I don't know what hyperbole you have in mind. Maybe 'nobody'. Because you seemed adamant with all-caps, and, as I recall, three variations of 'no', I didn't know it was hyperbole. So I merely replied to it at face value. Of course I would not have begrudged you then declaring it was only hyperbole. But still, I don't think what was hyperbolized was correct, even if given non-hyperbolized restatement. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Anyway, your response again misses my point. My point that you just quoted is not to take issue with your hyperbole, but rather to point out how your more recent argument goes wrong. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Okay, but my point quoted above was not about that. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Do you mean the hyperboles "blow up the moon" and "AIDS denier"? — TonesInDeepFreeze
If so, that's fine that you say now it was hyperbole. But I did take your comments at least to be a claim that a view that mathematical truth is not confined to model-theoretical is on its face preposterous even outlandish. I said that a lot of mathematicians don't view truth as merely model-theoretic, and you replied to the effect that there are intellectually talented people who believe a number of crazy things. It is reasonable for me to say that believing that truth is not merely model theoretic is not that kind of crazy, if it is even crazy at all. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Some set theorists have pointed how we can reduce some axiomatic assumptions and still get the mathematics for the sciences. And even if ZFC is too productive, that doesn't refute that a good part of the interest in the axiom of infinity is to axiomatize (even if too productively) the mathematics for the sciences. — TonesInDeepFreeze
No, not that I don't at all know. Rather, I don't know that it hasn't been axiomatized at all (i.e. hasn't been axiomatized to any extent whatsoever or with no progress toward axiomatizing it). That was in response to what you wrote, "Physics has not been axiomatized at all." — TonesInDeepFreeze
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. Therefore it very truly is bound by the world. 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. We all know that imagination cannot give us any real escape from the bounds of the world. 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. — Metaphysician Undercover
You would not have begrudged me then, but you will begrudge the living bejeebus out of me now? — fishfry
Does the phrase, "Give it a rest," have any resonance with you? — fishfry
I don't remember making any recent argument with you other than that it's pointless to argue about how many mathematicians believe this or that — fishfry
I may be lost by now. I have no idea what we're discussing. — 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. — fishfry
Do you mean the hyperboles "blow up the moon" and "AIDS denier"?
— TonesInDeepFreeze
No, those are literal facts of record. I supplied the relevant Wiki links. — 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
No, not that I don't at all know. Rather, I don't know that it hasn't been axiomatized at all (i.e. hasn't been axiomatized to any extent whatsoever or with no progress toward axiomatizing it). That was in response to what you wrote, "Physics has not been axiomatized at all."
— TonesInDeepFreeze
LOL. You said, "I don't know that it hasn't been axiomatized AT ALL," your caps. Which could mean:
a) You don't know AT ALL if it hasn't been axiomatized; or
b) You don't know if it's been axiomatized AT ALL, as opposed to in its entirety. — fishfry
I pointed out that parts of science have been very nicely axiomatized, such as Newtonian gravity. That would be an agreement with (b). Whereas (a) refers to the state of your knowledge. — 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. They can't even reconcile quantum mechanics and relativity. And the idea that set theory could ever be a foundation for physics seems to me to be an unlikely stretch. But at least that is an interesting and substantive topic in the philosophy of math and science. — fishfry
The axiom of infinity is in contradiction with known physics — fishfry
I supplied the relevant Wiki links. — fishfry
Scenario A (This universe): — TheMadFool
nite set of particles or that physical space extends infinitely outward or whatever.I don't know that. The axiom of infinity says there is an inductive set and, with other axioms, entails that there is an infinite set. Set theory doesn't say that there is an infi — TonesInDeepFreeze
Also, is it definitively established that there are not infinitely many particles or that space does not extend infinitely outward? — TonesInDeepFreeze
No. I did not begrudge you hyperbole. Rather, (1) I explained why previously it was not unreasonable for me not to infer that you were writing hyperbolically, and (2) That even factoring for hyperbole, I disagreed with the non-hyperbolic claim behind the hyperbole. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I don't see that when you continue to reply, with both repeated points and arguments and new points and arguments that I should then not also reply. — TonesInDeepFreeze
If an inductive set that's not physical "exists," what does that mean to you? — fishfry
If you play Platonist — fishfry
But you're the one claiming that an inductive set "exists," — fishfry
"I explained why previously it was not unreasonable for me not to infer that you were writing hyperbolically" broke my parser. And that hurts! — fishfry
