Pure [abstract] mathematics is the study of mathematical concepts independently of any application outside mathematics. These concepts may originate in real-world concerns, and the results obtained may later turn out to be useful for practical applications, but pure mathematicians are not primarily motivated by such applications. Instead, the appeal is attributed to the intellectual challenge and aesthetic beauty of working out the logical consequences of basic principles. . . .
. . . It follows that, presently, the distinction between pure and applied mathematics is more a philosophical point of view or a mathematician's preference than a rigid subdivision of mathematics. In particular, it is not uncommon that some members of a department of applied mathematics describe themselves as pure mathematicians. — Wikipedia
These concepts may originate in real-world concerns, and the results obtained may later turn out to be useful for practical applications, but pure mathematicians are not primarily motivated by such applications. Instead, the appeal is attributed to the intellectual challenge and aesthetic beauty of working out the logical consequences of basic principles. . . . — Wikipedia
So, as much as I see the claim that "pure mathematicians" are motivated by aesthetic beauty, as opposed to real world concerns, I don't see that any such concepts as being produced purely for aesthetic beauty actually exist in mathematics. — Metaphysician Undercover
The question is whether those principles ought to be derived from pure imagination, or ontology — Metaphysician Undercover
Is there such a thing as "pure imagination" that does not arise ultimately from observations and experiences in the physical world? — jgill
If there is order which inheres within a thing, then that order puts a necessary constraint on future possibilities of order, due to the continuity (causal relation) which we assume to exist between past and future. — Metaphysician Undercover
Thanks for the reading material fishfry, I've read through the SEP article a couple times, and the other partially, and finally have time to get back to you. — Metaphysician Undercover
Actually, I think that often when one stops replying to the other it is because they get an inkling that the other is right. — Metaphysician Undercover
Me: Here is how the knight moves in chess. Two squares in the horizontal or vertical direction, and one in the vertical or horizontal, respectively.
You: But that's wrong! Knights in the real world carry lances and save damsels. You can't just make up rules that don't match the real world.
Me: This is not about the real world, I'm just explaining the rules of this game.
You: You insist that you're right, but you're wrong.
Me: The rules of a game can't be right or wrong, they're just the way they are. I'm explaining, not advocating. I'm not claiming that this is the "right" way to define a knight move. I'm just telling you what the rules of chess are.
You: You're wrong, that's not how knights move.
Me. Ok, well let's agree to disagree. I prefer not to continue like this. Nice chatting with you.
You: That just shows that you know you're wrong.
Me: Oh brother.
So there's a matter of pride, where the person stops replying, and sticks to one's principles rather than going down the road of dismantling what one has already put a lot of work into, being too proud to face that prospect. — Metaphysician Undercover
You, it appears, do not suffer from this issue of pride so much, because you keep coming back, and looking further and further into the issues. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think Frege brings up similar issues to me. The main problem, relevant to what I'm arguing, mentioned in the referred SEP article, is the matter of content. — Metaphysician Undercover
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 — Metaphysician Undercover
In critical analysis, we have the classical distinction of form and content. You can find very good examples of this usage in early Marx. Content is the various ideas themselves, which make up the piece, and form is the way the author relates the ideas to create an overall structured unity. — Metaphysician Undercover
Hilbert appears to be claiming to remove content from logic, — Metaphysician Undercover
to create a formal structure without content. In my opinion, this is a misguided adventure, because it is actually not possible to pull it off, in reality. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is because of the nature of human thought, logic, and reality. Traditionally, content was the individual ideas, signified by words, which are brought together related to each other, through a formal structure. Under Hilbert's proposal, the only remaining idea is an ideal, the goal of a unified formal structure. So the "idea' has been moved from the bottom, as content, to the top, as goal, or end. This does not rid us of content though, as the content is now the relations between the words, and the form is now a final cause, as the ideal, the goal of a unified formal structure. The structure still has content, the described relations. — Metaphysician Undercover
Following the Aristotelian principles of matter/form, content is a sort of matter, subject-matter, hence for Marx, ideas, as content, are the material aspect of any logical work. This underlies Marxist materialism — Metaphysician Undercover
However, in the Aristotelian system, matter is fundamentally indeterminate, making it in some sense unintelligible, producing uncertainty. Matter is given the position of violating the LEM, by Aristotle, as potential is is what may or may not be. Some modern materialists, dialectical materialists, following Marx's interpretation of Hegel prefer a violation of the law of non-contradiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
