Moreover, the deployment of our concepts is not governed by truth, but by their ranged of illumination. This is not on account of their being arbitrary ('subjective'), but absolutely necessary. — StreetlightX
Otherwise, we are free to keep it. What I want to add to this is that philosophical concepts are just like this. The concepts we employ are a function of what we aim to capture with them; to employ one concept rather than another is to bring out one aspect of the world rather than another. Moreover, the deployment of our concepts is not governed by truth, but by their ranged of illumination. — StreetlightX
The math "dictates" that a particular rule must be used — schopenhauer1
Yes, then change what I said to the "problems of math", — schopenhauer1
But you compared the problems of math to the problems of philosophy, so I am just taking your cue.But I'm not talking about the problems of math. At least, not exclusively. So there's no good reason to make any such change. — StreetlightX
Further, among the points that B&C stress is that it is not at all 'discovery' that is at stake, but what they call - following Wittgenstein - concept-determination: "what is going on here is best described neither as ‘discovery’ nor as ‘invention’ of something entirely new. There are facts to be revealed, and creativity to be exhibited, but what is crucial is the opening up of different aspects of something ... which prompts a choice that sooner or later ‘catches on’... and proves fruitful." — StreetlightX
indispensable for decimal notation - was first accomplished by Indian (or possibly Chinese) mathematicians, who had no such inhibitions. — Wayfarer
Well, for B&C, the important point to note is that nothing in the math itself forced this choice, rather than the other. — StreetlightX
the Ancient Greeks were dazzled by this new Platonic reality that rational geometry opened up — apokrisis
the 'choice' to allow imaginary numbers (the square root of negative numbers, like √-1 — StreetlightX
By way of a footnote, the discovery and acceptance of the concept of zero was resisted by Western mathematicians for a long period of time, for religious and philosophical reasons. As is well-known, the incorporation of zero into maths - indispensable for decimal notation - was first accomplished by Indian (or possibly Chinese) mathematicians, who had no such inhibitions. — Wayfarer
But the route was always Platonically predestined and necessary. If existence takes definite shape due to constraints, due to symmetry-breakings, then the only way to understand that is by following the path backwards that abstracts away those constraints, unbreaks those symmetries, to reveal how the how show works. — apokrisis
Moreover, the deployment of our concepts is not governed by truth, but by their range of illumination. This is not on account of their being arbitrary ('subjective'), but absolutely necessary. — StreetlightX
And the point I am trying to make contra your comparison is that while both might have an "opening up of different aspects of something..which catches on", the "proves fruitful" part is what is different between the two. — schopenhauer1
Giving up 1) would be to give up using the notion of a unit of length, which would entail nothing could be measured. — MetaphysicsNow
I think you're missing the point though - what 'proves fruitful' is the choice made between two possible 'paths'. We're not talking about 'solving problems': we're talking about determining concepts: should number be treated in this way or that? Should infinity be thought of like this or like that? The point is that the normative force of this 'should' is provided by a concrete problem (with may be intra-mathematical or not) which any choice that is made is responsive to. Mutatis mutandis the way in which we form concepts in philosophy are similarly responsive to the problems they address: in neither case is it a matter of solving problems, but determining concepts. — StreetlightX
We now take all this for granted, but if we go back to the origin of the
determination, we can see that it was by no means necessary. At the core of this
determination was a choice of conceptual aspect, and although we might find it hard
now to see things in any other way, it is important to recognize that the choice was
there and that our concept of number might have developed in another way. We
should also note that while the choice between the different ways of seeing – of
determining the concept – was, we might say, forced by mathematics itself (the proof
above), the outcome of the choice was not so determined. The choice between
criteria, whatever its motivation, does not answer uniquely to intra-mathematical
considerations; mathematics itself, we might say, allows either choice, while
eventually accepting the choice that is made. — B&C
Philosophical problems are more like interesting flourishes of thought. Whether math has necessity or not, the problems are constrained enough to have its own dictates through demonstration. Philosophy does not. They are flights of fancy, if you will, that can be entertained or not entertained with no demonstrable constraints on the flights of fancy one chooses. It is too open-ended for any consensus. — schopenhauer1
To dismiss philosophy as 'flights of fancy' is to not understand it. — StreetlightX
I'm firmly of the belief that every philosophy worth its salt has the kind of internal consistency that characterizes mathematical concepts, and they derive that consistency from the particular problems that animate them. — StreetlightX
The difference, to the degree there is one, lies only in the fact that philosophy has a far wider range of inspiration than math: its problems are drawn from a more diverse array of sources. — StreetlightX
The irrationals show that criteria (2) as I developed it (which could be an incorrect development, I grant you) is just false - there is simply no "decision to make about which of the two criteria is more important to us" to quote the authors. — MetaphysicsNow
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