If I say I am not replying, that would constitute a reply. — fishfry
inane self-referential conversation — fishfry
When you something substantive, as opposed to looping back on the syntax of whatever I may have said — fishfry
when we got into the second half of Halmos Naive Set Theory most of us lost interest. — jgill
Sure the pieces are made of atoms, but there is no fundamental physical reason why the knight moves that way. — fishfry
That math is inspired by the world and not bound by it? To me this is a banality, not a falsehood. It's true, but so trivial as to be beneath mention to anyone who's studied mathematics or mathematical philosophy. — fishfry
But it's still a formal game. — fishfry
That's an interesting point. Yet you can see the difference between representational art, which strives to be "true," and abstract art, which is inspired by but not bound by the real world. Or as they told us when I took a film class once, "Film frees us from the limitations of time and space." A movie is inspired by but not bound by reality. Star Wars isn't real, but the celluloid film stock (or whatever they use these days) is made of atoms. Right? Right. — fishfry
I recognize the difference between pure and applied mathematics. And you seem to reject fiction, science fiction, surrealist poetry, modern art, and unicorns. Me I like unicorns. They are inspired by the world but not bound by it. I like infinitary mathematics, for exactly the same reason. Perhaps you should read my recent essay here on the transfinite ordinals. It will give you much fuel for righteous rage. But I didn't invent any of it, Cantor did, and mathematicians have been pursuing the theory ever since then right up to the present moment. Perhaps you could take it up with them. — fishfry
The concept of infinite infinities is already part of mathematics today. Therefore, in your dubious distinction between mathematics and “imaginary fictions”, your placement of infinite infinities on the side of "imaginary fictions" makes no sense; infinite infinities is already on the side of mathematics. Your attempted stipulations to the contrary are pointless. — Luke
I don't know anything about physics. Nothing I've said here pertains to the physical universe.
— fishfry
2. If infinite energy is applied on an object, that object will attain light speed.
But I do make it a point to go into discussion threads about business and economics and make my boredom with the subject well known. — TonesInDeepFreeze
jgill posted a while back about the tiny percentage of overall math papers that are devoted to set theory. Few working mathematicians give any of these matters the slightest thought. — fishfry
I'm not claiming any particular sense of existence. Nor am I disputing any particular sense of existence. In context of the question whether set theory is inconsistent with physics, I am interested in the context of formal axiomatization (I'll just say 'axiomatization'). In Z we have the theorem: Ex x is infinite. I would think that that would provide an inconsistent axiomatization T of mathematics/physics only if T has a theorem: ~Ex x is infinite. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I claim that set theory has a theorem: Ex x is an inductive set. I don't opine as to what particular sense we should say that provides. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I do tend to think that whatever that sense is, it is at least some abstract mathematical sense. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And I appreciate that there are variations held by different people. I can "picture" in my mind certain notions such as "the least inductive set is an abstract mathematical object that I can hold in my mind as "picked out" by the predicate of being a least inductive set". I find it to be a coherent thought for myself. But I don't have any need to convince anyone else that such a view of mathematical existence should be be generally adopted or even considered coherent by others. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Then your parser is weak handling double negation. I chose double negation because it best suits the flow of how I think about the proposition. With less negation: I explained why previously that it was reasonable for me not to infer that you were writing hyperbolically. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Just to be clear, my replies were not merely to you saying that you are not replying. — TonesInDeepFreeze
My part is not inane. And whether or not you think that conversation about conversation should be eschewed, I don't think that way. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I did not merely "loop back on the syntax of whatever you may have said". It's interesting that you want an end to posting about the conversational roles themselves, but you want to do that while still getting in your own digs such as "inane" and dismissive mischaracterization such as "looping back on the syntax". — TonesInDeepFreeze
No. I did not begrudge you hyperbole. Rather, (1) I explained why previously it was not unreasonable for me not to infer that you were writing hyperbolically, and (2) That even factoring for hyperbole, I disagreed with the non-hyperbolic claim behind the hyperbole. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I don't see that when you continue to reply, with both repeated points and arguments and new points and arguments that I should then not also reply. — TonesInDeepFreeze