So the move toward formalism by Frege and Hilbert can be seen as an effort to deal with the uncertainty of content, Uncertainty is how the human being approaches content, as a sort of matter, there is a fundamental unintelligibility to it. Hilbert appears to be claiming to remove content from logic, to create a formal structure without content, thus improving certainty. In my opinion, what he has actually done is made content an inherent part of the formalized structure, thus bringing the indeterminacy and unintelligibility, which is fundamental to content, into the formal structure. The result is a formalism with inherent uncertainty. — Metaphysician Undercover
I believe that this is the inevitable result of such an attempt. The reality is that there is a degree of uncertainty in any human expression. Traditionally, the effort was made to maintain a high degree of certainty within the formal aspects of logic, and relegate the uncertain aspects to a special category, as content. — Metaphysician Undercover
Think of the classical distinction between the truth of premises, and the validity of the logic. We can know the validity of the logic with a high degree of certainty, that is the formal aspect. But the premises (or definitions, as argued by Frege) contain the content, the material element where indeterminateness, unintelligibility and incoherency may lurk underneath. We haven't got the same type of criteria to judge truth or falsity of premises, that we have to judge the validity of the logic. There is a much higher degree of uncertainty in our judgement of truth of premises, than there is of the validity of logic. So we separate the premises to be judged in a different way, a different system of criteria, knowing that uncertainty and unsoundness creeps into the logical procedures from this source. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now, imagine that we remove this separation, between the truth of the premises, and the validity of the logic, because we want every part of the logical procedure to have the higher degree of certainty as valid logic has. However, the reality of the world is such that we cannot remove the uncertainty which lurks within human ideas, and thought. All we can do is create a formalism which lowers itself, to allow within it, the uncertainties which were formerly excluded, and relegated to content. Therefore we do not get rid of the uncertainty, we just incapacitate our ability to know where it lies, by allowing it to be scattered throughout the formal structure, hiding in various places, rather than being restricted to a particular aspect, the content. — Metaphysician Undercover
I will not address directly, Hilbert's technique, described in the SEP article as his conceptualization of independence and consistency, unless I read primary sources from both Hilbert and Frege. — Metaphysician Undercover
Geometers, and mathematicians have taken a turn away from accepted philosophical principles. This I tried to describe to you in relation to the law of identity. So there is no doubt, that there is a division between the two. Take a look at the Wikipedia entry on "axiom" for example. Unlike mathematics, in philosophy an axiom is a self-evident truth. — Metaphysician Undercover
Principles in philosophy are grounded in ontology, but mathematics has turned away from this. — Metaphysician Undercover
One might try to argue that it's just a different ontology, but this is not true. There is simply a lack of ontology in mathematics, as evidenced by a lack of coherent and consistent ontological principles. — Metaphysician Undercover
You might think that this is all good, that mathematics goes off in all sorts of different directions none of which is grounded in a solid ontology, but I don't see how that could be the case. — Metaphysician Undercover
I know you keep saying this, but you've provided no evidence, or proof. Suppose we want to say something insightful about the world. So we start with what you call a "formal abstraction", something produced from imagination, which has absolutely nothing to do with the world. Imagine the nature of such a statement, something which has nothing to do with the world. How do you propose that we can use this to say something about the world. It doesn't make any sense. Logic cannot proceed that way, there must be something which relates the abstraction to the world. But then we cannot say that the abstraction says nothing about the world. If the abstraction is in some way related to the world, it says something about the world. If it doesn't say anything about the world, then it's completely independent from any descriptions of the world, so how would we bring it into a system which is saying something about the world? — Metaphysician Undercover
it is not the case that Frege and I do not get the method of abstraction. Being philosophers, we get abstraction very well, it is the subject matter of our discipline. You do not seem to have respect for this. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is the division of the upper realm of knowledge Plato described in The Republic. Mathematicians work with abstractions that is the lower part of the upper division, philosophers study and seek to understand the nature of abstractions, that is the upper half of the upper division. — Metaphysician Undercover
Really, it is people like you, who want to predicate to abstraction, some sort of idealized perfection, where it is free from the deprivations of the world in which us human beings, and our abstractions exist, who don't get abstraction. — Metaphysician Undercover
But many (maybe the preponderance of) mathematicians regard the axioms for particular fields of study not to be merely arbitrary, but rather as meaningful and true. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I'm not arguing my point of view is right, I'm not even arguing a point of view. I'm telling you how modern math works. It's like this, if you don't mind a Galilean dialog. — fishfry
Modern math is what it is, and nothing you say changes that, nor am I defending it, only reporting on it. — fishfry
It was forced on math by the discovery of non-Euclidean geometry. Once mathematicians discovered the existence of multiple internally consistent but mutually inconsistent geometries, what else could they do but give up on truth and focus on consistency?
