I'm not claiming any particular sense of existence. Nor am I disputing any particular sense of existence. In context of the question whether set theory is inconsistent with physics, I am interested in the context of formal axiomatization (I'll just say 'axiomatization'). In Z we have the theorem: Ex x is infinite. I would think that that would provide an inconsistent axiomatization T of mathematics/physics only if T has a theorem: ~Ex x is infinite.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Of course that is vacuously true, since there is no axiomatic formulation of physics. — fishfry
The axiom of infinity is inconsistent with known physics since there is no principle of modern physics that stipulates the existence of any infinite set, — fishfry
contemporary physics can not accept the axiom of infinity as a physical principle. — fishfry
I claim that set theory has a theorem: Ex x is an inductive set. I don't opine as to what particular sense we should say that provides.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Why not? — fishfry
why not say something like, "The axiom of infinity is a formal statement that, as far as we know, is false about the world, yet taken as a fundamental truth in mathematics. And I account for that philosophically as follows: _______." — fishfry
Ducking the question doesn't help. — fishfry
The axiom of infinity is taken as true in "some abstract mathematical sense." My point exactly, on which we are now in agreement. There are models of set theory in which it's true; at least if there are any models at all. — fishfry
You've come to be in agreement with me. The only way the axiom of infinity can possibly be accepted as true or meaningful is in the context of purely abstract math — fishfry
and NOT physics — fishfry
when we got into the second half of Halmos Naive Set Theory most of us lost interest. — jgill
If an inductive set that's not physical "exists," what does that mean to you? — fishfry
If you play Platonist — fishfry
But you're the one claiming that an inductive set "exists," — fishfry
"I explained why previously it was not unreasonable for me not to infer that you were writing hyperbolically" broke my parser. And that hurts! — fishfry
If I say I am not replying, that would constitute a reply. — fishfry
inane self-referential conversation — fishfry
When you something substantive, as opposed to looping back on the syntax of whatever I may have said — fishfry
The axiom of infinity is in contradiction with known physics — fishfry
You would not have begrudged me then, but you will begrudge the living bejeebus out of me now? — fishfry
Does the phrase, "Give it a rest," have any resonance with you? — fishfry
I don't remember making any recent argument with you other than that it's pointless to argue about how many mathematicians believe this or that — fishfry
I may be lost by now. I have no idea what we're discussing. — fishfry
It may have been tedious, but my entries have been responses to your continued posting on the subject. It seems odd to me that one would continue to reply, and repeat some points that are essentially the same, but then complain that responses on point to your own replies are thereby tediousness. — fishfry
Do you mean the hyperboles "blow up the moon" and "AIDS denier"?
— TonesInDeepFreeze
No, those are literal facts of record. I supplied the relevant Wiki links. — fishfry
I addressed the additional matter of outlandishness; I didn't thereby declare that I am forever changing any subject or not changing it.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I used a figure of speech called hyperbole. — fishfry
No, not that I don't at all know. Rather, I don't know that it hasn't been axiomatized at all (i.e. hasn't been axiomatized to any extent whatsoever or with no progress toward axiomatizing it). That was in response to what you wrote, "Physics has not been axiomatized at all."
