Are you sure of that? Are not all instantiated truths particular truths, and are not all universal truths abstract? You have left out how to get from particular to "universal." And how do you instantiate the truths of transfinite arithmetic?and surely we cannot abstract universal truths that are not instantiated. — Dfpolis
I doubt if one in twenty-thousand can say what a "Platonic" world is. Further, it may be that we can trace to a ground in nature, but is that all? And while the idea of concepts needing minds to have and hold them informally and intuitively seems right, is it altogether right? It seems to me there is here the fallacy of the half-argued argument, the appeal for both halves of something only half complete. Why the quibble? Mind-matter arguably requires a mind, but the content of thinking - the that that is thought about, is pretty much always already there prior to a mind thinking it. This means there is an accounting/definition problem.As we can trace our concepts to experiences of nature, and since there is no evidence concepts exist outside the minds of rational animals, there is no reason to posit a Platonic world. — Dfpolis
The remaining hypothetical axioms can't be tested, e.g. the axiom of choice. These are unfalsifiable and unfalsifiable hypotheses are unscientific. As, they are unscientific, pursuing their consequences is merely a game, no different in principle than any other game with well-defined rules, such as Dungeons and Dragons. — Dfpolis
As we can trace our concepts to experiences of nature, and since there is no evidence concepts exist outside the minds of rational animals, there is no reason to posit a Platonic world. Doing so is unparsimonious and irrational. — Dfpolis
Gödel was a mathematical realist, a Platonist. He believed that what makes mathematics true is that it's descriptive—not of empirical reality, of course, but of an abstract reality. Mathematical intuition is something analogous to a kind of sense perception. In his essay "What Is Cantor's Continuum Hypothesis?", Gödel wrote that we're not seeing things that just happen to be true, we're seeing things that must be true. The world of abstract entities is a necessary world—that's why we can deduce our descriptions of it through pure reason. 1 — Rebecca Goldstein
Does the Incompleteness Theorems say really this? Correct me if I'm wrong, but doesn't (the first Gödel Incompleteness Theorem) say that for any 'set of axioms' or consistent formal system there exists specific true but unprovable statements. That's a bit differentYet, Godel's work shows more: it shows that there are truths that cannot be deduced from any knowable set of axioms. — Dfpolis
I agree here with tim wood, talking about scientific/unscientific here with foundations mathematics is totally out of whack.I think maybe "unscientific" in this context is wrong usage. In any case, mathematics is not an experimental science. — tim wood
and surely we cannot abstract universal truths that are not instantiated. — Dfpolis
Are you sure of that? Are not all instantiated truths particular truths, and are not all universal truths abstract? You have left out how to get from particular to "universal." And how do you instantiate the truths of transfinite arithmetic? — tim wood
Further, it may be that we can trace to a ground in nature, but is that all? — tim wood
And while the idea of concepts needing minds to have and hold them informally and intuitively seems right, is it altogether right? — tim wood
the content of thinking - the that that is thought about, is pretty much always already there prior to a mind thinking it. — tim wood
This means there is an accounting/definition problem. — tim wood
I think maybe "unscientific" in this context is wrong usage. In any case, mathematics is not an experimental science. — tim wood
the pursuit of the consequences of which, which may be "no different in principle," are in practice and in fact altogether and entirely different from a mere game. — tim wood
So do you think the law of the excluded middle, or the Pythagorean theorem, only came into existence with h. sapiens; or that such principles are eternal, and are discovered by any intelligence sufficiently rational to discern them? — Wayfarer
I think the error you're making with the 'Platonic world' is to try and conceive of it as a literal domain. But what of the 'domain of natural numbers'? — Wayfarer
Surely that is something real, as real numbers are included in it, and irrational numbers are not. — Wayfarer
And how does your account differ from run-of-the-mill evolutionary naturalism, in which there is nothing corresponding to what Aquinas deem the soul, which is 'capable of existence apart from the body at death'? Your account most resembles that of John Stuart Mill, whom I'm sure would not be the least inclined to agree with Aquinas. — Wayfarer
Do you know that Godel considered himself a mathematical Platonist? — Wayfarer
What is the axiom of choice? — Noah Te Stroete
Yet, Godel's work shows more: it shows that there are truths that cannot be deduced from any knowable set of axioms. — Dfpolis
Does the Incompleteness Theorems say really this? Correct me if I'm wrong, but doesn't (the first Gödel Incompleteness Theorem) say that for any 'set of axioms' or consistent formal system there exists specific true but unprovable statements. That's a bit different — ssu
I think maybe "unscientific" in this context is wrong usage. In any case, mathematics is not an experimental science. — tim wood
I agree here with tim wood, talking about scientific/unscientific here with foundations mathematics is totally out of whack. — ssu
Actual numbers exist only in minds actually thinking them. — Dfpolis
the principle of excluded middle reflects the nature of being and so is intelligible to anything capable of abstracting being as being. — Dfpolis
Naturalism has no problem describing neurophysically encoded contents, but it has no rational account of awareness. — Dfpolis
