I'm missing your point also. What's your gripe about the innocuous Riemann sphere? :chin: — jgill
To make infinite numbers into a circle is to make a vicious circle. It is to say that the beginning is the same as the end. — Metaphysician Undercover
Again, this is the difference between fiction and fact. — Metaphysician Undercover
We can imagine infinite regress, and imagine time extending forever backward, but it isn't consistent with the empirical evidence. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's the problem with infinite regress, it's logically possible, — Metaphysician Undercover
but proven through inductive (empirical) principles (Aristotle's cosmological argument for example) to be impossible. — Metaphysician Undercover
I beg to differ. Didn't we go through this already in the Gabriel's horn thread. — Metaphysician Undercover
It seems like you haven't learned much about the way that I view these issues. — Metaphysician Undercover
You write very well, but your thinking hasn't obtained to that level. Another example of the difference between form and content. — Metaphysician Undercover
Are you denying the contradiction in what you wrote? — Metaphysician Undercover
If they are members of the same set, then there is a meaningful similarity between them. — Metaphysician Undercover
Being members of the same set constitutes a meaningful similarity. — Metaphysician Undercover
You said "the elements of a set need not be 'the same' in any meaningful way. — Metaphysician Undercover
The only thing they have in common is that they're elements of a given set." Can't you see the contradiction? — Metaphysician Undercover
If they are said to be members of the same set, then they are the same in some meaningful way. — Metaphysician Undercover
It is contradictory to say that they are members of the same set, and also say that they are not the same in any meaningful way. — Metaphysician Undercover
Another example of this same sort of contradiction is when people refer to a difference which doesn't make a difference. If you apprehend it as a difference, and speak about it as a difference, then clearly it has made a difference to you. Likewise, if you see two things as elements of the same set, then clearly you have apprehended that they are the same in some meaningful way. To apprehend them as members of the same set, yet deny that they are the same in a meaningful way, is nothing but self-deception. Your supposed set is not a set at all. You are just saying that there is such a set, when there really is no such set. You are just naming elements and saying "those are elements of the same set" when there is no such set, just some named elements. Without defining, or at least naming the set, which they are members of, there is no such set. And, naming the set which they are elements of is a designation of meaningful sameness. — Metaphysician Undercover
Here is a feature of imaginary things which you ought to learn to recognize. I discussed it briefly with Luke in the other thread. An imaginary thing (and I think you'll agree with me that sets are imaginary things, or "pure abstraction" in your terms) requires a representation, or symbol , to be acknowledged. And, for an imaginary thing, to exist requires being acknowledged. However, the symbol, or representation, is not the imaginary thing. The imaginary thing is something other than the symbols which represent it. So the imaginary thing necessarily has two distinct aspects, the representation, and the thing itself, the former is called form, the latter, content. And this is necessary of all imaginary things. — Metaphysician Undercover
The important point is that you cannot claim to remove one of these, from the imaginary thing, because both are necessary. So a purely formal system, or pure content of thought, are both impossibilities. And when you say "these things are elements of the same set", you have in a sense named that set, as the set which these things are elements of, thereby creating a meaningful similarity between them. The point being that a meaningful similarity is something which might be created, solely by the mind and that is how the imagination works in the process of creating fictions. But when something is a creation, it must be treated as a creation. — Metaphysician Undercover
Again, incoherency fishfry. Can't you see that? There is necessarily a reason why you place them in the same set, and this 'reason why' is something other than actually being in the same set. — Metaphysician Undercover
You are not acknowledging that "being gathered into a set" requires a cause, — Metaphysician Undercover
and that cause is something other than being in the same set. — Metaphysician Undercover
So the relation that the things have to one another by being in the same set is not the same as the relation they have to one another by being caused to be in the same set. — Metaphysician Undercover
And things which are in the same set necessarily have relations to each other which are other than being in the same set, because they have relations through the cause, which caused them to be in the same set. — Metaphysician Undercover
It appears like you didn't read what I said. — Metaphysician Undercover
That a word is not defined does not mean that it has no meaning. As I said, it may derive meaning from its use. If the word is used, then it has meaning. So if "set" derives it's meaning from the axioms, then there is meaning which inheres within, according to its use in the axioms. — Metaphysician Undercover
What we do not agree on is what "inherent order" means. — Metaphysician Undercover
i really do not see how you get from the premise, that "set" is not defined, but gets its meaning from its use, to the conclusion that a set might have no inherent order. In order for the word "set" to exist, it must have been used. Therefore it is impossible for "set" not to have meaning, and we might say that there is meaning (order, if order is analogous to meaning, as you seem to think), which inheres within. Wouldn't you agree with this, concerning the use of any word? If the word has been used, there is meaning which inheres within, as given by that use. And, for a word to have any existence it must have been used. — Metaphysician Undercover
It appears like you misunderstood. I didn't say every set is a number, to the contrary. I said that if we proceed under the precepts of set theory, every number is a set. — Metaphysician Undercover
Therefore we cannot say that "number" is undefined because "set" is now a defining feature of "number", just like when we say every human beings is an animal, "animal" becomes a defining feature of "human being". — Metaphysician Undercover
Didn't it strike you that I was in a very agreeable mood that day? — Metaphysician Undercover
Now I'm back to my old self, pointing out your contradiction in saying that things could be in the same set without having any meaningful relation to each other, other than being in the same set. You just do not seem to understand that things don't just magically get into the same set. There is a reason why they are in the same set. — Metaphysician Undercover
Maybe at some point we'll discuss the supposed empty set. How do you suppose that nothing could get into a set? — Metaphysician Undercover
Actually I do not agree with general relativity, so I would ban that first. — Metaphysician Undercover
You keep saying things like this, the Pythagorean theorem is not true, now Euclidian geometry in general is not true. I suppose pi is not true for you either? Until you provide some evidence or at least an argument, these are just baseless assertions. — Metaphysician Undercover
On what basis do you say they are a unity then? [/url}
The axiom of powersets.