I'm curious to hear your response to this point. What were they supposed to do with non-Euclidean geometry? Especially when 70 years later it turned out to be of vital importance in physics? — fishfry
It's not good or bad, it is simple inevitable. What should math do? Abolish Eucidean or non-Euclidean geometry? On what basis? — fishfry
As evidence I give you "The unreasonable effectiveness of math etc." — fishfry
You've given me not the slightest evidence that you have any idea how math works. And a lot of evidence to the contrary. — fishfry
This is not true. — Metaphysician Undercover
You've been making arguments about "pure math", and "pure abstractions". — Metaphysician Undercover
So it is you who is making a division between the application of mathematics, — Metaphysician Undercover
"how modern math works", and pure mathematics, and you've been arguing that pure mathematics deals with pure abstractions. — Metaphysician Undercover
You've argued philosophical speculation concerning the derivation of mathematical axioms through some claimed process of pure abstraction, totally removed from any real world concerns, rather than the need for mathematics to work. — Metaphysician Undercover
So your chess game analogy is way off the mark, because what we've been discussing here, is the creation of the rules for the game, not the play of the game. And, in creating the rules we must rely on some criteria. — Metaphysician Undercover
Nowhere do I dispute the obvious, — Metaphysician Undercover
that this is "how modern math works". That is not our discussion at all. — Metaphysician Undercover
What I dispute is the truth or validity of some fundamental principles (axioms) which mathematicians work with. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is why the game analogy fails, because applying mathematics in the real world, is by that very description, a real world enterprise, it is not playing a game which is totally unrelated to the world. — Metaphysician Undercover
So the same principle which makes playing the game something separate from a real world adventure, also makes it different from mathematics, therefore not analogous in that way — Metaphysician Undercover
I have a proposal, a way to make your analogy more relevant. Let's assume that playing a game is a real world thing, *as it truly is something we do in the world, just like scientists, engineers and architects do real world things with mathematics. Then let's say that there are people who work on the rules of the game, creating the game and adjusting the rules whenever problems become evident, like too many stalemates or something like that. Do you agree that "pure mathematicians" are analogous to these people, fixing the rules? — Metaphysician Undercover
Clearly, the people fixing the rules are not in a bubble, completely isolated from the people involved in the real world play. Of course not, they are working on problems involved with the real world play, just like the "pure mathematicians" are working on problems involved with the application of math in science and engineering, etc.. — Metaphysician Undercover
Plato described this well, speaking about how tools are designed. A tool is actually a much better analogy for math than a game. The crafts people who use the tool must have input into the design of the tool because they know what is needed from the tool. — Metaphysician Undercover
In conclusion, your claim that "pure mathematicians" are completely removed from the real world use of mathematics is not consistent with the game analogy nor the tool analogy. Those who create the rules of a game obviously have the real world play of the game in mind when creating the rules, so they have a purpose and those who design tools obviously have the real world use of the tool in mind when designing it, and the tool has a purpose. So if mathematics is analogous, then the pure mathematicians have the real world use of mathematics in mind when creating axioms, such that the axioms have a purpose. — Metaphysician Undercover
The problem is that you have been "reporting" falsely. — Metaphysician Undercover
You consistently claimed, over and over again, that "pure mathematicians" work in a realm of pure abstraction, completely separated, and removed from the real world application of mathematics, and real world problems. — Metaphysician Undercover
That is the substance of our disagreement in this thread. My observations of things like the Hilbert-Frege discussion show me very clearly that this is a real world problem, a problem of application, not abstraction, which Hilbert was working on. And, the fact that Hilbert's principles were accepted and are now applied, demonstrates further evidence that Hilbert delivered a resolution to a problem of application, not a principle of pure abstraction. — Metaphysician Undercover
