Or put otherwise: there is no 'ultimate symmetry', the breaking of which explains individuation — StreetlightX
something I'd love to see a thread on if you're interested/knowledgeable in the intersection btw Wayfarer). — fdrake
What I want to add to this is that philosophical concepts are just like this. — StreetlightX
It is precisely the kind of contingency that I am generalising away as the differences that don't make a difference when the intent is to reveal the basic structural mechanism at the heart of existence. — apokrisis
This appears to be the same point I have made at various times with that silly philosophical game in which players make up the rules of the game as they go along. — Banno
Maths deals with symmetries in Group theory, and those mathematical tools are used by physicists and other scientists to model reality and this or that part of reality. Does that tell us anything about reality, or does it just tell us about the way we currently model that reality?So maths and physics are talking about the same universal mechanism.
But that game was too arbitrary: — StreetlightX
That was part of it's attraction for me; it describes wheels spinning without ever engaging, an aspect of much of philosophy. — Banno
The standard model has its problems and its alternatives/adaptations, and the existence of "gravitons" is contentious — jkg20
So if you mean by "convinced" "convinced that the Standard Model describes reality as it is in itself independently of our means of modelling it", then no I am not convinced. — jkg20
The issue here is SX calling particle physics use of symmetry breaking "arbitrary". — apokrisis
Some here seem to think that philosophy per se is wheels in the void; I want to defend its friction - while avoiding at the same time a certain positivism, ugly and moribund. — StreetlightX
How do we account for the usefulness of pure mathematics in describing and predicting reality? That's a different question, but I'm certainly not convinced that the answer to it requires either mathematical realism or physical realism. — jkg20
But my sentiment I'm trying to convey here is that the models and demonstrations you speak of have a lot of constraints as to what kind of methodology can be employed to solve a particular mathematical problem. Philosophy does not have these constraints — schopenhauer1
To 'learn Hume' or to 'learn Plato' is not to learn simply what they said, but also why they said it, as well as the ways in which the distinctions they draw commit them - 'constrain them' - to saying certain things and not others. This is why there are - or rather can be - 'schools' of philosophy - as you said, 'Wittgensteinians', 'Platonists', etc; this would not be possible if not for that fact that philosophy sets it's boundaries - its distinctions, its categorizations - out in incredibly precise ways. — StreetlightX
it's that commitments of almost any sort can be made (and followed) and still constitute 'philosophy'. This is not the case with maths, — Pseudonym
The point is that the reason why philosophy is a wider field is to do with significant, categorical (non-scalar) differences in its approach to concept determination. Specifically, it's criteria for both the selection of commitments it is interesting to follow and its criteria for testing the degree to which they have been followed. The difference being that maths has reasonably strict criteria for both, where philosophy has virtually none.
Give any work of maths to an educated layman. What are the chances they'll correctly identify it as maths? Give a potential work of philosophy to a group of philosophy professors and even they won't agree on whether it is one or not. — Pseudonym
In math, there are at least some moves that are universally considered invalid. — schopenhauer1
All that needs to occur is that a higher amount of constraints that needs to take place math than in philosophy. — schopenhauer1
I could not solve a mathematical problem with a treatise on "being" for example. However, a metaphysical argument might be framed as a problem of "being", a problems of propositions/linguistics, problems of a priori synthetic knowledge, problems of empirical data gathering, etc. etc. It is framed too broadly for even a consensus on what a valid answer looks like (unless you fall within a camp with another philosopher who shares that point of view, but that doesn't negate that philosophy itself is much broader outside this compartmentalization). Thus I said earlier: — schopenhauer1
But my sentiment I'm trying to convey here is that the models and demonstrations you speak of have a lot of constraints as to what kind of methodology can be employed to solve a particular mathematical problem. Philosophy does not have these constraints (unless your philosophy is to put certain constraints on, but then the argument about what constraints to put on would still be contested and so on). There is a certain consensus in the math community about what counts as even in the realm of what is valid for an answer. — schopenhauer1
But this is because the very nature of philosophy is how unconstrained it tends to be. — schopenhauer1
Remember that in maths, a unit is defined by the identity element - a local symmetry that can't be broken by whatever operation broke the global symmetry. — apokrisis
So geometry begins with the fundamental thing of a zero-d point. Dimensionality cannot be constrained any more rigorously than a dot, a minimal dimensional mark. Having found the stable atom, the concrete unit, the construction of dimensional geometry can begin. — apokrisis
So in the mathematical realm where 1 is the identity element - the unit that is unchanged by the kind of change that more generally prevails - it is both part of that world and separate from it. It has that incompatibility which you point out. And that is because it is a re-emerging symmetry.
Globally, a symmetry got broke by the very notion of a division algebra. Division, as an operation, could fracture the unity of the global unity that is our generalised idea of a continuous wholeness - some undifferentiated potential. But then divisibility itself gets halted by reaching a local limit. Eventually it winds up spinning on the spot, changing nothing. A second limiting state of symmetry emerges ... when our original notion of unity as a continuous wholeness finally meets its dichotomous "other" in the form of an utterly broken discreteness. — apokrisis
If mathematical physics tells us that existence is the result of broken symmetry, then who are you to disagree? — apokrisis
This is a comforting opinion to hold I guess, but as it stands there's nothing here but assertion and some cute imaginative scenario posing. — StreetlightX
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.