— Metaphysician Undercover
You have a random group of natural numbers. Saying that they are a unity does not make them a unity. — Metaphysician Undercover
So saying that they are a "set" does not make them a unity. This is where you need a definition of "set" which would make a set a unity. — Metaphysician Undercover
Then you have no basis to your claim that a set is a unity. — Metaphysician Undercover
And you cannot treat a set as a unified whole. If a set is supposed to be a unified whole, then you cannot claim that "set" is not defined. — Metaphysician Undercover
I do reject fractions, — Metaphysician Undercover
df: k is ord-less-than j <-> k e j — TonesInDeepFreeze
Df. If x and y are ordinals, then x precedes y (x is less than y) iff x is an element of y. — TonesInDeepFreeze
So it seems to me a number is a "unity" — Gregory
and a set is not a noun but more like a verb. It's our action of containing a unity or many unities or unities and containers (verbs). — Gregory
I've been considering the "set of all sets that do not contain themselves" vs the "set of all sets the do contain themselves". — Gregory
This leads to what I see as Hilbert's position (contra Frege) of our rational power of humans to think of thinking of thinking of thinking and on to infinity. The set\verb would take precedence over the unity\number we place before our eyes as an object. — Gregory
It upsets some people (Frega, Meta) that mathematical axioms don't necessarily "mean" anything or "refer" to anything. — fishfry
And it should do, for classical set theory and real analysis are misleading and unrepresentative nonsense, unless cut down to the computationally meaningful content. — sime
Students who are taught those subjects aren't normally given the proviso that every result appealing to the axiom of choice is nonsensical, question-begging and of use only to pure mathematicians and historians. — sime
But we're not talking "fact," if by that you mean the real world. The subject was set theory, which is an artificial formal theory. Set theory is not any part of any physical theory. I pointed out to you that in set theory, everything is a set, including the elements of sets. You responded by saying you hadn't realized that. I thought we were therefore making progress: You acknowledged learning something you hadn't known before. And now you want to revert back to "fact," as if set theory has an ontological burden. It does not. — fishfry
Focus. You said that the fact that in set theory everything is a set, leads to infinite regress. I pointed out that the negative integers are an example of an unproblematic negative regress; and that the axiom of foundation rules out infinite regresses of set membership. — fishfry
Yes, that didn't last long. But you were more than agreeable the other day. You actually achieved some insight. You realized that a set has no definition, and that its meaning is derived from the axioms. You realized that the members of sets are also sets. — fishfry
So "2" cannot refer to two distinct but same things? — Luke
You cannot have 2 apples or 2 iPhones, etc? — Luke
The categories we use are either discovered or man-made. If they are discovered, then how can we be "wrong in an earlier judgement" about them; why are there borderline cases in classification; and why does nothing guarantee their perpetuity as categories? — Luke
Peano’s axioms for arithmetic, e.g., yield an infinite regress. We are told that zero is a natural number, that every natural number has a natural number as a successor, that zero is not the successor of any natural number, and that if x and y are natural numbers with the same successor, then x = y. This yields an infinite regress. Zero has a successor. It cannot be zero, since zero is not any natural number’s successor, so it must be a new natural number: one. One must have a successor. It cannot be zero, as before, nor can it be one itself, since then zero and one would have the same successor and hence be identical, and we have already said they must be distinct. So there must be a new natural number that is the successor of one: two. Two must have a successor: three. And so on … And this infinite regress entails that there are infinitely many things of a certain kind: natural numbers. But few have found this worrying. After all, there is no independent reason to think that the domain of natural numbers is finite—quite the opposite. — Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
I'm not reverting back. Just because I understand better what I didn't understand as well before, doesn't mean that I am now bound to accept the principles which I now better understand. — Metaphysician Undercover
I suggest you look into the concept of infinite regress. The negative numbers are not an example of infinite regress. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, you said "set" has no definition, as a general term, and I went along with that. But I spent a long time explaining to you how a set must have some sort of definition to exist as a set. — Metaphysician Undercover
You seem to be ignoring what I wrote. — Metaphysician Undercover
Since you haven't seriously addressed the points I made, — Metaphysician Undercover
and you claim not to be interested, — Metaphysician Undercover
I won't continue. — Metaphysician Undercover
Thanks for sharing your wisdom on these types of threads — Gregory
I looked at the SEP article. That is utterly bizarre. An infinite regress goes backward without a beginning. — fishfry
I looked at the SEP article. That is utterly bizarre. An infinite regress goes backward without a beginning. Going forward without end like the Peano axioms is not an infinite regress. — fishfry
I agree. It's nonsense. Regress means going backward. I am more than familiar with these notions, as I investigate dynamical processes going forward as well as those going backward. — jgill