— TonesInDeepFreeze
LOL. You said, "I don't know that it hasn't been axiomatized AT ALL," your caps. Which could mean:
a) You don't know AT ALL if it hasn't been axiomatized; or
b) You don't know if it's been axiomatized AT ALL, as opposed to in its entirety. — fishfry
I pointed out that parts of science have been very nicely axiomatized, such as Newtonian gravity. That would be an agreement with (b). Whereas (a) refers to the state of your knowledge. — fishfry
If 'to make interesting' includes 'to provide an axiomatization of the mathematics for sciences'.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
This could never be true. Physics has not been axiomatized at all. They can't even reconcile quantum mechanics and relativity. And the idea that set theory could ever be a foundation for physics seems to me to be an unlikely stretch. But at least that is an interesting and substantive topic in the philosophy of math and science. — fishfry
[,,,] That a vast number of mathematicians don't care about foundations doesn't imply that the vast number of mathematicians don't think axioms are true except model-theoretically, as indeed the fewer who care about foundations then reasonably we would expect the fewer who think truth is merely model-theoretic.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I used a figure of speech called hyperbole. You pointed out repeatedly that what I said was not literally correct. I conceded that "plenty" of mathematicians disagree with what I said. Yet this is still not enough for you. — fishfry
It may have been tedious, but my entries have been responses to your continued posting on the subject. It seems odd to me that one would continue to reply, and repeat some points that are essentially the same, but then complain that responses on point to your own replies are thereby tediousness.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I used a figure of speech called hyperbole. — fishfry
I addressed the additional matter of outlandishness; I didn't thereby declare that I am forever changing any subject or not changing it.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I used a figure of speech called hyperbole. — fishfry
I'm sure the standard axiomatization of math is an overkill for that. — fishfry
You don't know at all if it's been axiomatized ? — fishfry
I'll go with "plenty" if this will mollify your sense of right and wrong here. — fishfry
If you want to argue about what people think, I can't engage on that anymore. — fishfry
99% of professional mathematicians are not involved in foundations (more or less objective number, I didn't look it up but recall jgill's post regarding the percentage of recently published papers) and therefore have no professional opinion on the subject at all. — fishfry
You made your point then got tedious and are now beyond that. — fishfry
Whether one agrees with notions of mathematical truth other than model-theoretic, I'd be inclined not to claim that thinking philosophically or heuristically of mathematical truth as rather than model theoretic is among the ilk of proposing detonation of the moon or claiming that AIDS doesn't exist.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
The question of foundations is as far from the practice of most mainstream mathematicians as blowing up the moon or AIDs denialism. — fishfry
Two different things: (1) "P is the case" and (2) "Nobody claims that ~P is the case".
— TonesInDeepFreeze
The former being interesting, the latter tedious beyond belief. — fishfry
So you didn't change the subject after all. — fishfry
If 'to make interesting' includes 'to provide an axiomatization of the mathematics for sciences'.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
This could never be true. Physics has not been axiomatized at all. — fishfry
[the axiom of infinity] is just a rule that's been found by experience to make the game interesting. — fishfry
if you deny that the axiom of infinity is "manifestly false about the real world," — fishfry
The axioms aren't false, either, any more than the way the knight moves in chess may be said to be true or false. It's just a rule that's been found by experience to make the game interesting. — fishfry
I truly can't argue about what the majority or substantial plurality or "some" or "a few" or whatever mathematicians believe. — fishfry
I have no data or evidence, neither do you. — fishfry
But the subject matter that most mathematicians work on, as evidenced by the number of papers published, is so far removed from foundations that I can't imagine that many mathematicians spend five minutes thinking about the subject in a year or in a career. — fishfry
arguing popular opinion is not fruitful — fishfry
Would you like me to go from "a few" to "a whole bunch?" I'm not sure what outcome would satisfy you. This is not a meaningful conversation. — fishfry
This is not a meaningful conversation. — fishfry
So 'real world' is now added to the question.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
That's what true and false typically mean. — fishfry
The axiom of infinity is manifestly false about the real world. — fishfry
Perhaps you can put your concept of truth into context for me. — fishfry
Respected mathematician Alexander Abian wanted to blow up the moon; and prolific author of high-level math texts Serge Lange was an AIDs denier. — fishfry
is false.Nobody claims that the axiom of replacement or the axiom of powersets is true. NOBODY [all caps in original] says that. [,,,] [no one] is claiming the axioms of math are "true." — fishfry
Which requires the existence of an inaccessible cardinal, the existence of which is not even provable in ZFC. — fishfry
tiny percentage of overall math papers that are devoted to set theory. — fishfry
We're arguing over what other people think, we can't ever get to the bottom of that. — fishfry
In what sense could the Peano axioms be true in the real world? — fishfry
The overwhelming majority of working mathematicians are not set theorists or involved in foundations. They pay no attention to set theory and would be hard-pressed to even name the axioms. — fishfry
