Metaphysician Undercover
So math is just language games, right? — frank
Banno
Compare and contrast... https://survey2020.philpeople.org/survey/results/5030?aos=47 ...note change in AOS.There aren't a lot of experts in phil of math — frank
Banno
frank
You could say that. The point though is that if a numeral refers to a number which is an object, and that object is said to be an idea in someone's mind, then it would be a different object in each mind. — Metaphysician Undercover
The only way to assume that the numeral refers to the same object for distinct individuals, is to assume that the object is independent. — Metaphysician Undercover
frank
We've shown how quantification can be handled without invoking abstract objects at all — it’s rule-based, normatively grounded, and socially coordinated. — Banno
Metaphysician Undercover
An abstract object is something that isn't physical, but it's not simply mental either. — frank
What of quantification? — Banno
frank
This is platonism. The abstract object is independent from minds, but accessed by them. — Metaphysician Undercover
frank
A no to what? Set your account out. Say something. Do the work. — Banno
frank
We've shown how quantification can be handled without invoking abstract objects at all — it’s rule-based, normatively grounded, and socially coordinated. — Banno
Ludwig V
I was referring to the previous two posts. Beyond that, there's much that I agree with, but I still have puzzles (questions), which is not quite the same as disagreement. Partly, they centre on the questions about what it is for a mathematical object, such as a number, to exist. Partly, they centre on what the timeless present means in this context.Then do we have broad agreement? — Banno
I agree with that. I don't have a problem about the timeless present in the case of constitutive norms. But in relation to procedures, I do. For the obvious reason, that a procedure takes place in time.And all this by way of showing that some rules are not procedural at all; they are constitutive norms. — Banno
Of course. You may care to know that, as I understand it, the reason the Pythagoreans did not count 1 as a number was, at least partly, because they saw it as the source of all the other numbers. But don't we also need 0, as the starting-point?But we need another step - "1 counts as a number" - to get the procedure moving. — Banno
That's reassuring! But I'm not quite clear what it means to "produce" a number. It's not as if we say to ourselves "I need another number here" and so instigate the procedure. Does your procedure create the numbers it produces from scratch or does it just produce another copy of the number????I have a procedure for producing one natural number from another, but more to the point is that the natural numbers just are what you get when you do that. — Srap Tasmaner
You are not wrong. But now we are getting into trouble with the difference between numerals and numbers. I have a feeling, however, that we may need numbers in order to identify correspondences between numeral systems and perhaps even number systems with different bases.Numerals get their identity from roles in activities, not from reference to entities. — Banno
I think many people believe that if something is referred to, it counts as an object.What I said, is that if a numeral is taken to refer to an object, a thing called a number, that object must be a platonic object. This is supported by the argument above. However, I do not believe that a numeral refers to an object called a number. I believe that it refers to an idea called a value. I believe that values are not objects, yet they are referred to. Therefore, in no way do I believe that all reference is "object-reference". — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm getting the impression that your objection is simply to the concept of an abstract object, which you call platonism. Would that be fair?The only way to assume that the numeral refers to the same object for distinct individuals, is to assume that the object is independent. That's Platonism. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes. Though there are lots of different kinds of physical object, not all of which can be held in your hand. Shadows, reflections, clouds, lightning, colours, sounds, surfaces, centres of gravity and on and on. Similarly with mental objects. Abstract objects also come in lots of different kinds.An object in your mind is called a mental object. An object in your hand is a physical object. An abstract object is something that isn't physical, but it's not simply mental either. — frank
In the Roman number system "V" counts as five. The Chinese system has 五 (wǔ) for the same number. The ancient greeks used the letters of their alphabet as numerals, so five was the letter epsilon. If you just talk about numerals, you lose the equivalences across different systems.For example, we can do a bijection between the numerals and the things to be quantified. The presumption of "numbers" is superfluous in this case. — Metaphysician Undercover
Metaphysician Undercover
I think many people believe that if something is referred to, it counts as an object. — Ludwig V
So you are right to foreground what we do with numbers - or numerals if you prefer. But I think you slip up when you say that the numeral refers to an idea. That just resuscitates that argument you gave about numbers as ideas. The assignation of value in this context is public and shared, so it cannot be about ideas in our individual minds. — Ludwig V
I'm getting the impression that your objection is simply to the concept of an abstract object, which you call platonism. Would that be fair? — Ludwig V
In the Roman number system "V" counts as five. The Chinese system has 五 (wǔ) for the same number. The ancient greeks used the letters of their alphabet as numerals, so five was the letter epsilon. If you just talk about numerals, you lose the equivalences across different systems. — Ludwig V
Ludwig V
However, in the case of symbols used in calculation, an equivalence can be established.That's exactly the reality of translation. In most cases there is no true equivalence "across different systems". — Metaphysician Undercover
So you think that "to be is to be the value of a variable" is a platonist principle? I know you sometimes use words in ways I find hard to understand. This seems to be another case.My objection was to the hypocrisy of publicly rejecting platonism then employing platonist principles. — Metaphysician Undercover
Very true. Except that ordinal numbers don't assign a value; that assigns a place in an order. Assigning a value in mathematics just means what you do when you substitute a specific number (or word or sentence) to a place in a formula that is designated for such "values".When you count something publicly, you share your assignment of value. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, it isn't. It is about whatever I am assigning a value to.This clearly is about ideas in our minds. — Metaphysician Undercover
In the context of traditional grammar, an object can be almost any noun, limited only by the specific subject and verb that you are talking about.we distinguish noun and verb, object from subject, subject from predicate. — Metaphysician Undercover
Not all words refer to anything. That's why there's such a fuss about dragons and the present king of France.I think that would be an odd use of language, if every word referred to an object. — Metaphysician Undercover
Metaphysician Undercover
So you think that "to be is to be the value of a variable" is a platonist principle? — Ludwig V
Except that ordinal numbers don't assign a value; that assigns a place in an order. — Ludwig V
No, it isn't. It is about whatever I am assigning a value to. — Ludwig V
Not all words refer to anything. That's why there's such a fuss about dragons and the present king of France. — Ludwig V
Srap Tasmaner
But I'm not quite clear what it means to "produce" a number. It's not as if we say to ourselves "I need another number here" and so instigate the procedure. Does your procedure create the numbers it produces from scratch or does it just produce another copy of the number???? — Ludwig V
Banno
I was using "procedure" as a generalisation of "function". Where a function will have exactly one result for each input, a procedure need not. I hadn't considered that someone would suppose that logical procedures are somehow temporal. I find that idea quite odd.I don't have a problem about the timeless present in the case of constitutive norms. But in relation to procedures, I do. For the obvious reason, that a procedure takes place in time. — Ludwig V
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