Fair enough.So, you will have to explain why my criticism is "totally out of whack." — Dfpolis
Here you seem to have the idea that if the axiom of choice is independent of ZF, it is somehow 'unscientific' as if other axioms would be the 'scientifically' approved. Well, just look here on this site how utterly confused people are about infinity and try to then reason that axiom of infinity is scientific. But there there the axiom is, in ZF. On the other hand, the axiom of choice (AC) has a lot of equivalent findings in mathematics like Zorn's lemma, Tychonoffs theorem, Krull's theorem, Tukey's lemma and the list goes on and on. To say in this case that all of the math in all of those various fields of mathematics are unscientific is, should I say, out of whack.The remaining hypothetical axioms can't be tested, e.g. the axiom of choice. These are unfalsifiable and unfalsifiable hypotheses are unscientific. As they are unscientific, pursuing their consequences is merely a game, no different in principle than any other game with well-defined rules, such as Dungeons and Dragons. — Dfpolis
It's a subtle point only. Mainly that if for every consistent formal system there exists specific true but unprovable statements, that doesn't actually mean that there are true but unprovable statements in every formal system.It does not seem different enough to vitiate my point. In any lifetime, or finite number of lifetimes, we can only go through a finite number of axiom sets. So, there are true axioms we cannot deduce. Or, am I missing your point? — Dfpolis
Thank you for your comments. I have no problem with the neoplatonic One Identified as God. — Dfpolis
What I'm questioning is the notion that an account can be given of intelligible objects (such as number) in purely mentalistic terms. I think that Platonic realism posits that numbers are real for anyone who can count. So they are only knowable to a mind, but they are not the product of an individual's mind. — Wayfarer
think it's reason that naturalism has no account of. — Wayfarer
First of all, with 'scientific' we describe that we are using the scientific method, an empirical way to make objective observations, experiments, tests or measurements, about reality, the physical world as you mention, to solve if our hypothesis are correct or not. Mathematics is logical system. — ssu
Applicability of mathematics to the physical world isn't the logic that glues mathematics into a rigorous system, but logic itself. — ssu
Above all, something that we have thought to be a mathematical axiom isn't shown to be false from physical reality, but with mathematical logic. — ssu
Here you seem to have the idea that if the axiom of choice is independent of ZF, it is somehow 'unscientific' as if other axioms would be the 'scientifically' approved. — ssu
To say in this case that all of the math in all of those various fields of mathematics are unscientific is, should I say, out of whack. — ssu
To make my argument short, scientific/unscientific is a poor definition in math, far better would be to speak of logical and illogical. We have had and can indeed still have illogical presumptions (or axioms) of the nature of math, just like some Greeks thought that all numbers had to be rational and were truly disappointed when finding out that there indeed were irrational numbers. — ssu
... our mathematical concepts have a foundation in reality. — Dfpolis
See Armand Maurer, The Division and Methods of the Sciences — Dfpolis
Once again, the title of your topic is "The Foundations of Mathematics". Those foundations are not in modern mathematical theory or methodology. Greek mathematics is part of that foundation. Greek mathematics is not "Platonism". — Fooloso4
To say:
... our mathematical concepts have a foundation in reality. — Dfpolis
Is like saying a building has a foundation in the ground. It says nothing about that foundation. — Fooloso4
Instead, it would be more useful to direct the reader to Maurer's "Thomists and Thomas Aquinas On the Foundation of Mathematics", available free online — Fooloso4
First, sciences do not establish their own principles — Dfpolis
I did not claim that Greek math was Platonism — Dfpolis
Platonic relationship 2 + 2 = 4 — Dfpolis
I said most of the foundations are the result of abstraction. — Dfpolis
I disagree with much of the quote you gave from Maurer. — Dfpolis
To me, "awareness" means agent intellect, without which there is no reason or conscious experience. — Dfpolis
It makes them the actualization of a prior intelligibility in nature -- eliminating the need for numbers to actually exist prior to being known -- in other words, the need for a Platonic realm. — Dfpolis
So in the way as history is a science? Some in the natural sciences would shudder at the idea, but I'm totally OK with it.That is certainly the modern usage, but not the only one. Traditionally, scientia meant an organized body of knowledge -- organized in terms of explanations reducible to first principles. So, I would say that mathematics is a science in the sense of being an organized body of knowledge -- and that knowledge is an understanding of reality. — Dfpolis
No. I think it is you who define "logical" or "logical system" in an extremely narrow way and as logical meaning as a "closed system". The way I see here math to be logical that simply every mathematical truth has to be logical. It doesn't state AT ALL that everything in math has to begin from a small finite set of axioms. What Hilbert was looking for was something else, especially with things like his Entscheidungsproblem.Second, "logical system" needs more explanation. All sciences proceed logically. I suspect that you mean a "closed system," i.e. one that simply elaborates an axiom se — Dfpolis