I can't say that I see what I'm supposed to comment on. The geometry used is the one developed to suit the application, it's produced for a purpose. With the conflation of time and space, into the concept of an active changing space-time, Euclidean geometry which give principles for a static unchanging space, is inadequate. Hence the need for non-Euclidean geometry in modern physics. — Metaphysician Undercover
Sorry fishfry, but this is evidence for my side of the argument. "The unreasonable effectiveness of math" is clear evidence that the mathematicians who dream up the axioms really do take notice, and have respect for real world problems. That's obviously why math is so effective. If the mathematicians were working in some realm of pure abstraction, with total disregard for any real world issues, then it would be unreasonable to think that they would produce principles which are extremely effective in the real world. Which do you think is the case, that mathematics just happens to be extremely effective in the real world, or that the mathematicians who have created the axioms have been trying to make it extremely effective? — Metaphysician Undercover
Our discussion, throughout this thread has never been about "how math works". — Metaphysician Undercover
We have been discussing fundamental axioms, and not the application of mathematics at all. — Metaphysician Undercover
You are now changing the subject, and trying to claim that all you've been talking about is "how math works", but clearly what you've been talking about has been pure math, and pure abstraction, not application. — Metaphysician Undercover
The geometry used [Non-Euclidean] is the one developed to suit the application, it's produced for a purpose. With the conflation of time and space, into the concept of an active changing space-time, Euclidean geometry which give principles for a static unchanging space, is inadequate. Hence the need for non-Euclidean geometry in modern physics — Metaphysician Undercover
Nobody claims that the axiom of replacement or the axiom of powersets is true. NOBODY [all caps in original] says that. [,,,] [no one] is claiming the axioms of math are "true." The axioms are strings of formal symbols, true in some models and false in others. — fishfry
Many mathematicians and philosophers of mathematics regard certain axioms and theorems to be true not just relative to models. It might even be the dominant view. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The overwhelming majority of working mathematicians are not set theorists or involved in foundations. They pay no attention to set theory and would be hard-pressed to even name the axioms. — fishfry
The question doesn't come up. — fishfry
Among those who study foundations, it must be abundantly clear that the axioms are arbitrary and not literally true — fishfry
or at best I would say that "a few" mathematicians claim the axioms are literally true in some sense. — fishfry
Among philosophers, who could seriously argue that the axioms of set theory are "true" in any meaningful sense; or even meaningful in any meaningful sense! — fishfry
I'd go further and say that it's perfectly clear that some of the axioms, such as the axiom of infinity, are literally false. — fishfry
I would add to all that the growing importance of neo-intuitionist, constructivist, and category-theoretic approaches, in which set theory is not only false, but irrelevant. — fishfry
you said, "certain axioms," and I suppose if you want to say that high school notions like unions and intersections are true or instantiable in the real world, you'd have a point. — fishfry
I don't know a lot about category theory, but it can be axiomatized by ZFC+Grothendieck-universe. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Which requires the existence of an inaccessible cardinal, the existence of which is not even provable in ZFC. — fishfry
tiny percentage of overall math papers that are devoted to set theory. — fishfry
We're arguing over what other people think, we can't ever get to the bottom of that. — fishfry
In what sense could the Peano axioms be true in the real world? — fishfry
Yes, which makes it even more curious what one would mean by saying the axioms of ZFC are false, while proposing a theory that is equivalent to ZFC PLUS another axiom. — TonesInDeepFreeze
That doesn't entail that a lot mathematicians aren't aware of axioms, including those not of set theory and those of set theory. And, again, probably most mathematicians don't get hung up on mathematical logic and its model theoretic sense of truth, yet mathematicians speak of the truth of mathematical statements.
