For example, in what way is the SKI combinator calculus useful or meaningful? It is obviously neither. It is merely "interesting". — alcontali
Hence, this real-world phenonemon falls outside the realm of what mathematics is supposed to study. — alcontali
Hence, this real-world phenonemon falls outside the realm of what mathematics is supposed to study. — alcontali
You mistake the claim that all stipulated axioms and formal systems are useful or arbitrary or relevant in every sense for the much weaker claim that some stipulated axioms and formal systems are useful or arbitrary or relevant in some sense. — fdrake
I wonder if computability and epistemology are ultimately not one and the same thing? — alcontali
You mistake the claim that all stipulated axioms and formal systems are useful or arbitrary or relevant in every sense for the much weaker claim that some stipulated axioms and formal systems are useful or arbitrary or relevant in some sense. — fdrake
Well, no. I do not even care if a formal system is useful or meaningful. — alcontali
I think you found your own answer, then. — fdrake
Ah yes, the MU puzzle, something which entirely resembles how humans come to conclusions using evidence and argument... — fdrake
So, we shouldn't trust you to know when a formal system is relevant for epistemology or not... — fdrake
The MU puzzle is a puzzle stated by Douglas Hofstadter and found in Gödel, Escher, Bach involving a simple formal system called "MIU". Hofstadter's motivation is to contrast reasoning within a formal system (ie., deriving theorems) against reasoning about the formal system itself. MIU is an example of a Post canonical system and can be reformulated as a string rewriting system. — Wikipedia on MU puzzle
You don't even need a formal meta-language to consider differences in axiomatic systems, natural language suffices. — fdrake
Maybe, maybe not. — alcontali
It's difficult to see if you're making an argument or making a series of unconnected statements about formal languages but not about the reduction of epistemology to formal languages — fdrake
formal systems don't just have syntactic rules, don't just have formal semantics, they also have conceptual content. — fdrake
never-mind the reduction of epistemology to effective procedures. — fdrake
Verifying the justification's paperwork is a procedure. If there is no procedure possible for that, then the justification is unusable. — alcontali
If accepting/rejecting a hypothesis is not algorithmic, then anybody may accept or reject a hypothesis on merely subjective grounds. — alcontali
If that is possible, then the hypothesis cannot be sound knowledge. — alcontali
I've shown that it does....and it generally does not occur in science either. — alcontali
The existence of such "component of choice" points to the fact that the body of statements, i.e. the discipline, is in fact not legitimate knowledge. — alcontali
Broader point: formal systems don't just have syntactic rules, don't just have formal semantics, they also have conceptual content. The conceptual content of mathematical objects and systems is what unites them over the varying degrees of formality of their presentation. — fdrake
Yes, science is not algorithmic, and hence not certain. It's a human enterprise, subject to all sorts of politics and abuse. — Banno
There is proof for that, i.e. justification. Hence, "The MU puzzle cannot be solved" is a justified (true) belief, i.e. legitimate knowledge. — alcontali
In general, my problem with prioritizing strictly formal proofs is that we forget that moving from formal proof to the real world is an act of informal interpretation. — mask
In real language, we can't strictly control the meanings of our signs. They are caught up in history and context. — mask
Yes, science is not algorithmic, and hence not certain. — Banno
Certainty is a type of belief. It is not a type of truth. — Banno
The trouble with thinking instead of reading is that you are bound to repeat the errors made by others. — Banno
Formal proof is never about the real world. Furthermore, mathematics is not directly applicable. It first has to go through a framework of empirical rules and regulations, such a science or engineering. In that sense, there is no act of informal interpretation of mathematics. — alcontali
Natural language is primarily used for non-knowledge which is the overwhelming majority of what is being expressed. In fact, we do not use that much epistemically-sound knowledge. It is not the main purpose of language (or communication in general) anyway. — alcontali
But if it's just chess, then why should we expect it to matter in the real world? — mask
If 'pure knowledge' is just formalism, how could it be important for us? — mask
Ultra pure math is something like language purified of all ambiguity but also therefore any reference to the world we live in. — mask
Long story: Some of it may (unpredictably) meander downstream through the hands of science and engineering. From there on the question becomes: Do science or engineering matter? For both mathematics and science, usefulness is ultimately harnessed by engineering. — alcontali
Without purification, however, it would be substantially less interesting to use in science or engineering. We also cannot know during the discovery process of mathematics if science or engineering will ever be able to do anything with it. That could take decades, if not, centuries. — alcontali
I think there's truth in that these days, but we know that historically it was the reverse. Math was purified from its immersion in applications--by Greeks as I understand it. — mask
My primary point is that philosophy isn't like pure math and yet is what we have for dealing with the world strategically. — mask
Computation only gets us so far. — mask
You seem to misunderstand the meaning of "certainty". It is a relationship between belief and truth, not simply a belief. — god must be atheist
Think of it this way: the likelyhood that your certainty is right on (ie. that your belief is false, or else that your belief is right on target) is reflected by the degree of certainty. And the degree of certainty can't be established by any means by humans when it comes to KNOWING whether what we sense as reality is itself reality or not.Are you claiming that a belief is always a belief that such-and-such is true? That's what I've long claimed.
What more is there to a certainty, that it is not simply a belief? — Banno
Are you claiming that a belief is always a belief that such-and-such is true? That's what I've long claimed. — Banno
Even the truths of the two systems are different. In the empirical world, there are no truths. Only approximations. In the a priori world, the truths are perfect.
— god must be atheist
Perhaps you confuse being true with being justified. There are obvious empirical truths - such as that you are reading this post. — Banno
Are you claiming that a belief is always a belief that such-and-such is true? That's what I've long claimed. — Banno
Are you claiming that a belief is always a belief that such-and-such is true? — Banno
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