mean whatever knocked the chip off his shoulder. — Gnomon
I certainly had no intention to insult him, or to debate the technicalities of higher math with him. — Gnomon
I was about to mention that he's gnawing on an imaginary bone, with no nutritional value. But such a light-hearted tongue-in-cheek remark — Gnomon
I'll take [banno's] advice to just laugh quietly and walk away. [...] — Gnomon
[italics original]PS___Since he's bursting at the seems — Gnomon
I'll let Tones have the last word : fill-in the blank [ . . . . . . . ] — Gnomon
I wanted to bounce my pre-formalized idea off of someone to see whether it was worth me investing in formalizing it. — keystone
the proofs come from the axiom— keystone
unless I can prove the axioms to be inconsistent there's no point discussing my musing. — keystone
While I would have deeply appreciated you trying to truly understand what I'm trying to say, I fully acknowledge that it is reasonable for you to not want to invest the time into it. — keystone
when discussing the standard position on an intuitive level many paradoxes arise. — keystone
The standard position doesn't gel with our intuitions — keystone
You did it again: You bolded in my quote without indicating that the bolding was not original.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Yes. I emphasized the subject of the sentence, to show where you missed the point of the original statement. Apparently, that didn't have the desired effect. But I'll continue to do it again, if you continue to misinterpret my meaning. — Gnomon
In the words of Paul McCartney, "let it be". — Gnomon
Do the general questions listed above have mathematical solutions? — Gnomon
philosophical questions about contingency and necessity, causation and explanation, part/whole relationships (mereology), possible worlds, infinity, sets, the nature of time, and the nature and origin of the universe.
— Gnomon
Of course those are informed by mathematics and science.
contingency and necessity. That is informed by modal logic, which is a study in formal logic very closely related to mathematical logic.
mereology. Also studied in formal logic.
possible worlds. Again, informed by modal logic. Also, analogous to semantics for intuitionistic logic for intuitionistic mathematics.
infinity. The notions 'is infinite' and 'points of infinity' are informed by mathematics.
sets. Informed by set theory and class theory, which are mathematics and are themselves foundations for mathematics.
the nature of time. I don't know about 'the nature of', but the subject of time is, of course, informed by mathematics and physics.
the nature and origin of the universe. questions about the universe are of course addressed by cosmology, which is informed by mathematics.
It is curious, at best, to me that a person would want to dogmatically declare that philosophy should not be discussed in cross-context with [added: certain] subjects. Especially when the original poster her(or him)self introduced mathematical aspects and not merely metaphorically. On the contrary, intellectual curiosity, intellectual creativity and open mindedness invite cross-study/conversation, not shutting it down. — TonesInDeepFreeze
that is not my claim. It's your erroneous interpretation, but not my intention. — Gnomon
Instead, it is "philosophical concepts" that the predicate modifies with "not addressed". — Gnomon
I admitted above that the sentence construction could be misconstrued --- by someone with a pre-conception. — Gnomon
And it's the "Infinite Regression"*1 argument, not the definition of "Infinity", that is in question. — Gnomon
impassioned mathematical side-track — Gnomon
I suspect that we are actually in agreement about the math of PI & Infinity, but perhaps not about the philosophical concept of a pre-big-bang First Cause. — Gnomon
invicta seems to be insisting on a colloquial usage of "infinity" — Gnomon
while you are insisting on technical definitions. — Gnomon
I suppose you would like me to paraphrase so you can judge my comprehension. — keystone
I incorrectly claimed that the S-B paths converged to a limit. — keystone
I think this may be an important point to you because you are stressing the importance of completeness to calculus. — keystone
What I'm suggesting is that by starting with uncountably infinite objects (corresponding to real numbers) you are effectively starting with the 'bottom of the tree'. And that agreeing to the former and not the latter is wanting your cake and having it too. — keystone
A continuum defined by numbers — keystone
[in k-musings] numbers defined by a continuum. The ordering of numbers in this [k-]system does not need to be complete. — keystone
Would you agree to either of the following?
1) A continuum is defined completely by numbers.
2) A line is made up entirely of points. — keystone
I don't think there's a need to define the limit of an algorithm. — keystone
Are my proposed algorithms that different from Cauchy sequences?
— keystone
Indeed they are! I EXPLAINED this. I don't understand what you don't understand in my explanation.
