Material Numbers – because a material object can hold a position, perhaps we can understand that any material object has a built-in property of number. The number property of a material object is its ability to afford a slot wherein a set of possible numbers gives value to its position within an array of other material objects in interrelationship. — ucarr
Can someone please explain the OP to me ? — Hello Human
No. They're only graspable by an intelligence capable of counting. — Wayfarer
I say an intelligence grasps a material thing, as when it counts a line of stones, en route to understanding numbers & counting. — ucarr
“I believe that the only way to make sense of mathematics is to believe that there are objective mathematical facts, and that they are discovered by mathematicians,” says James Robert Brown, a philosopher of science recently retired from the University of Toronto. “Working mathematicians overwhelmingly are Platonists. They don't always call themselves Platonists, but if you ask them relevant questions, it’s always the Platonistic answer that they give you.”
Other scholars—especially those working in other branches of science—view Platonism with skepticism. Scientists tend to be empiricists; they imagine the universe to be made up of things we can touch and taste and so on; things we can learn about through observation and experiment. The idea of something existing “outside of space and time” makes empiricists nervous: It sounds embarrassingly like the way religious believers talk about God, and God was banished from respectable scientific discourse a long time ago.
Platonism, as mathematician Brian Davies has put it, “has more in common with mystical religions than it does with modern science.” The fear is that if mathematicians give Plato an inch, he’ll take a mile. If the truth of mathematical statements can be confirmed just by thinking about them, then why not ethical problems, or even religious questions? Why bother with empiricism at all?
What is a number without a material referent?
It's just another material thing, but unlocateable. — ucarr
Will you go to my world devoid of spacetime and think about the role of numbers there? — ucarr
8. A thing that has a certain quantity or number isn’t •really distinct from the quantity or number—all that’s involved is •distinctness of reason. [See 1:62.] There is no real difference between quantity and the extended substance that has the quantity; the two are merely distinct in reason, in the way that the number three is distinct from a trio of things. ·Here’s why they have a distinctness of reason·: Suppose there’s a corporeal substance that occupies a space of 10 ft3—-we can consider its entire nature without attending to its specific size, because we understand this nature to be exactly the same in the whole thing as in any part of it. Conversely, we can think of •the number ten, or •the continuous quantity 10 ft3 , without attending to this particular substance, because the concept of •the number ten is just the same in all the contexts where it is used, ten feet or ten men or ten anything; and although •the continuous quantity 10 ft3 is unintelligible without some extended substance that has that size, it can be understood apart from this particular substance. ·And here’s why they aren’t really distinct·: In reality it is impossible to take the tiniest amount from the quantity or extension without also removing just that much of the substance; and conversely it is impossible to remove the tiniest amount from the substance without taking away just that much of the quantity or extension. — Descartes
The number of a material object is then a kind of measure of the built-in positionality of a material object.
Proceeding from here, perhaps we can characterize math as a property of material objects inhabiting the neighborhood of epiphenomenon.
Are you saying the positional grid, a material thing, possesses the property of number? — ucarr
Will you go to my world devoid of spacetime and think about the role of numbers there?
— ucarr
There's not a lot to go on based on what you've said, but if by that you mean: are numbers real in the absence of reference to space-time?, my response would be again: 'well what about pure mathematics'? — Wayfarer
So physical systems, given satisfying conditions, can instantiate mathematical structures just as ideas in our heads can. — Kuro
The positional grid is not a material thing, it is an abstract. — Sir2u
Writing words and numbers down does not make them physical objects, it just makes it easier to transmit ideas. — Sir2u
Pure math, and all other forms of signification, once uncoupled from empirical experience, become unintelligible.
Numbers, uncoupled from interrelated material objects, become random, unable to signify anything intelligible. — ucarr
These are very rigid statements that are beliefs, not facts. You should indicate as such. Should a philosopher state their beliefs as facts? — jgill
These are very rigid statements that are beliefs, not facts. — jgill
If I remember Battleship correctly, there is a plastic platform full of holes, the grid where a player's battleship moves to various positions. — ucarr
Yes, number symbols & words are signs that refer to material things. — ucarr
I'm saying that number symbols refer to & derive meaning from material things whose set of attributes includes one particular attribute I call number. All of this verbiage is an attempt to say material objects are numericalizable because they have a built-in property of being movable, which is to say, positionable. — ucarr
I recall an anecdote I read decades ago about Arabs who used to play chess whilst riding camels across the desert - without a board. — Wayfarer
Pure math, and all other forms of signification, once uncoupled from empirical experience, become unintelligible. — ucarr
Numbers, uncoupled from interrelated material objects, become random, unable to signify anything intelligible. — ucarr
But they both are only physical representations of concepts. — Sir2u
I know Michael Brooks' writing, but hadn't heard of that book - looks very interesting though. I'm not sure of the feasibility of simulating a computer in one's mind - you would have to have quite an extraordinary mind to do that, something which I lack. — Wayfarer
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