I am trying to express myself - as much as possible - within your framework. Here is what you said a while back:Once you say "transcendental", you are already outside the system itself. What does "transcendental" even mean within a formal system? — alcontali
Religion also proclaims the transcendental origin of this system of rules, necessarily from outside its formal system of rules. — alcontali
I take this to mean that there are axioms outside the formal system of Islamic Law upon which the laws are based - and that these axioms come from Allah. Am I getting this correct - or am I at least close? — EricH
According to Islamic theology, human beings are born with an innate inclination of tawhid (Oneness). — Fitrah in the ontology of Islam
mathematics is an exercise of the human intuition, not a game played with meaningless symbols. — Intuitionism in the ontology of mathematics
mathematics is an exercise of the human intuition, not a game played with meaningless symbols. — Intuitionism in the ontology of mathematics
Belated response here. I think I'm following this - Fitrah is an axiom.According to Islamic theology, human beings are born with an innate inclination of tawhid (Oneness). — Fitrah in the ontology of Islam — alcontali
Can you give me a few axioms - in plain language if possible? :smile:
If there is a more comprehensive list available - again with plain language explanations if available - you can give me a link to check out. — EricH
However, in your last reply to me, you stated that the Quran - and presumably all the laws therein - consists only of axioms. I think you would agree with me that a list of axioms does not constitute a formal system.You see, Islamic law is a complete formal system with rules concerning morality. — alcontali
I think you would agree with me that a list of axioms does not constitute a formal system. — EricH
A formal system is used for inferring theorems from axioms according to a set of rules. These rules, which are used for carrying out the inference of theorems from axioms, are the logical calculus of the formal system. A formal system is essentially an "axiomatic system".[1] In 1921, David Hilbert proposed to use such system as the foundation for the knowledge in mathematics.[2] A formal system may represent a well-defined system of abstract thought. — Wikipedia on the term formal system
In mathematics, an axiomatic system is any set of axioms from which some or all axioms can be used in conjunction to logically derive theorems. A theory is a consistent, relatively-self-contained body of knowledge which usually contains an axiomatic system and all its derived theorems.[1] — Wikipedia on axiomatic system
In Islam, the Quran is a set of axioms — alcontali
check the difference between Meccanic and Medinaic verses — Nobeernolife
A pretty strange axiomic system seeing how many times it contradicts itself (check the difference between Meccanic and Medinaic verses). Go on alcantali! — Nobeernolife
I could quibble with you over the definition of a formal system. Is a list of axioms by itself without a mechanism to generate theorems a formal system? I'm not qualified to answer that question, but if I had to maker a guess I'd say no.A formal system is a list of axioms.
Such formal system is always augmented with a choice of logic system, which is by default first-order logic. — alcontali
I could quibble with you over the definition of a formal system. Is a list of axioms by itself without a mechanism to generate theorems a formal system? I'm not qualified to answer that question, but if I had to maker a guess I'd say no. — EricH
assert Syllogism { all Socrates: univ, Man, Mortal: set univ | -- every man is mortal Man in Mortal -- Socrates is a man and (Socrates in Man) -- implies Socrates is mortal implies Socrates in Mortal } check Syllogism
These theorems are derived from the Quran, but they also rely on the Hadith for supporting evidence. — EricH
Hence, there is some justification to accept the view that the Hadith is often the 'vehicle' which conveys information about the 'Sunna'. ... There is a fundamental difference between the Hadith and Sunna and though often used synonymously, should be kept distinct. ... — Difference between Hadith and Sunna
It is clear that the Quran does not support any type of 'Sunna' that does not find sanction from the Quran. — Difference between Hadith and Sunna
This seems accurate to me. So when we say that Islamic law is a formal system it seems to me that we are making an analogy: Islamic law mirrors some /many of the attributes/behavior/qualities of a formal system. Your thoughts?Mathematics is pure symbol manipulation, i.e. language expressions. It does not take any sensory input. Therefore, it is pure reason. — alcontali
↪alcontali
OK. We are saying that in some sense Islamic law is a formal system. However, I think you would agree that it is not a formal system in the same sense as in math. I did a quick search and pulled out this from a different thread:
Mathematics is pure symbol manipulation, i.e. language expressions. It does not take any sensory input. Therefore, it is pure reason.
— alcontali
This seems accurate to me. So when we say that Islamic law is a formal system it seems to me that we are making an analogy: Islamic law mirrors some /many of the attributes/behavior/qualities of a formal system. Your thoughts? — EricH
Islamic law mirrors some /many of the attributes/behavior/qualities of a formal system. Your thoughts? — EricH
assert Syllogism { all Socrates: univ, Man, Mortal: set univ | -- every man is mortal Man in Mortal -- Socrates is a man and (Socrates in Man) -- implies Socrates is mortal implies Socrates in Mortal } check Syllogism
So you would be mapping the text of the Quran into a set of symbols with no semantic content? — EricH
Man in Mortal and (Socrates in Man) implies Socrates in Mortal
x in k and (s in x) implies s in k
Structuralism is a position holding that mathematical theories describe structures, and that mathematical objects are exhaustively defined by their places in such structures, consequently having no intrinsic properties. — Wikipedia on mathematical structuralism
A basic form of equivalence, definable on lambda terms, is alpha equivalence. It captures the intuition that the particular choice of a bound variable, in an abstraction, does not (usually) matter. For instance, λx.x and λy.y are alpha-equivalent lambda terms, and they both represent the same function (the identity function). — Wikipedia on alpha equivalence (lambda calculus)
↪Athena I am a so-called "bipolar" man, and I possess knowledge. — Michael Lee
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