So you talk about directly experiencing the substantial material concreteness of the actual real world. But that is still just a conception. — apokrisis
Nope. You want to apply a rigid if/then cause and effect logic to the situation. So for you, it has to be the case that one thing comes before the other thing. That is the habitual materialist Umwelt you are seeking to impose on your experiences of the world. — apokrisis
Semiosis says what you "experience" is your Umwelt. — apokrisis
In fact to say that nature is constructed from number, or some such kind of metaphysical claim, as for example Tegmark makes, is a form of reductionism; reduction of the organic to the mechanistic. — Janus
I think you're confusing yourself by over-thinking this. — Janus
Try feeling some object in your vicinity right now. You can directly feel its material concreteness, its tangibility; it is from that basic experience that the idea of substantial material concreteness originates. — Janus
Machinery - mathematical machinery - can be "absolutely true" because it is based on deductive proof. — apokrisis
If something counts as an object in the sense that Alethiest stipulates, then it certainly exists. If qualities exist, or subsist, only in their instantiations, then they are existent. My argument is only that there is no coherent sense in which we can say that they have an existence, or being or that they are real, whatever locution you prefer, beyond their instantiations and representations. — Janus
Mathematical platonism has considerable philosophical significance. If the view is true, it will put great pressure on the physicalist idea that reality is exhausted by the physical. For platonism entails that reality extends far beyond the physical world and includes objects which aren’t part of the causal and spatiotemporal order studied by the physical sciences. — SEP
Charles Sanders Peirce described himself as an extreme scholastic realist, rather than a Platonist, and the distinction that he carefully made between existence and reality seems pertinent here. Something exists iff it reacts with other like things in the environment; something is real iff it possesses certain characters regardless of what anyone thinks about it. As such, mathematical objects do not exist apart from their concrete representations, but they are nevertheless real. — aletheist
Oh please. I press hard on the desk with my finger. I poke my finger with no sense of resistance through the surrounding air. I then pick up the physics textbook that tells me the solid matter is really a void of excitations, while the airy space is crammed with Newtonian particles exerting a collective pressure and resistance on my being. — apokrisis
Mathematical platonism has considerable philosophical significance. If the view is true, it will put great pressure on the physicalist idea that reality is exhausted by the physical. For platonism entails that reality extends far beyond the physical world and includes objects which aren’t part of the causal and spatiotemporal order studied by the physical sciences. — SEP
and also this:
Charles Sanders Peirce described himself as an extreme scholastic realist, rather than a Platonist, and the distinction that he carefully made between existence and reality seems pertinent here. Something exists iff it reacts with other like things in the environment; something is real iff it possesses certain characters regardless of what anyone thinks about it. As such, mathematical objects do not exist apart from their concrete representations, but they are nevertheless real. — aletheist — Wayfarer
The textbook explanation is parasitic upon the experience of a world of tangible objects. Only a fool would deny that. — Janus
You love to resort to throwing around labels like "naive realist' — Janus
I'm making no claim about the "ultimacy" of the material world, only about the foundational character of the experience of tangible things. — Janus
That quote refers to "objects", but it does not explain how those purported objects qualify as objects beyond their conceptual, abstract dimension. — Janus
Surely the point about the axioms of arithmetic etc is that they're true for no further reason, they are apodictic, not dependent on some other truth. — Wayfarer
But reason itself is strictly the relationship between ideas. It doesn't need to be validated with respect to any particular state of affairs - that is why it is associated with a priori truths. — Wayfarer
So you put yourself in a weird position by celebrating the inspiration and the logic - seeing in them a transcendent step from the mind to the divine - and then rejecting the third leg of this triad, the empiricism that roots reasoning back in the world with which it engages. — apokrisis
Why has mathematics developed at first, and for such a long time, along two parallel lines: geometry and arithmetic? The answer begins to clarify: because these two branches of mathematics are of value for creatures like us, who instinctively count friends, enemies and sheep, and who need to measure, approximately, a nearly flat earth in a nearly flat region of physical space. In other words, this mathematics is of interest to us because it reflects very contingent interests of ours. — Rovelli
