The value of what - another number - something mathematical, or feature of some object?Does an object weigh 19 pounds or 8.6 kg?
— Harry Hindu
Those are just different units for the same value. — Marchesk
Right, so unless you are saying abstractions exist independent of minds, then math doesn't exist independent of minds. But don't think that doesn't mean that abstractions aren't real, or that they don't have causal power. My point is to watch where you are pointing with your words. When talking about ten chickens, are you talking about a number or chickens?Yes, math is done in abstraction all the time. It's not like there are prime chickens. — Marchesk
When talking about ten chickens, are you talking about a number or chickens? — Harry Hindu
t's not the numbers that are equal, but the weight, right? When we talk about weight, are we talking about measurements, or something else? Aren't measurements OF something? Isn't a measurement simply a comparison of objects and their features? — Harry Hindu
I guess the question is, when is a discovery made - when it is observed in the math, or when it is observed in nature? Either way, it was observed.The issue is in mathematical physics, that discoveries are made BECAUSE of the maths, not made first by observation, and then described mathematically. A case in point was Dirac's discovery of anti-matter. According to the equations he developed or discovered that described electrons, there ought to be positive counterparts to the negatively-charged electrons. At the time no such things were known but lo and behold some years later they were discovered 1. There are many other such examples in the history of physics, which is why Eugene Wigner felt compelled to write the essay On the Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics in the Natural Sciences. — Wayfarer
But why does 19 = 19? Is it because 19 is the same scribble as 19?A number is a symbol denoting a count. And the count is nowhere but in the mind of the counter, it is a purely intellectual act. Yet all who can count will agree that 19=19 so it is not the property of a single observer. — Wayfarer
There were a quantity of chickens before humans were around to count them. What we call that is arbitrary. Aliens could use a different scribble to refer to the quantity, or use a totally different number-system for all we know.Both. Were there not 10 chickens before humans were around to count them? — Marchesk
When comparing an apple to an orange, are all the words that we use to compare them numerical? Is color numerical, what about taste or smell?Sure, but the measurement always gives us a numerical value of some kind, and we decide on the units. — Marchesk
Aliens could use a different scribble to refer to the quantity, or use a totally different number-system for all we know. — Harry Hindu
Can numbers exist on their own without being attributed to things? — Harry Hindu
Can things exist without being counted, or having numbers attributed to them? — Harry Hindu
When comparing an apple to an orange, are all the words that we use to compare them numerical? Is color numerical, what about taste or smell? — Harry Hindu
so reality can't be fundamentally mathematical. — Harry Hindu
Without having read it, what does the author replace numbers with? If it's something else that's abstract — Marchesk
(some kind of operators that can quantify over particulars), — Marchesk
My question would be that if you ditched numbers, how can talk about the properties of electrons, such as their mass and charge, since the value is the same for all electrons? Another way to ask the question is what are physical properties if they're not mathematical (que Tegmark)? — Marchesk
Intelligence is a contingent and emergent feature. The laws of nature are not fixed, their stability temporal. — Fooloso4
Hence the necessity of Platonic realism to the natural sciences. — Wayfarer
The last book my dear departed mother gave me, as a Christmas present, almost 20 years ago, was Steve Pinker's The Blank Slate. I'm not at all disposed towards Pinker's philosophical attitude, but he has many interesting things to say about linguistics and evolution. — Wayfarer
Myself, I feel that evolutionary explanations are only part of the picture. It seems obvious to me that infants are born with all kinds of proclivities, talents, dispositions, inclinations, and so on, and I don't know how much of a grasp science has on all that, or whether it all can be explained in terms of evolution and genetics. — Wayfarer
Not that I'm saying I have a better theory, other than some vague sense of their being a collective consciousness of some kind, that takes birth in such forms. But I would never try and persuade anyone of the truth of such an idea. — Wayfarer
But again, I'm rather skeptical that it is only a matter of biology. Actually Chomsky has also written on this, Why Only Us? co-authored with Robert Berwick. I'm meaning to read that, but there's about ten thousand books I'm meaning to read. At least Chomsky approaches it with a satisfactorily awed appreciation, in my view. — Wayfarer
I don't think there's a scientific account of why those kinds of talents ought to exist, not even to mention that musical genius has no obvious connection to biological adaptation. Not that I'm saying I have a better theory, other than some vague sense of there being a collective consciousness of some kind, that takes birth in such forms. But I would never try and persuade anyone of the truth of such an idea. — Wayfarer
The critic, Harold Bloom, was able to read and process 1000 pages in little over an hour with almost total recall. — Tom Storm
I've discovered some books on it (e.g this. — Wayfarer
've seen this claim before and I really doubt it is even possible (I know this is irrelevant to the rest or your post, sorry). — emancipate
So Plato's meno, Kant - anything else come to mind? — Manuel
The critic, Harold Bloom, was able to read and process 1000 pages in little over an hour with almost total recall. — Tom Storm
I suspect some brains are just abnormally fecund. — Tom Storm
I've discovered some books on it (e.g this.
— Wayfarer
I took a look at what was available to read on Amazon. — Fooloso4
I suspect the brain is analogous to a receiver~transmitter in some basic respect, rather than an originator of information. — Wayfarer
That is a reference to 'metanoia' is it not? — Wayfarer
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