So formal truths have a sort of... transcendality? Transcendency? Whatever. They go above and beyond possible worlds, basically. — MindForged
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
There is no perfect form of fiveness, — Janus
The problem I see with this is that if a mathematical "object", say the number five, has no existence apart from its concrete representations, then it cannot qualify as an object at all, since its representations are potentially infinite in number. — Janus
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. It's like, for example, traveling by train from one station to another; the journey is both always the same and yet different every time, just as each instantiation or representation of fiveness is. There is no perfect form of fiveness, just as there is no perfect form of the train journey. The sameness in both cases is the result of the human process of abstraction. — Janus
So spacetime with its complex structure seems to be a specific mathematical object. — litewave
Within mathematics in general, there are numerous contradictions such as Euclidean vs. non-Euclidean geometry, — Metaphysician Undercover
If you mean truths that hold in different possible worlds, then these truths constitute a more general/more abstract/higher-order possible world. — litewave
We must tack on a tensor field to specify some energy density at every point in this spacetime. We have to tell Lorentzian spacetime how it should actually curve. A literally material constraint must be glued to the floppy Lorentzian fabric to give it a gravitational structure. — apokrisis
And even then, the quantum of action - how G scales the interaction between the energy density and the spatiotemporal curvature - remains to be accounted for. — apokrisis
Energy density is a quantity (number) — litewave
Maybe G can be derived from some general principles — litewave
But then M isn't a possible world, it's an impossible world. Under most analyses, impossible worlds have no ontology (because then you're accepting the existence of a contradictory object). — MindForged
All that's needed for math platonism is for the objects referred to and quantified over in maths to be real. — MindForged
But irrespective of which one the universe does does have, the theorems about those systems are true about those systems — MindForged
The question is explicitly about the independence of math from our intellectual activity. — StreetlightX
Not sure if you missed my reply: — litewave
Only consistently defined objects can be part of the mathematical world.
Axioms are properties of an object (also called axiomatic system). Axioms like "The continuum hypothesis is true" and "The continuum hypothesis is not true" would be contradictory if they were properties of the same object but they are not contradictory if they are properties of different objects. — litewave
Is it just that? The claim would be that it is some quantity of something. So the structuralism of the maths still leaves open the question of how to understand the material part of reality’s equation. — apokrisis
First, I see no definition of "object". Second, you say "axioms are properties of an object". Third, opposing axioms may describe different objects. Why this is totally confused is that you have no principle to differentiate one object from another object because you have no definition of "object" — Metaphysician Undercover
In other words, we could make up an endless number of random axioms, each describing a different object, therefore mathematics would consist of an endless supply of random objects, each with its own axiom. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now, let's get logical. Within logic we have subjects. You cannot attribute to the same subject, opposing predicates, without contradiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
Mathematics is a subject, so we cannot attribute to mathematics, opposing hypotheses, without contradiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think 'our intellectual activity' is another abstraction. It's along the lines of a set. I'm pointing to the difficulty in finding a vantage point on abstraction. — frank
No, Rovelli's 'M' explicitly excludes contradiction: "Then the platonic world M is the ensemble of all theorems that follow from all (non contradictory) choices of axioms": It contains everything that is true under any choice of non-contradictory axioms (so yes, read the paper!). — StreetlightX
The untold story of the heretical thinkers who dared to question the nature of our quantum universe. Every physicist agrees quantum mechanics is among humanity's finest scientific achievements. But ask what it means, and the result will be a brawl. For a century, most physicists have followed Niels Bohr's Copenhagen interpretation and dismissed questions about the reality underlying quantum physics as meaningless. A mishmash of solipsism and poor reasoning, Copenhagen endured, as Bohr's students vigorously protected his legacy, and the physics community favored practical experiments over philosophical arguments. As a result, questioning the status quo long meant professional ruin. And yet, from the 1920s to today, physicists like John Bell, David Bohm, and Hugh Everett persisted in seeking the true meaning of quantum mechanics.
thought content [numbers and logical laws] exists independently of thinking "in the same way that a pencil exists independently of grasping it. Thought contents are true and bear their relations to one another (and presumably to what they are about) independently of anyone's thinking these thought contents - "just as a planet, even before anyone saw it, was in interaction with other planets."
Well then he's not talking about the trivial world, which is the world where everything is true. — MindForged
So, I'm not convinced by Rovelli's argument; in any case, his conclusion that mathematical Platonism says that mathematics is 'fully independent' is not at all the case. Here, you're seeing the assumption that 'what is real' must, by definition, be mind-independent being smuggled into the argument. — Wayfarer
Object is something that has properties. — litewave
Is there any difference between object and subject? — litewave
We don't attribute opposing axioms to the whole mathematical world, only to its parts (objects in the mathematical world). For example, zero curvature of space does not hold in the whole mathematical world but only in Euclidean spaces. And non-zero curvature of space does not hold in the whole mathematical world but only in non-Euclidean spaces. — litewave
So what exists as "an object" is completely arbitrary, and dependent only on the way that human beings assign properties. if someone assigns properties, there is an object there. — Metaphysician Undercover
So an object is identified as something individual, particular, and unique, while a subject is identified as something specific. One is a particular, the other a universal. — Metaphysician Undercover
We could say that biology and physics are distinct subjects within the subject of natural science, just like Euclidean space and non-Euclidean space are distinct subjects within the subject mathematics. However, we cannot allow that biology and physics proceed from contradictory axioms, because this would signify incoherency within the subject of natural science. — Metaphysician Undercover
(...) Muddy the waters elsewhere you intellectual cretin. — StreetlightX
This is over the top and uncalled for. — Pierre-Normand
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.
No, an object has properties even if no one assigns them to it. Planet Earth is round no matter whether someone assigns roundness to it. It was also round before anyone believed it was round, or before anyone even existed. — litewave
Huh? An object is a particular and a subject is a universal? Where did you get this terminology? — litewave
But biology is part of physics; properties of biological objects are physical properties. Curved space is not part of flat space and flat space is not part of curved space. — litewave
Rather than imagining counting train journeys, what about counting holes in a sphere. There is something perfect and absolute about the distinction between a sphere and a torus. Then you can keep on adding more holes. — apokrisis
So sure, some objects - like train journeys - seem pretty arbitrary. But then maths does arrive at cosmically general objects when every arbitrary geometric particular has been generalised away, leaving only the necessity of a pure topological constraint. — apokrisis
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