Would you say the experience of animals conceptually structured? — Janus
...but its ultimate concern is not utilitarian in nature. — Wayfarer
My view is that materialism kind of hijacked the Western tradition from within, although the times they are a'changing. — Wayfarer
Everything is, after all, a function of biological adaption; we have the kinds of maths we have, because of the kinds of creatures we are. — Wayfarer
But they do have one that is structured by its ecologically useful generalisations, or habits of interpretance. — apokrisis
No, this completely ignores the accompanying definitions by which existence and reality are distinct. While qualities and habits only exist in their instantiations - as characters embodied in reacting things and laws governing such events - their reality does not depend on those instantiations; again, they are what they are regardless of what anyone thinks about them. Their mode of being is that of a conditional proposition; under certain circumstances, they would be instantiated.If something counts as an object in the sense that Alethiest stipulates, then it certainly exists. If qualities exist, or subsist, only in their instantiations, then they are existent. My argument is only that there is no coherent sense in which we can say that they have an existence, or being or that they are real, whatever locution you prefer, beyond their instantiations and representations. — Janus
This is very clearly false. It conflates the object of a sign with the sign itself. The reality of a character, and the existence of things that possess it, is very clearly independent of any particular system of signs that represent that character and those things. Otherwise, the same claim would apply to the world - i.e., it is absolutely impossible that there was a world before there was the word "world" - which is obviously absurd.Before there was the word "round", there was obviously nothing which the word "round" signifies, because there was no word "round" to signify anything . Therefore it is absolutely impossible that there was "the real character of roundness" before there was the word "round". That there is something which the word "round" signifies is very clearly dependent on the existence of the word "round". — Metaphysician Undercover
That the world is round(ish) is a fact, whether anyone ever judged it to be so or not; i.e., the world is really round(ish), regardless of what anyone thinks about it.That the world is round is a judgement. Whether any such judgement is true or false is irrelevant to the fact that such predications are judgements. — Metaphysician Undercover
I still don't get what it could mean to say that they have a reality independent of their instantiations. — Janus
Algebra is concerned with manipulation in time and geometry is concerned with space. These are two orthogonal aspects of the world, and they represent two different points of view in mathematics.
Except I found the author to be saying that the tree is not blue, and he did not tell us why. — Luke
Indeed, the paper stands or falls on whether the world M is a fair interpretation of mathematical realism. The process then becomes our selection fo the interesting bits of M. — Banno
Again, something exists iff it reacts with other things; something is real iff it is what it is regardless of how anyone thinks about it. Numbers clearly do not exist, because they do not react with anything; yet they are clearly real, because they are what they are regardless of how anyone thinks about them.I still don't get what it could mean to say that they have a reality independent of their instantiations. — Janus
I am saying that the reality of numbers does not depend on their particular instantiations (existence), and hence that at least some "mere logical possibilities" are real - i.e., independent of how anyone thinks about them.If you want to say that they are real over and above their instantiations, and then we imagine that there are no instantiations, then what could that reality consist in other than mere logical possibility? — 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. — aletheist
I am saying that the reality of numbers does not depend on their particular instantiations (existence), and hence that at least some "mere logical possibilities" are real - i.e., independent of how anyone thinks about them. — aletheist
The objects that appear to be dependent on the minds of individuals are mental objects. We know mathematical objects aren't in that category, and if intuition informs you as to why, then you know the basis of mathematical platonism. — frank
It's true you can be wrong about math. But at the basic level this can be seen by manipulating physical objects. Say you want proof that 8 x 13 = 104. All you need to do is arrange 104 objects in groups of 8 and see if there are thirteen of them. — Janus
Rovelli, who is happily a bulb above the rest, rightly avoids the whole semantic debate altogether. — StreetlightX
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