check out Aden Evens's paper on this: — StreetlightX
Deleuze warns exactly against this conflation - of which you engage in every time - of what he calls the virtual with the actual, wherein the terms of the reciprocal relation are taken to be themselves terms rather than relations — StreetlightX
Note that one can of course, artificially reverse this whole enterprise so that rates of change are mere 'properties' of self-identical substances. But everything that is in any way important is thereby missed: the entire process of individuation whereby a thing 'takes on' an identity is missed. Any attempt to treat these relations as properties - which is entirely possible - simply misses the becoming of the entity or process at hand. Recall too that in the OP, I marked a distinction between becoming and change. — StreetlightX
Explicit in my description of limits is that they don't "actually exist". Limits are what actuality can approach - with asymptotic closeness. But by the same token, actuality can never arrive at the limit. The limit is where existence ceases to be an intelligible possiblity.
Thus a limit is virtual - in having this kind of negative reality. The reality of a general constraint on actualisation or individuation. — apokrisis
I should also note that none of this is particularly 'out of the box': the sciences have been operating in this domain for decades, and continental philosophy has never taken predicate logic seriously. I would suggest instead that the whole institution of formal logic has on the contrary 'boxed itself in', playing formal-logical games without actually attending to the world about it. — StreetlightX
I don't recall my calculus well, but so far as I know, the derivative still uses the function-argument schema, and I'm not sure what you were trying to say about it: the dx/dy are essentially notations for explicitly binding variables. The rate of change with one value w.r.t. another still just means, if the argument were to change 'infinitesimally,' how the value would change, and then extrapolating from that. — The Great Whatever
Without knowing the original function? In Taylor series the first element f(a) is the most important one in reconstructing the function - has the biggest effect, and then successive terms have lesser effects, the farther down you go with the derivatives. And anyway, Taylor series are useful to approximate and work with functions which have an infinite number of derivatives. Like ex for example. Or sin(x) or such functions. Definitely not polynomials.You can actually use a Taylor series to reconstruct a primitive curve (locally, around a singularity) with a single derivative. I couldn't tell you the details, but that's what the paper is referring to. — StreetlightX
Without knowing the original function? — Agustino
Yes that would obviously be sufficient if you're only integrating once.I think, for the series, you must know the value of the function at some point, not the function itself. But then you have to know the derivative values at that point, and so on down the line. — The Great Whatever
Yes, but you'd have to know one value from each derivative. Say I start with f(x) = 3 and the function I'm looking for is 3 integrations up. First integration I need one point on the line 3x+C1, which will enable me to find C1. Second integration I need one point on the curve 3/2 x^2 + C1*x + C2. And so on. Or if not I need as many number of points as the number of integrations I perform to get to the mother function that I'm looking to find.The point is that you only need to know the value at some point for the multiple integrations, not the function itself. — The Great Whatever
To understand Taylor just follow the formula. Take an easy second degree order equation:I don't understand Taylor series, but I'd still be curious to know what's to be said about the simple linear example. Doesn't a derivative of '3' determine an infinite class of linear functions, one for each y-intercept? — The Great Whatever
What do you mean? Are you asking what the use of Taylor series is? Or?Yep, I've got it. So the question is the extent to which having a value for one argument for each level is comparable to knowing the original function to begin with, or what conceptually this buys you. — The Great Whatever
the virtual - which refers here to the register of coupled rates of change - is precisely opposed to the possible, and in fact is more or less defined directly in distinction to it: — StreetlightX
Your conception of limits - as having ‘negative reality’ that constrains a general ‘vagueness’ could not be better described as exactly what Deleuze considers to be the entirely wrong approach to things. — StreetlightX
As for the Evens paper, the irony of complaining that I have a comprehension problem is kinda hilarious considering that the whole paper is geared towards treating the differential not as a question of limits, but as a question of generative production that is everywhere opposed to understanding the differential in terms of limits. — StreetlightX
And speaking of preaching - dude, if it were up to me I wouldn't engage with you ever, except you can't help but spew your babble in every thread I post in. Trust me, I have never once initiated a conversation with you except when you barge in telling me how I got it all wrong from the perspective of your ready-made monotone pseudo-system. The only one who incessantly rocks up time and time again to spread the gospel of symmetry-breaking and general-particular bullshit here is you. So if you feel hard done by feel free to fuck off any time - you won't exactly be missed. — StreetlightX
But then he doesn't get the need to remain dichotomous. — apokrisis
This "need" you refer to must be justified, or else it's not a need at all, just an assertion. — Metaphysician Undercover
You may claim that there can be no knowledge or understanding without dichotomy, and this may be justifiable, — Metaphysician Undercover
And once you allow for the possibility of non-dichotomous existence it gives you a completely different perspective on the relationship between existing and knowing. — Metaphysician Undercover
Becoming is a particularly hard thought to think. So hard, in fact, that at almost every point is it subordinated instead to 'Being'. This is particularly the case when becoming is thought of as simply another word for 'change'. But to think becoming as change is to more or less forget the specificity of becoming altogether. Why? Because to assert the primacy of becoming is precisely to assert what we might call becoming without terms. That is, it's not that one 'thing' becomes another 'thing'. Thinking of Becoming in this way just reverts back to thinking in terms of Being (becoming here is subordinate to 'things', which are primary). If becoming has any cogency at all, it must not be thought of as occurring between two terms, but as a concept self-sufficient unto itself. — StreetlightX
But dichotomies are justified logically. — apokrisis
And yet, if it works, it works. — apokrisis
So sure, reductionism works to build laptops and cities. But by definition, it is not holism.
And my argument is that the two are in fact related by the reciprocity of a dichotomous relation. If we understand reductionism vs holism properly, each is "true" as the inverse of the other. — apokrisis
Well if you can explain what kind of crisp existence is not the result of a symmetry breaking dichotomy, go for it. — apokrisis
What I'm asking is to ground the dichotomy in ontology, rather than to base your ontology in dichotomy, simply because dichotomy is logical. — Metaphysician Undercover
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