And it's not even a given that only a few mathematicians who do understand models in mathematical logic hold that there are other senses of truth, including realism, instrumental, true-to-concept, et. al. Indeed, we know that there are mathematicians who well understand mathematical logic but still regard a sense of truth no restricted to that of "true in a model". — TonesInDeepFreeze
You made a clam about it. We don't have a scientific polling, but we can see that there are many people who don't think that mathematical truth is confined only to the model-theoretic sense. — TonesInDeepFreeze
So 'real world' is now added to the question. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Again, that you view certain notions about mathematics to be untenable doesn't entail that there are not plenty of people who don't share your view — TonesInDeepFreeze
is false.Nobody claims that the axiom of replacement or the axiom of powersets is true. NOBODY [all caps in original] says that. [,,,] [no one] is claiming the axioms of math are "true." — fishfry
(not necessarily your own): — TonesInDeepFreeze
Dealing with natural numbers without having the set of all natural
numbers does not cause more inconvenience than, say, dealing with sets
without having the set of all sets. Also the arithmetic of the rational
numbers can be developed in this framework. However, if one is already
interested in analysis then infinite sets are indispensable since even the
notion of a real number cannot be developed by means of finite sets only.
Hence we have to add an existence axiom that guarantees the existence of
an infinite set.
The axioms aren't false, either, any more than the way the knight moves in chess may be said to be true or false. It's just a rule that's been found by experience to make the game interesting. — fishfry
I truly can't argue about what the majority or substantial plurality or "some" or "a few" or whatever mathematicians believe. — fishfry
I have no data or evidence, neither do you. — fishfry
But the subject matter that most mathematicians work on, as evidenced by the number of papers published, is so far removed from foundations that I can't imagine that many mathematicians spend five minutes thinking about the subject in a year or in a career. — fishfry
arguing popular opinion is not fruitful — fishfry
Would you like me to go from "a few" to "a whole bunch?" I'm not sure what outcome would satisfy you. This is not a meaningful conversation. — fishfry
This is not a meaningful conversation. — fishfry
So 'real world' is now added to the question.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
That's what true and false typically mean. — fishfry
The axiom of infinity is manifestly false about the real world. — fishfry
Perhaps you can put your concept of truth into context for me. — fishfry
Respected mathematician Alexander Abian wanted to blow up the moon; and prolific author of high-level math texts Serge Lange was an AIDs denier. — fishfry
if you deny that the axiom of infinity is "manifestly false about the real world," — fishfry
[the axiom of infinity] is just a rule that's been found by experience to make the game interesting. — fishfry
That's your view. My point is not nor has been to convince you otherwise. Rather, my point is that no matter that it may be your view, it is not true that nobody (or only a few) people disagree with it. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Fine. And so there's not basis to claim that nobody (or merely a few) views axioms as true in a sense other than relative to models. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I have evidence from writings, conversations, and posts. From those, it is manifestly clear that it is false that "Nobody claims that the axiom of replacement or the axiom of powersets is true. NOBODY [all caps in original] says that. [,,,] [no one] is claiming the axioms of math are "true."" Then, as to what the majority of mathematicians believe, I've stated my impression based on what I have read and heard from mathematicians, while I've said that of course that impression is not scientific. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Again, that is the wrong road of argument for your position. I don't doubt that the vast majority of mathematicians don't care about foundations, in particular the model-theoretic notion of truth. But that only adds to my argument, not yours. Clearly, commonly mathematicians speak of the truth of mathematical statements, and even many mathematicians not occupied with foundations understand axioms in their field of study and often enough even the set theory axioms. So when such mathematicians say things like "the fundamental theorem of arithmetic" is true, then they don't mean it as "the fundamental theorem of arithmetic is true only in the sense that it is derivable in a consistent formal theory so that it is true in some models". — TonesInDeepFreeze
It's become a point of contention only because I responded to your claim about it, and not just in popular opinion, but your claim of totality of opinion. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I don't care what you go to. I am making my own point that it is not the case that NOBODY (or even only a few) people regard axioms as true other than model-theoretically. — TonesInDeepFreeze
If it was meaningful for you to make the claim, then it is meaningful for me to reply to it, and to reply to your replies. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Views of mathematical truth don't have to be limited to what is typical otherwise. Whether or not departures from "typical" are justified, my main point was that it is not the case that all (or nearly all) mathematicians regard truth as merely model-theoretic. — TonesInDeepFreeze