(1) An algorithm is finite. A Cauchy sequence is denumerable. And an equivalence class of Cauchy sequences has the uncountable cardinality of the set of equivalence classes of Cauchy sequences.*
* I think that sentence is right.
(2) There are only denumerably many algorithms, but uncountably many equivalence classes of Cauchy sequences.
(3) Cauchy sequences have a limit. But if we somehow defined the limit of an algorithm, then that would be infinitistic (unless some actual rigorous workaround could be formulated). — TonesInDeepFreeze
very number-centric view. — keystone
Your "line", the k-line, has NOTHING on it, as YOU said. So 'continuous' is not even applicable. And there is no infinite set of cuts on the k-line that comes after all the rows. You just now admitted that.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Over and over you repeat the same point, as if I'm not understanding you. I understand what you're saying. — keystone
— Gnomon
That is nothing less than bizarre for you to say.
You wrote:
"Infinite Regress" and "First Cause" are philosophical concepts that are not addressed by Mathematics — TonesInDeepFreeze
I assumed the subject of the sentence was obvious. — Gnomon
"Infinity" is a legitimate mathematical topic, but "Infinite Regression" is an ancient philosophical conundrum. Hence, to get into mathematical technicalities is irrelevant to questions about a world-creating act of Causation. — Gnomon
[bold added]What proof is there of 1/Pi…creating irrational diameter ?
Mathematically speaking ? — invicta
An Uncaused Cause or Prime Mover is a Platonic/Aristotelian notion of Metaphysics, not Physics, nor Math. [...] Or do you think philosophical questions can be solved mathematically? — Gnomon
An Uncaused Cause or Prime Mover is a Platonic/Aristotelian notion of Metaphysics, not Physics, nor Math. — Gnomon
A self-drawn circle is the theory to be "trashed", not the definition of Infinity. — Gnomon
Apparently, in the face of such sniping, Invicta bailed on his own thread. — Gnomon
For those interested in the actual topic of this thread — Gnomon
philosophical questions about contingency and necessity, causation and explanation, part/whole relationships (mereology), possible worlds, infinity, sets, the nature of time, and the nature and origin of the universe. — Gnomon
What proof is there of 1/Pi…creating irrational diameter ? — invicta
Mathematically speaking ? — invicta
a line with irrational extension would snake its way when drawn — invicta
It is just not the case that one has to accept everything invicta says as merely metaphorical when [invicta] [...] presses others to be mathematically exact. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Of course. And a symbolic metaphor for a thing is not that thing. When invicta says that Pi is a circle, and even presses others to be mathematically exact in disputing that claim, it is unreasonable to disallow that [invicta] is [...] speaking about mathematics not merely [...] non-mathematical musings. — TonesInDeepFreeze
One can arrange digits of any number on any figure you please. One could arrange digits of Euler's constant on a triangle. That doesn't make Euler's constant a triangle. Not even a metaphor for a triangle. One can arrange digits of Pi along a hexagon. So Pi is no less a hexagon than it is a circle. And if one says, as does invicta, that Pi IS a circle, then a circle is a hexagon. — TonesInDeepFreeze
But you also said, "Infinite Regress" and "First Cause" are philosophical concepts that are not addressed by Mathematics".
