You are assuming the existence of an inherent order that lies beyond conscious recognition. Is there another aspect of mind that might register this phenomena? Is the fact we can discuss IO due to this possibility? — jgill
It is evident, that at the most fundamental level, living beings make use of inherent order, by creating extremely complex molecules, etc.. — Metaphysician Undercover
Therefore there is an order which inheres within that set of abstract objects, necessitated by the meaning of the objects — Metaphysician Undercover
But as simple symbols, rather than meaningful symbols, they may have no IO or a different IO. If I make up three random symbols from finite lines, say, would you then state the order in which I created them gives IO to the set? — jgill
You know it's an oxymoron to talk of a symbol without meaning — Metaphysician Undercover
It's an intentional act, so there must be reasons, therefore order. — Metaphysician Undercover
Are all acts founded on reason? — jgill
Is there an axiom in set theory that requires the display of elements of sets to be done in inherent order? — jgill
Mathematically, it might well be the case that the number of grains of sand in a heap is neither finite nor actually infinite, but indefinitely large — sime
a set is normally specified as a collection of things which satisfy a given predicate, — sime
Ironically, it is the the platonists who insist that every set must be "well-ordered" which is an assumption equivalent to the axiom of choice. — sime
But for those who deny the axiom of choice, it is nevertheless meaningful to compare the "sizes" of different sets even if the determined sizes are not synonymous to counting elements. — sime
for a set is normally specified as a collection of things which satisfy a given predicate . . . — sime
. . . nobody knows what a set is — fishfry
The issue I brought up with fishfry is the distinction between representation and imagination. Fishfry allows that "abstraction" might encompass both of these, such that imaginary ideas could be a useful part of a representative model. — Metaphysician Undercover
During the second half of the nineteenth century, through a process still awaiting explanation, the community of geometers reached the conclusion that all geometries were here to stay … [T]his had all the appearance of being the first time that a community of scientists had agreed to accept in a not-merely-provisory way all the members of a set of mutually inconsistent theories about a certain domain … It was now up to philosophers … to make epistemological sense of the mathe‐maticians’ attitude toward geometry … The challenge was a difficult test for philosophers, a test which (sad to say) they all failed …
For decades professional philosophers had remained largely unmoved by the new developments, watching them from afar or not at all … As the trend toward formalism became stronger and more definite, however, some philosophers concluded that the noble science of geometry was taking too harsh a beating from its practitioners. Perhaps it was time to take a stand on their behalf. In 1899, philosophy and geometry finally stood in eyeball-to-eyeball confrontation. The issue was to determine what, exactly, was going on in the new geometry.
(my emphasis).What was going on, I believe, was that geometry was becoming less the science of space or space-time, and more the formal study of certain structures. Issues concerning the proper application of geometry to physics were being separated from the status of pure geometry, the branch of mathematics.1Hilbert's Grundlagen der Geometrie [1899] represents the culmination of this development, delivering a death blow to a role for intuition or perception in the practice of geometry. Although intuition or observation may be the source of axioms, it plays no role in the actual pursuit of the subject.
A main feature of Hilbert's axiomatization of geometry is that the axiomatic method is presented and practiced in the spirit of the abstract conception of mathematics that arose at the end of the nineteenth century and which has generally been adopted in modern mathematics. It consists in abstracting from the intuitive meaning of the terms … and in understanding the assertions (theorems) of the axiomatized theory in a hypothetical sense, that is, as holding true for any interpretation … for which the axioms are satisfied. Thus, an axiom system is regarded not as a system of statements about a subject matter but as a system of conditions for what might be called a relational structure … [On] this conception of axiomatics, … logical reasoning on the basis of the axioms is used not merely as a means of assisting intuition in the study of spatial figures; rather logical dependencies are considered for their own sake, and it is insisted that in reasoning we should rely only on those properties of a figure that either are explicitly assumed or follow logically from the assumptions and axioms.
At first, Frege had trouble with this orientation to mathematics. In a letter dated December 27, 1899, he lectured Hilbert on the nature of definitions and axioms.3 According to Frege, axioms should express truths; definitions should give the meanings and fix the denotations of terms.