That's your view. But it doesn't refute my point that it is not the case that all (or nearly all) mathematicians and philosophers regard axioms as true only as pertains to models. — TonesInDeepFreeze
It doesn't matter toward my point. I have not claimed nor disagreed with any notion of truth. I don't have to just to point out that it is not the case that nobody regards axioms as true except relative to models. This reminds me of an article I read today. The writer claimed that nobody finds Colbert funny. I don't have to opine whether Colbert is funny to point out that it is false that nobody laughs at his jokes. — TonesInDeepFreeze
That opens another question. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Whether one agrees with notions of mathematical truth other than model-theoretic, I'd be inclined not to claim that thinking philosophically or heuristically of mathematical truth as rather than model theoretic is among the ilk of proposing detonation of the moon or claiming that AIDS doesn't exist. — TonesInDeepFreeze
if you deny that the axiom of infinity is "manifestly false about the real world,"
— fishfry
I neither denied it nor affirmed it. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Two different things: (1) "P is the case" and (2) "Nobody claims that ~P is the case". — TonesInDeepFreeze
Today when I read "Nobody thinks Colbert is funny", my first thought was not "But Colbert is funny" nor "I agree that Colbert is not funny", but rather how ludicrous it is to start an opinion article about American society with such a manifestly false claim as "Nobody thinks Colbert is funny." — TonesInDeepFreeze
If 'to make interesting' includes 'to provide an axiomatization of the mathematics for sciences'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
How can you argue with the truth of things that are not claimed to be true? Nobody claims that the axiom of replacement or the axiom of powersets is true. NOBODY says that. — fishfry
It's entirely analogous. Chess is a formal game, there's no "reason" why the knight moves as it does other than the pragmatics of what's been proven by experience to make for an interesting game. And there are equally valid variations of the game in common use as well. — fishfry
Of course math is inspired by the world. It's just not bound by it. A point I've made to you a dozen times by now. — fishfry
News to me. — fishfry
Wow! I am really impressed to realize Omar Khayyam (1048-1131) had the perspicacity to realize his efforts at Non-Euclidean geometry involved notions of space-time. Thanks, MU. I would not have guessed. :chin: — jgill
I'll go with "plenty" if this will mollify your sense of right and wrong here. — fishfry
If you want to argue about what people think, I can't engage on that anymore. — fishfry
99% of professional mathematicians are not involved in foundations (more or less objective number, I didn't look it up but recall jgill's post regarding the percentage of recently published papers) and therefore have no professional opinion on the subject at all. — fishfry
You made your point then got tedious and are now beyond that. — fishfry
Whether one agrees with notions of mathematical truth other than model-theoretic, I'd be inclined not to claim that thinking philosophically or heuristically of mathematical truth as rather than model theoretic is among the ilk of proposing detonation of the moon or claiming that AIDS doesn't exist.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
The question of foundations is as far from the practice of most mainstream mathematicians as blowing up the moon or AIDs denialism. — fishfry
Two different things: (1) "P is the case" and (2) "Nobody claims that ~P is the case".
— TonesInDeepFreeze
The former being interesting, the latter tedious beyond belief. — fishfry
So you didn't change the subject after all. — fishfry
If 'to make interesting' includes 'to provide an axiomatization of the mathematics for sciences'.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
This could never be true. Physics has not been axiomatized at all. — fishfry
Yet you write:
You continue to miss the point. That a vast number of mathematicians don't care about foundations doesn't imply that the vast number of mathematicians don't think axioms are true except model-theoretically, as indeed the fewer who care about foundations then reasonably we would expect the fewer who think truth is merely model-theoretic. — TonesInDeepFreeze
It may have been tedious, but my entries have been responses to your continued posting on the subject. It seems odd to me that one would continue to reply, and repeat some points that are essentially the same, but then complain that responses on point to your own replies are thereby tediousness. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I addressed the additional matter of outlandishness; I didn't thereby declare that I am forever changing any subject or not changing it. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I didn't say "axiomatization of physics". I said "axiomatization of the MATHEMATICS for the sciences" [all-caps added]. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Also, I don't know that physics has not been axiomatized "AT ALL" [all caps added]. — TonesInDeepFreeze