The question doesn't come up. — fishfry
Among those who study foundations, it must be abundantly clear that the axioms are arbitrary and not literally true — fishfry
or at best I would say that "a few" mathematicians claim the axioms are literally true in some sense. — fishfry
Among philosophers, who could seriously argue that the axioms of set theory are "true" in any meaningful sense; or even meaningful in any meaningful sense! — fishfry
I'd go further and say that it's perfectly clear that some of the axioms, such as the axiom of infinity, are literally false. — fishfry
I would add to all that the growing importance of neo-intuitionist, constructivist, and category-theoretic approaches, in which set theory is not only false, but irrelevant. — fishfry
you said, "certain axioms," and I suppose if you want to say that high school notions like unions and intersections are true or instantiable in the real world, you'd have a point. — fishfry
Nobody claims that the axiom of replacement or the axiom of powersets is true. NOBODY [all caps in original] says that. [,,,] [no one] is claiming the axioms of math are "true." The axioms are strings of formal symbols, true in some models and false in others. — fishfry
Likewise your persistent complaint that I omitted the fact that I am talking about total orders (which you called "connected" for reasons I didn't understand). — fishfry
I [...] decided to implicitly assume total orders to make the exposition more readable. — fishfry
If you would take a moment to ask yourself, "How would I explain ordinal numbers in a fair amount of depth to a casual audience," you might come to understand some of the tradeoffs involved. — fishfry
Necessarily not everything was perfectly pedantic. So you missed that point entirely. — fishfry
A number of your statements were flat out wrong, — fishfry
such as claiming that a bijection of a well-ordered set to itself is necessarily another well-order. — fishfry
I had already given the counterexample of the naturals and the integers. — fishfry
Your several posts to me seemed not just pedantic, but petty, petulant, and often materially wrong. — fishfry
You either misunderstood the pedagogy or the math itself — fishfry
a long list of topics to be studied before one can read my article. — fishfry
The challenge is to write something that can be read by casual readers WITHOUT any mathematical prerequisites. — fishfry
"Yes, 'x is an ordinal iff x is the order-type of a well ordered set' is a theorem." followed by some picky complaint. — fishfry
I led with "x is an ordinal iff x is the order-type of a well ordered set" because that's something that I can explain to a casual audience in a couple of paragraphs. — fishfry
With zero and 1, I take it a person can get to any number in {0, 1, 2,.., n}, though perhaps not efficiently. The limit of that being ω. — tim wood
all the successors have already been used — tim wood
we can both agree that mere familiarity with terms doesn't get a person very far. — tim wood
By "successor" I understand some number, as 3 is the successor to 2, 4 to 3, and so forth. — tim wood
is the change from ω-street to ε-street a "can't get theah from heah" transition? I see the language that says you just add a successor, but what successor would that be? — tim wood
ω is N in its usual order. — fishfry
ω+1 is N in the funny order: — fishfry
ω+1 as an alternate ordering of the natural numbers — fishfry
The only way I can understand ω or ω+1, is simply as the numbers ω and ω+1, which are just larger than any of the {0, 1,.., n}. — tim wood
Maybe I need a bit more care in thinking about what a number is. — tim wood
there are many who consider such books "archives" and that the sine qua non of learning is the good teacher. I myself favor middle ground, finding books to allow triangulation on a topic by one providing illumination where another is dark, while a teacher provides guidance and explains difficulties. — tim wood
I vaguely remember a comment that "explained" certain large cardinals by saying, "You can't get theah from heah." By which I understood that no ordinary process could get to them, meaning, as best I get it, that no recursion scheme could get to them. — tim wood
Every permutation of a finite set is a well-order. — fishfry
A well-order is an order in which every nonempty subset has a smallest element. — fishfry
So for infinite sets, permuting does not preserve order type. — fishfry
in the limit, or sup operation. — fishfry
Infinity and the Mind by Rudy Rucker. — fishfry
An ordinal number is the order-type of a well-ordered set — fishfry
A well-order is an order relation on a set such that every nonempty subset has a smallest element. — fishfry
Every possble nonempty set of the naturals has a smallest member, so the naturals are well-ordered by <. — fishfry
the negative numbers have no smallest element. — fishfry
ω stands for the natural numbers in their usual order. — fishfry
If the usual order 0, 1, 2, 3, ... is called ω — fishfry
our funny order (N,≺) is called ω+1 — fishfry
even without choice, some uncountable sets can be well-ordered. Just not all of them. — fishfry
in the absence of choice, there are infinite sets that are not well-ordered — fishfry
there's also no set of all sets bijectively equivalent to the naturals or any other cardinality. — fishfry
the Alephs are indexed by whole numbers — fishfry
Is it correct to think of all the well-orderings to be the same thing as all the permutations? — tim wood
ω! — tim wood
NN — tim wood
seems that ω is the ordinal associated with NN. But it also seems that ω is also associated with every infinite subset of NN. — tim wood
how many infinite subsets of NN are there? — tim wood
ε — tim wood
how do you get beyond ε and still be countable? — tim wood
First? Or least but not necessarily first? — tim wood
can be and is — tim wood
well-ordering means the set [...] is ordered lexicographically. — tim wood
1,2,3 is well ordered in each, and all, of six variations — tim wood
An ordering has a first element (yes?) — tim wood
At some point candidates for the second element are exhausted, — tim wood
uniquely orderable — tim wood
