The further point is that the fact ( if it is a fact) that a perception must be (to at least some minimal degree) conceptually mediated, does not entail that a perceptual experience is a concept. Similarly then, an experience of material concreteness is not a concept of material concreteness. — Janus
No, I would say that objects have qualities or characteristics which are different from and similar to other objects. So it is the qualities or the characteristics which are the properties of objects, not difference or similarity per se. In other words I think it is better to think not in terms of qualities constituting difference and/ or similarity as such, but in terms of qualities being different and/ or similar to other qualities. — Janus
Exactly right; according to Peirce, reality is independent of what any individual mind or finite collection of minds - including, notably, the collection of all actual minds - thinks about it; but reality is not independent of thought in general. As he once put it, "just as we say that a body is in motion and not that motion is in a body, we ought to say that we are in thought and not that thoughts are in us." In fact, another of his definitions is that reality is whatever would be included in the ultimate consensus of an infinite community after infinite inquiry. This is obviously a regulative ideal, not something that could ever actually be achieved.I think the key point here is that saying a number is what it is regardless of what anyone thinks about it is not the same as saying that a number is what it is independently of all thought whatsoever. — Janus
If there is a "platonic world" M of mathematical facts, what does M contain precisely? I observe that if M is too large, it is uninteresting, because the value is in the selection, not in the totality; if it is smaller and interesting, it is not independent from us. Both alternatives challenge mathematical platonism.
interest' provides just the selective principle.... — StreetlightX
This is very clearly false. It conflates the object of a sign with the sign itself. — aletheist
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. — aletheist
Have been away (so this is an answer to page 4)Is it really true to say "all math is quite logical"? 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
Premises (axioms) can make the math to seem contradictory, but can be totally logical. Only if you prove that something that we call an axiom is actually false, then is the statement simply wrong.You might argue that it is just different branches of mathematics which employ different axioms, but if one discipline (mathematics) employs contradictory premises, can it be true to say that this is logical? — Metaphysician Undercover
It's only a 'conflation' if one assumes from the outset the Platonic position on mathematical objects. — StreetlightX
I find affinities with (late) Wittgenstein's view, which in general I find the most appealing view on math. The emphasis on mathematical practice and on the selection principle are topics which preoccupied W. too. I'm curious if you're familiar with W's view as expounded by Rodych and of your opinion on it — Πετροκότσυφας
Hi! Would you mind presenting a quick explanation of the argument? I'll pay you in hamburgers. — frank
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