Quantitative variables are made of numerical measurements that have meaningful units attached to them. Categorical variables take on values that are categories or labels.
I'm sure they might, but I would argue that this is an example of where the use of mathematics is harmful, when one thinks that mathematics is useful, but it is not. This person produces conclusions believed to be right, with the certitude associated with mathematics, which might actually be wrong. — Metaphysician Undercover
Why would you say this? If you saw an individual applying logic to false premises, and proceeding to act on the conclusions, wouldn't you feel obliged to inform that person that the conclusions are false? And if that person was acting immorally because the mathematics told him to, do you think that this is ok? Maybe the mathematics told him that if he robbed a bank he would have more money and more money would allow him to buy more things, and having more things would allow him to me more generous. So he thought that robbing the bank would improve his moral character. — Metaphysician Undercover
The issue though, is what would be the case if moral issues cannot be quantified in this way. If they cannot, then the person who uses mathematics in this way will inevitably go wrong. But by assuming that mathematics can be used in this way, that person will be convinced by the mathematics, that he or she is right, and will proceed to act in the wrong way, claiming to be right. So before one proceeds to use mathematics this way, one ought to demonstrate that moral issues can be quantified in this way. — Metaphysician Undercover
for instance in assigning "weights" to each "value" in a moral model; or in the collection and analysis of big data pertaining to moral behavior, norms, and intuitions. — Cabbage Farmer
Although mathematics is commonly associated with quantity, it is more broadly the application of necessary reasoning to hypothetical or ideal states of affairs. — aletheist
As such, the usefulness of its conclusions is entirely dependent on how well its initial assumptions capture the significant aspects of reality - not just the model itself, but the representational system that governs its subsequent transformations. — aletheist
It is thus highly suitable for analyzing natural phenomena, since the habits of matter are largely entrenched; but not so much for analyzing human behavior, since the habits of mind are much more malleable. — aletheist
The bank robber in your example needn't have used arithmetic to conclude that he would have more money after a successful robbery than he had before. It's his moral reasoning that is wrong, not his rough quantitative judgment. Getting hung up on the culprit's correct use of quantitative reasoning distracts from the real problem in this case. — Cabbage Farmer
Notice that in such examples, mathematics cannot determine moral models or judgments all by itself. We'd still have to rely on moral agents to supply moral values, moral intuitions, and so on. — Cabbage Farmer
Deriving conclusions from information that is already present in the premisses. Also known as deductive reasoning.What is "necessary reasoning"? — Cabbage Farmer
Arithmetic is an obvious example, such as 2+2=4.What sort of necessary reasoning is commonly associated with quantity? — Cabbage Farmer
Syllogisms are an obvious example, such as "All men are mortal, Socrates is a man, therefore Socrates is mortal."What sort of necessary reasoning is not commonly associated with quantity? — Cabbage Farmer
I am following Charles Sanders Peirce in suggesting that all necessary reasoning is fundamentally mathematical reasoning. He defined mathematics as the science of drawing necessary conclusions about ideal states of affairs by means of diagrams, which are representations that embody the significant relations among the parts of their objects.In what broad sense is mathematics "the application of necessary reasoning"? — Cabbage Farmer
We can apply reasoning to real states of affairs, but typically we do so by modeling them as ideal states of affairs. We have to identify the significant parts and relations of the actual situation and create a diagram accordingly within an appropriate representational system, whose rules govern our transformations of the diagram.Can we apply reasoning to real states of affairs, or only to hypothetical and ideal states of affairs? — Cabbage Farmer
Only to ideal states of affairs, since we can never be absolutely sure that real states of affairs are completely deterministic.Can we apply necessary reasoning to real states of affairs, or only to hypothetical and ideal states of affairs? — Cabbage Farmer
Your paraphrase seems about right.Do you mean to say ... — Cabbage Farmer
The representational system is a set of rules, such as Euclid's postulates for geometry. It is ideal because it may or may not accurately capture aspects of reality; for example, non-Euclidean geometry is more appropriate in certain cases. The model is a diagram constructed and manipulated in accordance with those rules, such as a sketch of a triangle and any auxiliary elements that must be added in order to carry out a particular proof. It is ideal because the actual drawing includes features that are irrelevant to the problem at hand, such as the thickness of the lines and their deviation from being perfectly straight.What is the difference between the "model" and the "representational system" that governs subsequent transformations of the model? How are each of these terms related to the definition of "hypothetical or ideal states of affairs"? — Cabbage Farmer