Ok, there's your problem right above. What you are making is a hugely reductionist argument that everything has to be deduced from the same axioms. If something doesn't fit to be the universal foundation, in your terms it has to be false and whole fields have to be false. Classical mechanics works just as classical geometry works. There being quantum mechanics or geometries of spheres etc. simply don't refute one another and make the other untrue or false. What is only wrong is the reductionist idea that everything can be deduced from one system or the other.The classical mechanics they developed is still useful and taught today, but it is not true. Unjustified foundations necessarily give unjustified conclusions. — Dfpolis
First, sciences do not establish their own principles — Dfpolis
Where do you imagine these principles come from? — Fooloso4
After a full paragraph on Platonism you said:
Platonic relationship 2 + 2 = 4 — Fooloso4
I said most of the foundations are the result of abstraction. — Dfpolis
To say what they are the result of is not to say what they are — Fooloso4
The most basic concepts of of Western mathematics underwent a fundamental change with the origin of algebra, that is when numbers were replaced by symbols. Which leads to the question of whose mathematics? — Fooloso4
Which leads to the question of whose mathematics? — Fooloso4
Are you disagreeing with his reading of Aquinas? If so, where do the mistakes lie? Or is it that you are disagreeing with Aquinas? — Fooloso4
Yes, well, crocodiles and dragonflies have some degree of awareness, but zero intellect! — Wayfarer
the problem boils down to the fact that consciousness is intrinsically first-person, something of which one is subjectively and immediately aware, or rather, 'that which is aware', and as such is never an object of experience (except for by abstraction). The precise reason why Daniel Dennett refuses to accept that it's real, is because it's not an object of experience. — Wayfarer
Thank you for very lucid explanation. — Wayfarer
I have the idea that numbers and other intelligible objects are not existent (as are sensory objects), but that they are real. Numbers do not come into or go out of existence, and when we know them, we know them purely intelligibly, i.e. they are only discernible to a rational intellect (which is the thrust of the passage in Augustine). — Wayfarer
But they're not really objects, they're constituents of thought - so the word 'object of thought' is in some sense a metaphor. (I regard 'objects' as exactly that - things that you have a subject-object relationship with, i.e. everything around you.) — Wayfarer
So in the way as history is a science? Some in the natural sciences would shudder at the idea, but I'm totally OK with it. — ssu
The way I see here math to be logical that simply every mathematical truth has to be logical. It doesn't state AT ALL that everything in math has to begin from a small finite set of axioms. What Hilbert was looking for was something else, especially with things like his Entscheidungsproblem. — ssu
What you are making is a hugely reductionist argument that everything has to be deduced from the same axioms. — ssu
If something doesn't fit to be the universal foundation, in your terms it has to be false and whole fields have to be false. — ssu
There being quantum mechanics or geometries of spheres etc. simply don't refute one another and make the other untrue or false. What is only wrong is the reductionist idea that everything can be deduced from one system or the other. — ssu
Math isn't like this. Mathematics has for example incommensurability, which is totally logical. — ssu
Each field of math assumes its principles (its postulates and axioms), but that does not mean that the principles can't be investigated and justified by nonmathematically. I — Dfpolis
mostly via abstraction — Dfpolis
Please read sentences in context. — Dfpolis
It leaves unexplained how mathematical truths that exist only in the Platonic realm can apply to reality.
In this last point, how can the Platonic relationship 2 + 2 = 4 tell us that if we have two apples and two oranges, we have four pieces of fruit? — Dfpolis
I said most of the foundations are the result of abstraction. — Dfpolis
To say what they are the result of is not to say what they are
— Fooloso4
What they are is not my present interest. — Dfpolis
The concepts that existed before the addition of unknowns, variables, functions and distributions continue in use today. Adding new concepts does not vitiate old concepts. — Dfpolis
Which leads to the question of whose mathematics?
— Fooloso4
Mathematics is not personal property. — Dfpolis
You are avoiding the question. Science does not simply "assume its principles". It determines them through observation, hypothesis, testing, theory, modeling, and so on. — Fooloso4
First, someone has to do the abstracting. Second, the properties of say a triangle are not determined by abstraction. — Fooloso4
2+2=4 does not exist only in the "Platonic realm", does not need to "apply to reality", and it is meaningless to call it a Platonic relationship. It does not apply to reality because it is counting something real. — Fooloso4
So, in a topic entitled The Foundations of Mathematics, the actual foundations of mathematics is not your present interest. — Fooloso4
It is not simply adding new concepts, it is a matter of different concepts. — Fooloso4
This does not vitiate old concepts in the sense that they are wrong, but that mathematics no longer operates according to the older concepts. — Fooloso4
As I pointed out, there is no number 0 or 1 in Greek mathematics. You might dismiss this as simply wrong, but in doing so what you miss is the ability to understand a way of looking at the world that is not our own. — Fooloso4
The remaining hypothetical axioms can't be tested, e.g. the axiom of choice. These are unfalsifiable and unfalsifiable hypotheses are unscientific. As they are unscientific, pursuing their consequences is merely a game, no different in principle than any other game with well-defined rules, such as Dungeons and Dragons. — Dfpolis
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