This point is interesting. — javi2541997
I explained why a rational empiricist can be possibilian which could allow this discussion to progress further, without being divided between people of different persuasions. I made the case, epistemically justified, that possibilianism is natural consequence of rational empiricism, for philosophical subjects which lack clear determination. — simeonz
The question can't be answered without some kind of speculation, obviously. — simeonz
there are certain areas in physics where math, as they claim, "breaks down" e.g. black holes, the Big Bang singularity, to name a few. — TheMadFool
Possibilianism is mostly concerned with theistic claims, but it is essentially attitude open towards the exploration of unproven claims, as long as they are suggested hypothetically.'m not familiar with this term 'possibilian' and I can't find it on the Web. Perhaps you could explain? — Wayfarer
The question about the nature of experience. What explains having experience and hence knowledge. How does it form - does experience emerge from the innate ability of the material substance to be self-cognizant of its configuration (panpsychism, emergent materialism, pantheism), does it emerge by virtue of connection to higher cognitive self (substance dualism), does it emerge as creative fictional introspection (idealistic existential monism), or does it emerge through collaborative enactment (enactvism). Those are some ideas. All of those ideas explain science in different manner and with somewhat different consequences. Some justify the attitude of empiricism completely, and others explain this attitude, but do not justify it.Which 'question' do you mean? What question do you think I'm posing that 'can't be answered without some kind of speculation?' — Wayfarer
The essay itself is interesting. You can find a copy here. — Wayfarer
Enactivism is as close to what was referred on the forum as intersubjective idealism. Each person is a creative force, but the collective effort is contingent and self-regulating. How it self-regulates constitutes the challenge for this hypothesis. — simeonz
Yes. In retrospect, I realize that I got a little carried away from the topic. I got stuck on the issue of the nature of experience. I'll think about whether I can research and contribute something more topical later (edit:...or much later).The rhetorical question I’m posing is, why is mathematical Platonism out of fashion?Why is it that many serious mathematicians and philosophers seek to discredit it, and to explain our ability to mathematise in naturalistic or reductionist terms? It’s really rather a specialised question, and one I am barely qualified to consider, considering how technical many of the arguments are. — Wayfarer
Yes, true, although black holes, in particular, were theoretically posited as a direct consequence of Einstein's laws, weren't they? And again I'm not claiming that science is all-knowing even in principle. Look carefully at the OP again. The topic I'm interested in is: are numbers real? And if so, in what sense are they real?
The view that numbers are real, independently of any mental activity on a human's part, is what is generally known as mathematical platonism. The point is, this is unpopular in today's academy; there are many very influential mathematicians, who are far greater experts than I could ever hope to be, who are intent on showing that it's mistaken. But according to this article Benecareff's influential argument against platonism was made 'on the grounds that an adequate account of truth in mathematics implies the existence of abstract mathematical objects, but that such objects are epistemologically inaccessible because they are causally inert and beyond the reach of sense perception.' In other words, this argument denies that we can have the innate grasp of mathematical truths that Frege asserts in the paper mentioned above. That's the 'meta-argument' I'm trying to get my head around. — Wayfarer
The square root of -1, according to mathematicians, doesn't exist and that means, the aptly named, real numbers exist. — TheMadFool
I don't think this is right. Imaginary numbers exist as mathematical entities used by mathematicians. In exactly the same way, the real numbers exist for mathematicians: they exist because they are used.
The term imaginary number is considered to be a misnomer by many mathematians. — emancipate
By the way, if imaginary numbers exist, what is the square root of -1? I know the square root of 4 is 2, a number; I know the square root of 2 is 1.414..., another number. — TheMadFool
All real numbers are (probably?) instantiated in the universe. Take for example pi, wherever you see something circular/spherical, it's there as the ratio between circumference and diameter. — TheMadFool
They exist as abstractions, mathematical concepts. — emancipate
The view that numbers are real, independently of any mental activity on a human's part, is what is generally known as mathematical platonism. The point is, this is unpopular in today's academy; there are many very influential mathematicians, who are far greater experts than I could ever hope to be, who are intent on showing that it's mistaken. But according to this article Benecareff's influential argument against platonism was made 'on the grounds that an adequate account of truth in mathematics implies the existence of abstract mathematical objects, but that such objects are epistemologically inaccessible because they are causally inert and beyond the reach of sense perception.' In other words, this argument denies that we can have the innate grasp of mathematical truths that Frege asserts in the paper mentioned above. That's the 'meta-argument' I'm trying to get my head around. — Wayfarer
So, if there are proficient and influential mathematicians who openly deny Platonism, then these same mathematicians must be prepared to revisit, denounce and replace, all the fundamental mathematical axioms which are based in Platonism, or else they are simply being hypocritical. — Metaphysician Undercover
Where is a real-world instantiation of the square root of -1? — TheMadFool
That is a historical question, and my understanding is that mathematicians refer to "real" numbers only to distinguish them from so-called "imaginary" numbers; the latter term actually came first.Well, what exactly does "real" in "numbers are real" mean? — TheMadFool
In general philosophy, "real" means being such as it is regardless of what anyone thinks about it. In philosophy of mathematics, realism ascribes this nature to mathematical objects, including both real and imaginary numbers.The question then is, are abstractions real? — TheMadFool
Yes, it is routinely used in circuit analysis and design.Where is a real-world instantiation of the square root of -1? Electronics? — TheMadFool
This is false, since it is not necessary for something to exist--in the metaphysical sense of reacting with other like things in the environment--in order to be the object of a sign. It does not even have to be real--it could instead be fictional, as some philosophers consider mathematical objects to be. Also, as I have explained elsewhere, signs denote their objects; what they signify are their interpretants.These mathematical axioms require that a term signifies an object. Only Platonism can support this prerequisite. — Metaphysician Undercover
Well, what exactly does "real" in "numbers are real" mean? — TheMadFool
This is false, since it is not necessary for something to exist--in the metaphysical sense of reacting with other like things in the environment--in order to be the object of a sign. It does not even have to be real--it could instead be fictional, as some philosophers consider mathematical objects to be. — aletheist
The human 'meaning-world' is constituted from these elements, but they’re not 'out there somewhere'. They don't exist in the same way that flowers or pens or chairs exist but are real nonetheless. — Wayfarer
No, it does not. Hamlet, the fictional character in Shakespeare's play, is the object of the sign that is the first word of this sentence. No form of Platonism is required to affirm this.To justify calling an imaginary thing "an object" requires some form of Platonism. — Metaphysician Undercover
It seems to me that number is obviously real. — Janus
The question for them is where or how do numbers as actual independent entities exist, or what would it mean to say they are real beyond saying that they are (real) abstractions? — Janus
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