Isolating assumptions can be quite a challenge, especially for more complex situations, such as a computer model of a structure that I analyze in accordance with the principles of mechanics in order to ascertain whether all of the members and connections are adequately designed for the forces to which they might be subjected. It is the whole package that validates the conclusions - the representational system and its assumptions, the individual model and its assumptions, and their correspondence (in some sense) to the actual state of affairs. As I like to put it, engineers solve real problems by analyzing fictitious ones, which involves simulating contingent events with necessary reasoning.How do we isolate "assumptions" that guide the definition of model, representational system, and states of affairs? Is it the assumptions, or the whole package, that determines the aptness of the conclusions obtained? — Cabbage Farmer
The representational system is often grounded in past inductive investigations; i.e., science. We have learned from collective experience that making certain assumptions and applying certain rules generally produces results that are useful. Learning how to create appropriate models is part of the personal experience that is required to develop competence in a particular field, since it often involves exercising context-sensitive judgment, not just following prescriptive procedures. Again, the modeler must be able to ascertain which parts and relations within the actual situation are significant enough to warrant inclusion in the model.What role does measurement play in your account? Or more generally: How are "aspects of reality" translated into formal signs in the model, or into bits of "necessary reasoning"? — Cabbage Farmer
The behavior of matter much more closely conforms to exceptionless laws of nature than the behavior of people, even taking their habits into account. As such, necessary reasoning is much more likely to be useful and effective in modeling and predicting the behavior of material things than the behavior of intelligent and willful people, who are quite capable of deviating from their habits at any time.It's not clear how this follows from anything you've just said about "necessary reasoning". Isn't human behavior part of nature? Aren't human behaviors "natural phenomena"? — Cabbage Farmer
No, Peirce vigorously rejected both dualism and materialism/physicalism; he wrote, "The one intelligible theory of the universe is that of objective idealism, that matter is effete mind, inveterate habits becoming physical laws."Have you signed up for special troubles associated with dualism? — Cabbage Farmer
That is fine. Hopefully these additional responses have helped clarify my thoughts for you.Accordingly, I'm not sure what difference you've gestured at here, and what relevance it may have for our conversation about the uses of mathematics. — Cabbage Farmer
I'd just like to point out that math is central to everything there is. — TheMadFool
The simple reason is the ''ER'' and ''EST' words.
BettER, HeaviEST, saddER, whitER, etc.
The above words are comparison words and as such all are an attempt to quantify or in other words all want to use math (the ultimate quantifying tool).
How can we compare two or more things without quantification (use of math) knowing that quantification is necessary in that arena? — TheMadFool
Is math "central" to the Sun, or is it central to our perception of the Sun, or is it central to a scientific understanding of the Sun -- or is it merely a tool that has proven to be extremely useful in cultivating empirical knowledge of natural phenomena, including the Sun? — Cabbage Farmer
Such capacities are prior to sophisticated techniques of precise comparison, measurement, and enumeration, and are independent of the concept of number. — Cabbage Farmer
OK, his "moral reasoning" is wrong. But that's the whole point, that mathematics cannot be used for moral reasoning. The issue here is how can one use mathematics in performing moral reasoning. I think that it can't be done. — Metaphysician Undercover
And the further point is that if one does think that there is a way to use math in moral reasoning, that individual could very easily have a wrong answer — Metaphysician Undercover
(because you actually can't use mathematics in moral reasoning) — Metaphysician Undercover
and also be convinced that it is right answer because math was used. — Metaphysician Undercover
Well this is my whole point. We cannot use mathematics to make moral judgements. You seem to be arguing that we can. — Metaphysician Undercover
But now you've qualified that to say that we would have to have moral agents, to supply moral values. — Metaphysician Undercover
This implies that the moral judgement has already been made by the moral agent. — Metaphysician Undercover
So the mathematics is not going to be used to make any moral judgement, this is already supplied by the moral intuition of the moral agent. — Metaphysician Undercover
What is the mathematics to be used for then? If the moral agent supplies the moral values, then the moral questions of what is right and wrong, has already been answered, prior to applying the math. — Metaphysician Undercover
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