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Again, I did not say what you attribute to me. The "not addressed" is your imaginary addition to what I said. — Gnomon
"Infinite Regress" and "First Cause" are philosophical concepts that are not addressed by Mathematics — Gnomon
"Infinite Regress" and "First Cause" are philosophical concepts that are not addressed by Mathematics — Gnomon
This whole off-topic series of accusations & counter-accusations is what I was referring to as "the shallow end of philosophical debate". — Gnomon
Disagreements about terminology are unnecessary. Discussants can instead acknowledge the clear definitions in mathematics: — TonesInDeepFreeze
Tones, apparently you didn't read the OP, — Gnomon
bear-trap Banno — Gnomon
what has incensed some posters in this thread — Gnomon
they hope to demolish by turning a broad philosophical question into a narrow technical definition. — Gnomon
Let's get back to sharing opinions on general philosophical questions, not specific mathematical technicalities. [with smiley face in original] — Gnomon
The open-ended OP --- an essay question, not true/false --- regarding opinions about "First Cause", was of mild interest to me, but not the nitty-gritty facts of mathematical infinities. — Gnomon
Note that in the Ouroboros symbol, the snake that seems to be recreating itself, actually has a head and tail, a beginning and end. — Gnomon
Referring to invicta as "he" :
"Unfortunately, he continues to argue with Banno about interminable terms that have no bearing on the original post -- just digging himself deeper into the shallow end of philosophical debate." — Gnomon
I believe though is that if this approach ever gets formalized it's going to use a lot of similar language as Cauchy sequences. — keystone
I think it's a matter of perspective by what one means by 'that different'. — keystone
The k-line becomes important when exploring higher dimensions. — keystone
To continue to clean up some of the language: — keystone
Your use of 'line' is only a figure of speech. It's not a line. It has nothing on it
— TonesInDeepFreeze
k-lines are associated with k-functions that describe their infinite potential. — keystone
Maybe one day you will see set theory as the mathematics of the bottom of the S-B tree…the bottom which you (rightfully) claim doesn't exist. Perhaps it is you who wants to eat your cake and have it too. — keystone
Meanwhile, I've asked you three times now whether you understand this post:
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/806060
But you still say not a word about it.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Sorry, I thought I was answering this question indirectly but let me be more clear. The successive outputs of a k-algorithm do not converge to any object. Ever. The S-B algorithm does not terminate (or to someone who believes in actual infinity - there is no bottom of the S-B tree). — keystone
apparently you didn't read the OP — Gnomon
I would have to be an idiot to make the "claim" you pin on me above. — Gnomon
"Infinite Regress" and "First Cause" are philosophical concepts that are not addressed by Mathematics — Gnomon
Wrong. I and others have studied infinite regress in detail — jgill
Irrelevant ! — Gnomon
some posters are treating invicta as an idiot — Gnomon
What I actually said was that his OP was not a scientific or mathematical assertion — Gnomon
He even asked if "anyone wanna trash this theory?". Would anyone in his right mind ask that of a mathematical fact? — Gnomon
Obviously, what has incensed some posters in this thread is the supernatural implications of the OP. Which they hope to demolish by turning a broad philosophical question into a narrow technical definition. — Gnomon
when others began to make an issue of the PI/infinity concept, I simply pointed out that it was used in a metaphorical context, not as mathematical fact. So, get off his back. — Gnomon
Pi is exactly the ratio of circumference to diameter. It is not infinite — Banno
Ok then mister, please give me the exact value of Pi — invicta
Pi is not a circle — Banno
Of course it’s a circle what is the value of the line when you’ve performed the calculation circumference/diameter…it’s Pi of course. — invicta
If you want to get technical, PI is indeed an infinite series of numbers — Gnomon
a circle -- no beginning or end -- is sometimes used symbolically as a metaphor for infinity — Gnomon
what has incensed some posters in this thread is the supernatural implications of the OP. Which they hope to demolish by turning a broad philosophical question into a narrow technical definition. — Gnomon
Anyone wanna trash this theory? — invicta
Irrelevant ! — Gnomon
"Infinite Regress" and "First Cause" are philosophical concepts that are not addressed by Mathematics
— Gnomon
Wrong. I and others have studied infinite regress in detail, as infinite compositions or iterations. — jgill
ght to to use a colloquial meaning of "infinite" in a philosophical proposition, without being challenged to present a mathematical justification. — Gnomon
incensed — Gnomon
Tarski came up with another concise definition that can be shown identical to Dedekind's. — jorndoe
I'm getting plenty of value out of this dialogue. — keystone
I don't think your infinite loop programming example of me not listening was a fair representation — keystone
The idea behind this proposal is that the fundamental object is the line, not the point. — keystone
This algorithm can be described as R RL[...] and I call it phi. — keystone
But doesn't that mean that standard calculus depends on there being no gaps on the line? — keystone
Infinite sets are so deeply embedded in your thinking that you're not even willing to imagine the possibility that points are not fundamental. — keystone
In my proposal — keystone
Are my proposed algorithms that different from Cauchy sequences? — keystone
Is my proposed line that different from the real number line? — keystone
Is my proposed line not continuous? — keystone
Standard analysis achieves length by having uncountably many points. — keystone
Is length not also achieved by having pseudo-intervals? — keystone
we must remember that calculus came before set theory — keystone
I'm only proposing a different foundational underpinning. If you don't think that's philosophy then sure. — keystone