News to me. You claim that being a Platonist ixs equivalent to believing in the axiom of choice? I'd take those two things to be totally independent of one another. You could be a Platonist or not, and pro-choice or not. I don't see the connection. — fishfry
the axiom of choice is equivalent to the law of excluded middle — sime
"And of course, we know that LEM does not imply AC, since we know that ZF is consistent with ¬AC while LEM holds." (MathStackExchange) :chin: — jgill
that is true for ZF, since it is built upon classical logic — sime
intuitionistic set theory, in which choice principles and LEM are approximately equivalent as documented in the SEP article on the axiom of choice. — sime
The connection is the fact that the axiom of choice is equivalent to the law of excluded middle, which for infinite objects dissociates truth from derivation. This in itself wouldn't imply platonism if it wasn't for the fact that most proponents of classical logic and ZFC make no attempt to justify the formalisms pragmatically with respect to real world application. — sime
In mathematical logic, Diaconescu's theorem, or the Goodman–Myhill theorem, states that the full axiom of choice is sufficient to derive the law of the excluded middle, or restricted forms of it, in constructive set theory.
Yes, I'm already aware of all of that, and was only speaking approximately on set theory. My point was only attacking the idea that quantity is reducible to ordering. — sime
choice principles and LEM are approximately equivalent — sime
I looked at that article briefly. I did not see mention of an "approximate" equivalence. — TonesInDeepFreeze
"And of course, we know that LEM does not imply AC, since we know that ZF is consistent with ¬AC while LEM holds." (MathStackExchange) — jgill
This stuff just gets more bewildering as time goes on. :worry:
(One reason math has become so abstract is that classical areas of investigation have been "mined out". Professors need suggestions for research topics for their PhD students. So, create new definitions and/or generalize.) — jgill
deleted post — GrandMinnow
the difference in meaning that AC has in the two different systems — sime
The axiom of choice holds trivially as a tautology in sets constructed in higher-order constructive logic — sime
So one could even say that absence of LEM implies AC (or perhaps rather, that AC is an admissible tautology in absence of LEM). — sime
when speaking of AC not in the sense of an isolated axiom, but in the commonly used informal vernacular when speaking of choice principles in their structural and implicational senses — sime
Explicitly constructive mathematics goes back at least a hundred years, and with roots in the 19th century too. It has great importance toward understanding foundations. I think interest in it goes well beyond any need for assigning research topics. — TonesInDeepFreeze
jgill This place is corrupting you! — fishfry
I mean no disrespect to constructive mathematics. — jgill
Thanks for opening my eyes a bit to formalized set theory and for your patience! — jgill
I was just reading about the Frege-Hilbert dispute. As I understand it, Hilbert was saying that axioms are formal things and it doesn't matter what they stand for as long as we can talk about their logical relationships such as consistency. Frege thought that the axioms are supposed to represent real things. I'm not sure if I'm summarizing this correctly but this is the feeling I got when I was reading it. That I'm taking Hilbert's side, saying that the axioms don't mean anything at all; and you are with Frege, saying that the axioms must mean whatever they are intended to mean and nothing else.
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/frege-hilbert/
Is this what you're getting at? — fishfry
The difference of opinion over the success of Hilbert’s consistency and independence proofs is, as detailed below, the result of significant differences of opinion over such fundamental issues as: how to understand the content of a mathematical theory, what a successful axiomatization consists in, what the “truths” of a mathematical theory really are, and finally, what one is really asking when one asks about the consistency of a set of axioms or the independence of a given mathematical statement from others. — SEP
I take this to be a reference to the fact that geometers studied various models of geometry, such as Euclidean and non-Euclidean, and were no longer concerned with which was "true," but rather only that each model was individually consistent. And philosophers, who said math was supposed to be about truth, were not happy. — fishfry
I'm saying that we can study aspects of the world by creating formal abstractions that, by design, have nothing much to do with the world; and that are studied formally, by manipulation of symbols. And that we use this process to then get insight about the world. — fishfry
This is EXACTLY what you are lecturing me about! But as SEP notes, Hilbert stopped replying to Frege in 1900. Just as I ultimately had to stop replying to you. If you and Frege don't get the method of abstraction, Hilbert and I can only spend so much time listening to your complaints. I found a great sense of familiarity in reading about the Frege-Hilbert debate. — fishfry
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