The thing with Groot is his vocabulary is limited to one word viz. ''Groot''. — TheMadFool
There is only one person who understands Groot's language - his companion, a fox(?)
What interests me is there's a real world twin to the imagined story described above:
...To whatever question man asks, the universe replies ''Mathematics''. Groot! — TheMadFool
I believe that mathematics is an invented language we employ to talk about the world. I don't believe that the world itself is mathematical per se. — Terrapin Station
Could you expand on what you intended by the phrase "a real world twin"? — geospiza
What I want to say is if the universe is not mathematical then our invented language would fail to describe it. — TheMadFool
Perhaps my words were poorly chosen. I only wanted to say that there's a similarity between the two (the movie and real life). — TheMadFool
Do you believe that the world is comprised of natural language, too?
What about paints? — Terrapin Station
I am trying to understand what that is. — geospiza
If someone were to answer your every question with the same sentence/phrase/word e.g. ''I am Groot'', what would go through your mind? — TheMadFool
I'd think their statements could be infered from their very nature and the situation they are in.If someone were to answer your every question with the same sentence/phrase/word e.g. ''I am Groot'', what would go through your mind? — TheMadFool
I believe that mathematics is an invented language we employ to talk about the world. I don't believe that the world itself is mathematical per se. — Terrapin Station
Your argument was that if the world itself is not x, then x could not describe the world. — Terrapin Station
Obviously the ways we talk about the world are going to have some relation to the world. The error is in assuming that they're identical to the world. That's a rudimentary conflation. More specifically a reification. — Terrapin Station
I would probably think that their ability to speak english was impaired. I certainly wouldn't conclude that "I am Groot" is the only thing worth saying.[/quote — geospiza
Your argument was that if the world itself is not x, then x could not describe the world.qq
Natural languages and paints on a canvas are two other things that can describe the world. Would you say that the world thus must be natural language and paints on a canvas? — Terrapin Station
Natural language seems to be entirely arbitrary - words and their referents are a matter of convention. I question this view but that's another topic.
But math is not like that. It probably started off as a language but its uncanny ability to describe the laws of nature isn't accidental (as you suggest). While natural language is not expected to be universal - there are so many languages on earth itself - the general consensus among scientists is that math is. Many interstellar messages have been beamed to nearby stars and their content is, well, mathematical. — TheMadFool
Wait, "the cat is on the mat" doesn't describe any objective fact in your view? — Terrapin Station
What does this have to do with what I'm saying? — TheMadFool
We have two languages - natural language and mathematics. You travel to a distant galaxy and find an alien civilization. Which language do you think would be shared by you and aliens? — TheMadFool
In my view nominalism and conceptualism aren't distinct. Nominalism isn't arbitrary. Under nominalism, universals are non-arbitrary abstractions that individuals make, where those abstractions are unique to each individual (in terms of whether they're particulars or somehow numerically identical among more than one individual). Under conceptualism, we can't have anything other than that. — Terrapin Station
You'd have to translate mathematics just as much as any natural language. You need to figure out their words and symbols and syntax etc. just the same way.
What you'd not have to translate is their representational visual art, whatever media they use. — Terrapin Station
Concept-formation is something that individuals do. It's a way that individuals think about things--they formulate abstractions, ignoring some details and generalizing others, so that the "same term" (again, it's not literally, numerically the same from instance to instance) can apply to many different particulars. Indviduals do this non-arbitrarily. It's in response to things experienced. And it can't be avoided as long as one is conscious and has anything like a normally functioning brain. — Terrapin Station
The laws of nature are mathematical — TheMadFool
I don't understand how humans generalize details in a non-arbitrary way if nominalism is the case. There must be something about certain details that makes them generalizable. That's the problem nominalism has always faced. Similarity between particulars needs to be accounted for somehow. — Marchesk
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