The point is, there are more than correlations between mathematics and nature; as Galileo said, and surely this is a Platonist sentiment, 'the book of nature is written in mathematics' (and as is well-known, Galileo was indebted to the revival of Platonism in the Italian Renaissance). — Wayfarer
Nowadays there is an overwhelming urge to 'relativise' the whole matter, to say that number is something internal to or peculiar to humans - which is pretty well the impulse behind the Rovelli paper too. — Wayfarer
'Concrete representations' are written symbols or representations in any material form. — Wayfarer
Abstract objects and their particular representations are inseparable. There cannot be one without the other. Representations cannot exist without that which they represent, and that which is represented cannot exist without its representations. If there is no number 5 then there are no 5 objects. — litewave
The point was just that there is no single real (as opposed to conceptual or abstract) object, 'train journey' of which all train journey are representations or instantiations, — Janus
The argument here is then over the reality of mathematical structures themselves. And to follow what that argument would be - from my own hylomorphic and constraints based view - I would want to start with a clear mental picture of what the maths might actually be claiming. — apokrisis
Perhaps, but do abstract objects exist independently of their being thought, and if so, how would that "existence" look? — Janus
Bear in mind that I was originally talking about a train journey between two specific destinations. — Janus
For me the very notion of "the reality of mathematical structures" beyond their being abstractions from concrete objects and processes, seems unintelligible. — Janus
Mathematical "reality" seems to consist far more in possibility than it does in actuality, — Janus
Curvature is a geometric property of spacetime and is related by Einstein's field equation to energy. Spacetime curvature and energy determine each other through Einstein's field equation. — litewave
The vast majority of it is simply useless, and of no interest to anyone whatsoever. — StreetlightX
I'm baffled by your reply. What else did you think I said? And where yet did you say anything useful about the nature of this "energy density" which you have to go off and measure? — apokrisis
The author appears to argue that 'Mathematical Platonism...the view that mathematical reality exists by itself, independently from our own intellectual activities' is false, and it is false because mathematics is dependent on our own intellectual activities — Luke
The argument straightforwardly conflates mathematical objects with mathematical practices developed using, or developed to describe, those objects. — Snakes Alive
I'm not sure if you meant to phrase it how you did, but that... would be a perfectly valid argument ('it is false that the tree is blue because the tree is green - and here is why'). — StreetlightX
On the contrary, the problem with such a question is that most moderns are nominalists, rather than realists; they treat reality as coextensive with existence. The "objective realm" of reality is not limited to that which exists in time and space.The objections to this understanding are usually based on the inability to make this distinction; hence the common objection to Platonic realism, 'where do numbers exist'? This is because we are by habit instinctively realist; we are oriented in respect of the domain of time and space, the objective realm, which for most of us defines the scope of what is real; everything that exists is 'out there somewhere' in the objective realm. — Wayfarer
In this context, an object is whatever is capable of being represented. Hence qualities are objects just as much as the things that embody them, and habits (including laws of nature) are objects just as much as the events that they govern. Some of these possibilities and (conditional) necessities are real - i.e., their characters are not dependent on what anyone thinks about them - even though they do not exist apart from their instantiations.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, except in the most abstract conceptual sense ... — Janus
But "independent of our intellectual activity" is precisely what "real" means, assuming that "our" refers to any individual person or finite collection of people. The muddle comes from conflating reality with actuality/existence.The question is explicitly about the independence of math from our intellectual activity. Rovelli - rightly, imo - does not say anything about what is or is not 'real', partly, I suspect, because the question of 'the 'real' causes more muddles than it solves. — StreetlightX
Again, mathematics is the science of reasoning necessarily about hypothetical states of affairs. Euclidean and non-Euclidean geometry employ exactly the same (deductive) logic, but draw different conclusions because they begin with different premises; specifically, non-Euclidean geometry adopts one fewer postulate. Imaginary numbers are the perfectly logical result of defining "i" as the square root of -1, regardless of whether this corresponds to something actual.Within mathematics in general, there are numerous contradictions such as Euclidean vs. non-Euclidean geometry, imaginary numbers vs. traditional use of negative integers. — Metaphysician Undercover
Mathematics in itself does not require the adoption of a particular set of hypotheses; it simply derives necessary conclusions from any set of hypotheses whatsoever - including, in some cases, the conclusion that those hypotheses are contradictory. Euclidean and non-Euclidean geometry are different subjects with different hypotheses. Algebra with imaginary numbers and algebra without imaginary numbers are different subjects with different hypotheses.Mathematics is a subject, so we cannot attribute to mathematics, opposing hypotheses, without contradiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
Nonsense. That which the word "round" signifies - the real character of roundness - existed in everything that possessed it before any human being existed, and would continue to exist in everything that possessed it after every human being ceased to exist. Do you not recognize that some judgments are true and others are false? This entails that there is a fact of the matter, which is independent of whatever anyone thinks about it. Any argument to the contrary is self-refuting.I conclude that you believe the word "round" existed before anyone existed, because this is what is required for the earth to have been determined as round, before anyone existed. Do you not recognize that whether or not an object has a specific property is a judgement, and nothing else? — Metaphysician Undercover
Plato was speaking to that dawning metaphysical realisation that the intelligibility of reality is about a division of the substantial into the complementary things of the formal and material principle. — apokrisis
The Good as a finality which acts to select certain forms... — apokrisis
maths speaks deeply to the reality we observe.. — apokrisis
the problem with such a question is that most moderns are nominalists, rather than realists; they treat reality as coextensive with existence. The "objective realm" of reality is not limited to that which exists in time and space. — aletheist
Yeah. But what I was arguing is that your notion of material concreteness is itself just a matching abstraction. — apokrisis
In this context, an object is whatever is capable of being represented. Hence qualities are objects just as much as the things that embody them, and habits (including laws of nature) are objects just as much as the events that they govern. Some of these possibilities and (conditional) necessities are real - i.e., their characters are not dependent on what anyone thinks about them - even though they do not exist apart from their instantiations. — aletheist
Perhaps, but do abstract objects exist independently of their being thought, and if so, how would that "existence" look? — Janus
The point of the paper is to ask how tenable just such a distinction is, by setting out a disjunction ('dilemma'), the choices between which are claimed to put the Platonist in an untenable bind. — StreetlightX
Whereas when logical and mathematical truths are known, they are known in a way that is not possible with respect to sensibles, almost in the sense that the mind unites with the object of knowledge. — Wayfarer
...the original impetus behind the understanding was soteriological rather than utilitarian. — Wayfarer
Again, mathematics is the science of reasoning necessarily about hypothetical states of affairs. Euclidean and non-Euclidean geometry employ exactly the same (deductive) logic, but draw different conclusions because they begin with different premises; specifically, non-Euclidean geometry adopts one fewer postulate. Imaginary numbers are the perfectly logical result of defining "i" as the square root of -1, regardless of whether this corresponds to something actual. — aletheist
Euclidean and non-Euclidean geometry are different subjects with different hypotheses. Algebra with imaginary numbers and algebra without imaginary numbers are different subjects with different hypotheses. — aletheist
Nonsense. That which the word "round" signifies - the real character of roundness - existed in everything that possessed it before any human being existed, and would continue to exist in everything that possessed it after every human being ceased to exist. — aletheist
Do you not recognize that some judgments are true and others are false? This entails that there is a fact of the matter, which is independent of whatever anyone thinks about it. Any argument to the contrary is self-refuting. — aletheist
Of course my notion of it is an abstraction, but material concreteness is experienced. — Janus
If it weren't we would have no way of differentiating between the concrete and the abstract in the first place. — Janus
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