[,,,] That a vast number of mathematicians don't care about foundations doesn't imply that the vast number of mathematicians don't think axioms are true except model-theoretically, as indeed the fewer who care about foundations then reasonably we would expect the fewer who think truth is merely model-theoretic.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I used a figure of speech called hyperbole. You pointed out repeatedly that what I said was not literally correct. I conceded that "plenty" of mathematicians disagree with what I said. Yet this is still not enough for you. — fishfry
It may have been tedious, but my entries have been responses to your continued posting on the subject. It seems odd to me that one would continue to reply, and repeat some points that are essentially the same, but then complain that responses on point to your own replies are thereby tediousness.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I used a figure of speech called hyperbole. — fishfry
I addressed the additional matter of outlandishness; I didn't thereby declare that I am forever changing any subject or not changing it.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I used a figure of speech called hyperbole. — fishfry
I'm sure the standard axiomatization of math is an overkill for that. — fishfry
You don't know at all if it's been axiomatized ? — fishfry
I don't see why this is a problem for you. You hand me a proposition, and I refuse to accept it, claiming that it is false. You say, 'but I am not claiming that it is true'. So I move to demonstrate to you why I believe it to be false. You still insist that you are not claiming it to be true, and further, that the truth or falsity of it is irrelevant to you. Well, the truth or falsity of it is not irrelevant to me, and that's why I argue it's falsity hoping that you would reply with a demonstration of its truth to back up your support of it.. — Metaphysician Undercover
If the truth or falsity of it is really irrelevant to you, then why does it bother you that I argue its falsity? — Metaphysician Undercover
And why do you claim that I cannot argue the falsity of something which has not been claimed to be true? Whether or not you claim something to be true, in no way dictates whether or not I can argue its falsity. — Metaphysician Undercover
Either you are not getting the point, or you are simply in denial. — Metaphysician Undercover
Playing chess, is a real world activity, as is any activity. Your effort to describe an activity, like the game of chess, or pure math, as independent from the real world, as if it exists in it's own separate bubble which is not part of the world, is simply a misrepresentation. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now, you admit that there actually is a pragmatic reason why the knight moves as it does, and this is to make an interesting game. — Metaphysician Undercover
And of course playing a game is a real world activity. so there is a real world reason for that rule.[/quote[
That's an equivocation of "real world." The planets move in elliptical orbits for fundamental reasons having to do with the laws of nature (stipulating for sake of argument that there are laws of nature and that Newton and Einstein are on to something real). Chess pieces are made of wood or plastic, but their movements are not subject to the laws of nature. That is, if you drop them near the earth, they fall. But their moves within the game are arbitrary conventions of humans. Surely you can do better than to argue by equivocating these two notions.
— Metaphysician Undercover
Now if you could hold true to your analogy, and admit the same thing about pure mathematics, then we'd have a starting point, of common agreement. — Metaphysician Undercover
However, the reason for mathematical principles beings as they are, such as our example of the Pythagorean theorem, is not to make an interesting game. It is for the sake of some other real world activity. Do you agree? — Metaphysician Undercover
You keep on insisting on such falsities, — Metaphysician Undercover
and I have to repeatedly point out to you that they are falsities. — Metaphysician Undercover
But you seem to have no respect for truth or falsity, — Metaphysician Undercover
as if truth and falsity doesn't matter to you. — Metaphysician Undercover
Mathematics has been created by human beings, with physical bodies, physical brains, living in the world. It has no means to escape the restrictions imposed upon it by the physical conditions of the physical body. — Metaphysician Undercover
Therefore it very truly is bound by the world. — Metaphysician Undercover
Your idea that mathematics can somehow escape the limitations imposed upon it by the world, to retreat into some imaginary world of infinite infinities, is not a case of actually escaping the bounds of the world at all, it's just imaginary. — Metaphysician Undercover
We all know that imagination cannot give us any real escape from the bounds of the world. — Metaphysician Undercover
Imagining that mathematics is not bound by the world does not make it so. Such a freedom from the bounds of the world is just an illusion. Mathematics is truly bound by the world. And when the imagination strays beyond these boundaries, it produces imaginary fictions, not mathematics. But you do not even recognize a difference between imaginary fictions, and mathematics. — Metaphysician Undercover
The reason why I can truthfully say that our discussion has never been about how math works, is that you have never given me any indication as to how it works. You keep insisting that mathematical principles are the product of some sort of imaginary pure abstraction, completely separated from the real world, like eternal Platonic Forms, then you give no indication as to how such products of pure fiction become useful in the world, i.e., how math works. — Metaphysician Undercover
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