But MOST sets can't possibly have specifications, because there are more sets than specifications, a point I've made several times and that you prefer not to engage with. There are uncountably many sets and only countably many specifications. There simply aren't enough specifications to specify all the sets that there are. Most sets are simply collections of elements unrelated by any articulable property other than being collected into that set. — fishfry
I won't continue — Metaphysician Undercover
Another example of the division between mathematics and philosophy. But the Wikipedia entry is consistent with the SEP.. You two just seem to twist around the concept, to portray infinite regress as a process that has an end, but without a start, when in reality the infinite regress is a logical process with a start, without an end. — Metaphysician Undercover
Perhaps it is the idea of "forward" and "backward" which is confusing you. There is no forward and backward in logic, only one direction of procedure because to go backward may result in affirming the consequent which is illogical. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is what I've argued is incoherent, the assumption of an unspecified set, and you've done nothing to justify your claim that such a thing is coherent. I will not ask you to show me an unspecified set, because that would require that you specify it, making such a thing impossible for you. So I'll ask you in another way. — Metaphysician Undercover
We agree that a set is an imaginary thing. But I think that to imagine something requires it do be specified in some way. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's the point I made with the distinction between the symbol, and the imaginary thing represented or 'specified' by the symbol. The symbol, or in the most basic form, an image, is a necessary requirement for an imaginary thing. Even within one's own mind, there is an image or symbol which is required as a representation of any imaginary thing. The thing imagined is known to be something other than the symbol which represents it. So, how do you propose that an imaginary thing (like a set), can exist without having a symbol which represents it, thereby specifying it in some way? Even to say "there are sets which are unspecified" is to specify them as the sets which are unspecified. Then what would support the designation of unspecified "sets" in plural? if all such sets are specified as "the unspecified", what distinguishes one from another as distinct sets? Haven't you actually just designated one set as "the unspecified sets"? — Metaphysician Undercover
Footnote 1 of the SEP article says: "Talk of ‘first’ and ‘last’ members here is just a matter of convention. We could just as well have said that an infinite regress is a series of appropriately related elements with a last member but no first member, where each element relies upon or is generated from the previous in some sense. What direction we see the regress going in does not signify anything important." — TonesInDeepFreeze
So ∼∼ partitions the real numbers into a collection of pairwise disjoint subsets, called equivalence classes, such that every real number is in exactly one subset. By the axiom of choice there exists a set, generally called VV in honor of Giuseppe Vitali, who discovered it, such that VV contains exactly one member, or representative, of each equivalence class. — fishfry
You're wrong. I just demonstrated a specific example, one that is not only famous in theoretical mathematics, but that is also important in every field that depends on infinitary probability theory such as statistics, actuarial science, and data science.
I know you have an intuition. Your intuition is wrong. One of the things studying math does, is refine your intuitions. — fishfry
You can tell me NOTHING about the elements of VV. Given a particular real number like 1/2 or pi, you can't tell me whether that number is in VV or not. The ONLY thing you know for sure is that if 1/2 is in VV, then no other rational number can be in VV. Other than that, you know nothing about the elements of VV, nor do those elements have anything at all in common, other than their membership in VV. — fishfry
Still Metaphysician Undercover must also agree that when he says that @jgill and I have infinite regress wrong, he's incorrect about that too. If both interpretations are the same, everyone's right. — fishfry
You are specifying "the real numbers". How is this not a specification? — Metaphysician Undercover
Actually, you're wrong, your set is clearly a specified set. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is not true, you have already said something else about the set, the elements are real numbers. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'll agree with Tones, the two ways are just different ways of looking at the same thing. That's why I said the Wikipedia article is consistent with the SEP. I do believe there are metaphysical consequences though, which result from the different ways, or perhaps they are not consequences, but the metaphysical cause of the difference in ways. The principal consequence, or cause (whichever it may be), is the way that we view the ontological status of contingency. — Metaphysician Undercover
Perhaps it is the idea of "forward" and "backward" which is confusing you. There is no forward and backward in logic, only one direction of procedure because to go backward may result in affirming the consequent which is illogical. — Metaphysician Undercover
I still don't see your point, or the relevance. — Metaphysician Undercover
I still don't see your point, or the relevance.
— Metaphysician Undercover
The point is that basing your mathematical "principles" on empiricism or reality demonstrably leads to absurdity, including your rejection of fractions, negative numbers, imaginary numbers, infinity, circles, probabilities, possible set orderings, and potentially all mathematics. Instead of coming to realise that this indicates a serious problem with your principles and position, you continue in your delusion that you possess a superior understanding of mathematics. — Luke
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