I know that, proving 1+1=2 is hard — Monist
but I do not see anyone trying to prove x=x, because it may seem so simple and obvious — Monist
For every natural number x, x = x. That is, equality is reflexive. — PA
Thus, what the axiom is really saying is that two sets are equal if and only if they have precisely the same members. The essence of this is: A set is determined uniquely by its members. — ZFC
"Called" is the act of an intelligence. "Should" is a deeply deceptive and misleading word - there ain't no should. What happens is that as both an idea and as applied to the world, x=x seems to work. And as to the underpinnings of the how or the why it works, it's enough to say that it works because it had better work! Of course there are fancier ways of saying that."an apple is an apple", but why? I do not get why any certain thing called 'x', should be 'x'. — Monist
"an apple is an apple", but why? I do not get why any certain thing called 'x', should be 'x'.
The simpler it gets, the complexer explaining it. — Monist
The thing you need to get, I think, is that X=X says something about the language we use to describe the world, and not necessarily about the world itself. — ChatteringMonkey
I know that, proving 1+1=2 is hard
— Monist
Well, no, it isn't. — alcontali
The starting-point rules, i.e. the system-wide premises, in a mathematical theory are always arbitrary, unexplained and unjustified beliefs. That is simply the essence of the axiomatic epistemology. — alcontali
You might only say this if somebody was trying to persuade you that x was not x but under what are the conditions might this be a possibility? — Mike Radford
It is difficult to see what is the content of the proposition, x=x is being presented to the reader. — Mike Radford
As with the x=x proposition it makes an assumption that numerical values remain constant — Mike Radford
Something is axiomatically true, we usually say, if its true by definition.
An apple is an apple because we have defined an apple as an apple.
But how do we know if a definition is correct or complete.
That is a difficult question, I would say. — Yohan
Meaning auto-supposes self-identity. — jorndoe
1+1=2 is a more meaningful proposition than simply 1=1. It tells us something about the definition of each quantity in the relationship and something about the relationship itself — Mike Radford
"an apple is an apple", but why? I do not get why any certain thing called 'x', should be 'x'.
The simpler it gets, the complexer explaining it.
— Monist
I really don't get the reason why anyone would ever use that phrase, "An apple is an apple.", unless they're just playing words games, which isn't a complex thing at all.
How is using that phrase different than saying, "An apple" while pointing at an apple? Is your pointing the equivalent of = ? — Harry Hindu
I know that, proving 1+1=2 is hard
— Monist
Well, no, it isn't.
— alcontali
Well, it was much harder for Russell and Whitehead, PA did not satisfy me for many reasons. — Monist
Instead of 'apple' try 'thing'. Saying "a thing" while pointing at the thing does not explain why the thing identical to the thing. It does not explain the relation between the thing and the thing. x=x does, it simply tells that the thing, is itself. The point is, why? — Monist
Aren't axioms, self-evident assumptions? — Monist
If so, when can we accept self-evident beliefs, just when they are practical? — Monist
Abstraction in mathematics is the process of extracting the underlying structures, patterns or properties of a mathematical concept, removing any dependence on real world objects with which it might originally have been connected, and generalizing it so that it has wider applications or matching among other abstract descriptions of equivalent phenomena.[1][2][3][4] Two of the most highly abstract areas of modern mathematics are category theory and model theory.[4] — Wikipedia on mathematical abstraction
Do we have to analyse the relation between truth and practicality then? — Monist
You might be interested in the idea of why we have a system of counting to ten, switch, then repeat because we have 10 fingers.
The Law of Identity is quite easy to understand. — Per Chance
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