It seems to destroy math actually. — Gregory
Nothing is exactly alike because individuality is what defines things in this philosophy. — Gregory
In articles on Russell and others, the word nominalism comes up sometimes. I have never known what it has to do with math. It seems to destroy math actually. Numbers can never act an exact way if they don't share a nature. Chaos theory would cover all branches. With the physical sciences, nominalism says you have to test each two objects that seem identical to see if they act different. Nothing is exactly alike because individuality is what defines things in this philosophy. Personally I like it. Any nominalists out there? — Gregory
If reality has no common natures,.why should numbers share a nature necessarily? — Gregory
I see this kind of argument here not infrequently. :roll: — jgill
If reality has no common natures, why should numbers share a nature necessarily? — Gregory
Numbers construed how? As fictional characters, or concrete quantities? — bongo fury
Aren't they only fictions? — Gregory
I am not doing what jgill says. — Gregory
If reality has no common natures,.why should numbers share a nature necessarily? — Gregory
What if for an alien's brain, 2 plus 2 equals 100? I can see how that could work. — Gregory
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