It's reasoning made for and by idiots. — StreetlightX
Now, he asks that we imagine a world M, which contains every possible mathematical object that could ever exist, even in principle. — StreetlightX
This, though, opens up a new question - what is 'interesting?' Well, interest simply is in the eye of the beholder — StreetlightX
Far from being stable and universal, our mathematics is a
fluttering buttery, which follows the fancies of inconstant creatures. Its theorems are solid, of course; but selecting what represents an interesting theorem is a highly subjective matter.... The idea that the mathematics that we find valuable forms a Platonic world fully independent from us is like the idea of an Entity that created the heavens and the earth, and happens to very much resemble my grandfather." — StreetlightX
The mistake that animates modern naive empiricism is to explain the phenomenon of convergence -- such as the discovery of laws of nature, or of general logico-grammatical features shared by (most) natural languages -- as a result of the faithful (or approximate) reproduction, as contents of our mental representations, of the structure of an independently existing empirical ('external') reality. — Pierre-Normand
One might avoid both mistakes though recognizing that the phenomenon of convergence is a dynamical product of the enactment of the social practice of arguing for or against doing and/or believing things. — Pierre-Normand
For Platonism, the universe is itself alive and filled with living things. Soul is the principle of life. Life is not viewed as epiphenomenal or supervenient on what is non-living. On the contrary, soul has a unique explanatory role in the systematic hierarchy. Though soul is fundamentally an explanatory principle, individual souls are fitted into the overall hierarchy in a subordinate manner. ...
Persons belong to the systematic hierarchy and personal happiness consists in achieving a lost position within the hierarchy. All Platonists accepted the view that in some sense the person was the soul and the soul was immortal. Since perhaps the most important feature of the divine was immortality, the goal or telos of embodied personal existence was viewed as ‘becoming like god’
This, though, opens up a new question - what is 'interesting?' Well, interest simply is in the eye of the beholder: we develop some parts of M and not others because those parts help us do stuff, alot of the time. — StreetlightX
My point was there are reasons to think the structures and relations we use math to model exist in the world independent of us, since they led to us existing. — Marchesk
hat we are getting at with mathematical physics at least is the objective point of view - the one from the perspective which would be the Cosmos contemplating its own rational structure. — apokrisis
Our physical world is not some random junk of accidents. It has an intelligible structure. But the problem with Platonism is the way it suggests a flat plane of forms - where the perfect triangle exists alongside the perfect turd. That problem can be addressed by the addition of a selection principle - a hierarchical story - which does then separate reality into its accidents and its necessities. — apokrisis
What we are getting at with mathematical physics at least is the objective point of view - the one from the perspective which would be the Cosmos contemplating its own rational structure. — apokrisis
Platonism - and Aristotle - both assume an hierarchy, but it's from a top-down, not bottom up, perspective. — Wayfarer
For this reason, Platonism is in a sense reductivist, though not in the way that a 'bottom-up' philosophy is. It is conceptually reductivist, not materially reductivist. — Wayfarer
Lloyd Gerson, What is Platonism? — Wayfarer
It's not difficult to explain, although it might be difficult to accept, or to understand. — Wayfarer
(Incidentally, whether there is indeed 'cosmic unity' is very much in question in current physics, is it not?) — Wayfarer
I was alerted to the possibility of the distortion by a handful of scattered remarks on Plato versus Platonism by John McDowell. But I haven't pondered much on the historical roots of the distortion, nor do I feel equipped for tracing such roots anywhere earlier than the modern period. — Pierre-Normand
For this reason, Platonism is in a sense reductivist, though not in the way that a 'bottom-up' philosophy is. It is conceptually reductivist, not materially reductivist. The simplicity of the first principle is contrasted with the simplicity of elements out of which things are composed according to a 'bottom-up' approach. Whether or to what extent the unqualifiedly simple can also be intelligible or in some sense transcends intelligibility is a deep question within Platonism. — Wayfarer
I think this is already starting on shaky grounds. What does "exist" mean here? Mathematically it would mean something like "provable" but if we're dealing with a possible world in which everything is provable, we're dealing with the Trivial World. A world without any coherent structure at all. — MindForged
I'm not really sure what his argument is supposed to be. Math platonism doesn't say math is universal in the sense he is assuming. I'd say I'm a mathematical pluralist, so I don't find myself committed to any particular math system as a matter of principle, but this doesn't preclude being a math platonist — MindForged
In defense of a dogma seems like a really fun article. I just started it and I'm impressed by the style, precision and generosity of the argument! — fdrake
What I understand is that modern-day Platonism is more like Pythagorean idealism. Although the refutation of Pythagorean idealism is commonly attributed to Aristotle, it has been argued that Plato actually laid the grounds for this. Plato worked to expose and clarify all the principles of Pythagorean idealism, and in the process uncovered its failings. I've seen it argued that the Parmenides, though it is quite difficult to understand, serves to refute this form of idealism. — Metaphysician Undercover
So sure, when maths is understood as just a realm of everything that unconstrained syntax will produce - a Borges library - then it seems to bear no real relation to a reality in which limitation or finitude is apparent everywhere. — apokrisis
The relation between such an unconstrained world of math and a limited finite world is that the limited finite world is a part of the unconstrained world of math. — litewave
...the limited finite world is a part of the unconstrained world of math. — litewave
mathematical objects do not exist apart from their concrete representations, but they are nevertheless real. — aletheist
I believe that's exactly the point: M would be entirely trivial. This is the dilemma that the paper poses for Mathematical Platonism: either M is trivial and has no structure whatsoever (and thus largely says nothing at all about our world), or, if M is not trivial in this way, then it cannot be independent from our intellectual activity. In either case Platonism is undermined because if the former, then it has no explanatory power, and if the latter, then it simply isn't Platonism. — StreetlightX
part of this, in turn, has to do with the modal status of our math: contingent or necessary, and to what degree? Rovelli's answer is a kind of qualified contingency: our math is contingent ("Which tiny piece of M turns out to be interesting for us, which parts turns out to be \mathematics" is far from obvious and universal. It is largely contingent"), but this contingency in turn is premised upon the kind of beings we are, and the kind of things we encounter in the world, along with what we do with them - which lends our mathematics a kind of empirical necessity (Rovelli doesn't use that term, but I think it's appropriate in this context). — StreetlightX
As such, mathematical objects do not exist apart from their concrete representations, but they are nevertheless real. — aletheist
Maths is spatial, or at best, spatiotemporal, and doesn't speak to energy or action in any basic way. It about the logical syntax of patterns and structures, and not about whatever breathes physical fire into those equations. — apokrisis
I think it is better to think of a "mathematical object" as a way of thinking or speaking, so the sameness consists in the human action. — Janus
Yet mathematics isn't an invented social construct that we can bend to whatever we want. All math is quite logical. — ssu
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