My argument is that such things are wrongly called mathematics, due to faulty conventions which allow imaginary fictions, cleverly disguised to appear as mathematical principles, to seep into mathematics, taking the place of mathematical principles. And obviously, it's not a stipulation but an argument, as I've spent months arguing through examples. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes there is a physical reason for this. The pieces cannot be floating in air, nor can they randomly disappear and reappear in other places, nor be in two places at once. There are real physical restrictions which had to be respected when the game was created. So a board and pieces, with specific moves which are physically possible, was a convenient format considering those restrictions. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is the problem with your claim that mathematics is not bound by real world restrictions. You can assert that it is not, and you can create completely imaginary axioms, such as a thing with no inherent order, but when it comes to real world play (use of such mathematics) if these axioms contain physical impossibilities, it's likely to create problems in application. — Metaphysician Undercover
The creator of chess could have made a rule which allowed that the knight be on two squares at once. or that it might hover around the board. But then how could the game be played when the designated moves of the pieces is inconsistent with what is physically possible for those pieces? — Metaphysician Undercover
I have full respect for the notion that mathematical axioms might be completely imaginary, like works of art, even fictional, — Metaphysician Undercover
but my argument is that such axioms would be inherently problematic when applied in real world play. — Metaphysician Undercover
You seem to think that it doesn't matter if mathematical axioms go beyond what is physically possible, and it's even okay to assume what is physically impossible like "no inherent order". — Metaphysician Undercover
And you support this claim with evidence that mathematics provides great effectiveness in real world applications. — Metaphysician Undercover
But you refuse to consider the real problems in real world applications (though you accept that modern physics has real problems), and you refuse to separate the problems from the effectiveness, to see that effectiveness is provided for by principles which are consistent with physical reality, and problems are provided for by principles which are inconsistent. — Metaphysician Undercover
I've explained to you very clearly why it is false to say that mathematics is not bound by the real world. — Metaphysician Undercover
Perhaps if you would drop the idea that it is a banality, you would look seriously at what I have said, and come to the realization that what you have taken for a banal truth, and therefore have never given it any thought, is actually a falsity. — Metaphysician Undercover
I've gone through this subject of formalism already. No formalism, or "formal game", of human creation can escape from content to be pure Form. — Metaphysician Undercover
You seem to be having a very hard time to grasp this, and this is why you keep on insisting that there's such a thing as "pure abstraction". — Metaphysician Undercover
Content, or in the Aristotelian term "matter" is what is forcing real world restrictions onto any formal system. — Metaphysician Undercover
So when a formal system is created with the intent of giving us as much certainty as possible, we cannot escape the uncertainty produced by the presence of content, which is the real world restriction on certainty, that inheres within any formal system. — Metaphysician Undercover
Let's take this analogy then. Will you oblige me please to see it through to the conclusion? — Metaphysician Undercover
Let's say that abstract art is analogous to pure, abstract mathematics, and representational art is analogous to practical math. — Metaphysician Undercover
Would you agree that if someone went to a piece of abstract art, and started talking about what was represented by that art, the person would necessarily be mistaken? — Metaphysician Undercover
Likewise, if someone took a piece of pure abstract mathematics, and tried to put it to practice, this would be a mistake. — Metaphysician Undercover
Bear in mind, that I am not arguing that what we commonly call pure math, ought not be put to practice, — Metaphysician Undercover
I am arguing that pure math as you characterize it, as pure abstraction, is a false description. — Metaphysician Undercover
In other words, your analogy fails, just like the game analogy failed, the distinction between pure math and practical math is not like the distinction between abstract art and representational art. — Metaphysician Undercover
I do not reject fiction, I accept it for what it is, fiction. I do reject your claim that pure mathematics is analogous to fiction. Here is the difference. In fiction, the mind is free to cross all boundaries of all disciplines and fields of education. In pure mathematics, the mathematician is bound by fundamental principles, which are the criteria for "mathematics", and if these boundaries are broken it is not mathematics which the person is doing. — Metaphysician Undercover
And, these boundaries are not dreamt up and imposed by the imagination of the mathematician who is doing the pure mathematics, they are imposed by the real world, (what other people say about what the person is doing), which is external to the pure mathematician's mind. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is why it is false to say that pure mathematics is not bound by the real world. If the person engaged in such abstraction, allows one's mind to wander too far, the creation will not be judged by others (the real world) as "mathematics". Therefore if the person wanders outside the boundaries which the real world places on pure mathematics, the person is no longer doing mathematics. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm not claiming any particular sense of existence. Nor am I disputing any particular sense of existence. In context of the question whether set theory is inconsistent with physics, I am interested in the context of formal axiomatization (I'll just say 'axiomatization'). In Z we have the theorem: Ex x is infinite. I would think that that would provide an inconsistent axiomatization T of mathematics/physics only if T has a theorem: ~Ex x is infinite.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Of course that is vacuously true, since there is no axiomatic formulation of physics. — fishfry
The axiom of infinity is inconsistent with known physics since there is no principle of modern physics that stipulates the existence of any infinite set, — fishfry
contemporary physics can not accept the axiom of infinity as a physical principle. — fishfry
I claim that set theory has a theorem: Ex x is an inductive set. I don't opine as to what particular sense we should say that provides.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Why not? — fishfry
why not say something like, "The axiom of infinity is a formal statement that, as far as we know, is false about the world, yet taken as a fundamental truth in mathematics. And I account for that philosophically as follows: _______." — fishfry
Ducking the question doesn't help. — fishfry
The axiom of infinity is taken as true in "some abstract mathematical sense." My point exactly, on which we are now in agreement. There are models of set theory in which it's true; at least if there are any models at all. — fishfry
You've come to be in agreement with me. The only way the axiom of infinity can possibly be accepted as true or meaningful is in the context of purely abstract math — fishfry
and NOT physics — fishfry
There are different formulations that may have equivalences, and there are complications throughout, but I know of no proof nor mention in the article you cited that shows the equivalence of AC with LEM in intuitionistic set theory. The SEP article does say "each of a number of intuitionistically invalid logical principles, including the law of excluded middle, is equivalent (in intuitionistic set theory) to a suitably weakened [italics in Bell's earlier article] version of the axiom of choice. Accordingly these logical principles may be viewed as choice principles." But the question was not that of various choice principles but of AC itself, and we have not been shown a proof that AC and LEM are equivalent in intuitionistic set theory. — TonesInDeepFreeze
For this reason, in conjunction with the rapid ascent of automated theorem proving and functional programming that are based on type theory, the awkward, misleading and practically false language of real analysis can only die fast. — sime
Has an actual, real live physicist posted on this thread? There have been a lot of assumptions about physics, interesting opinions, but I wonder what people in the profession have to say about the number systems they employ. fishfry provided a link to a novel paper on constructivism in physics that shows there is some degree of interest in the subject in the physics community. Kenosha Kid is a quantum researcher. :chin: — jgill
Some aspects of mathematics is so obviously fictional that it is UNREASONABLE that math should be so effective in the physical sciences. — fishfry
If you drop a set near the earth, it doesn't fall down. Sets have no gravitational or inertial mass. They have no electric charge. They have no temperature, velocity, momentum, or orientation. In what sense are sets bound by the real world? — fishfry
except that -- stretching a point -- mathematical objects are products of the human mind and the human mind is bound by the laws of nature. So perhaps ultimately there's a physical reason why we think the thoughts we do. I'd agree with that possibility, if that's the point you're making. — fishfry
In math, violating the "fundamental principles" is how progress is made. — fishfry
I've just shown that some of the greatest advances in math have been made by blowing up the opinions of the world. What happens is that the opinions of the mathematical world change. Or as Planck said, scientific progress proceeds one funeral at a time. Meaning that the old guard die off and the young Turks readily adopt the radical new ideas. — fishfry
In terms of recursion theory, Bridgman’s claim can be re-interpreted such that no diverging algorithm should be allowed as legal input of any other (terminating) algorithm.One may go even further than Bridgman and assume that, since infinite entities are not operational, infinities have to be abandoned altogether.
Here's a short excerpt from the first that is germane: " In terms of recursion theory, Bridgman’s claim can be re-interpreted such that no diverging algorithm should be allowed as legal input of any other (terminating) algorithm.One may go even further than Bridgman and assume that, since infinite entities are not operational, infinities have to be abandoned altogether." — jgill
And contrariwise in other articles. I'm sure you wouldn't want to cherry pick just gainsaying quotes — TonesInDeepFreeze
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.