They don't.So he should believe the symptoms you make up. — Banno
I don't know enough about this stuff to point to examples, but Turing's general point that allowing contradictions can be dangerous is almost certainly correct, precisely because of the emergence of computers. — Srap Tasmaner
The idea that engineering calculations would somehow remain unaffected is like saying: the logical foundations of mathematics are purely decorative, pure aesthetics, they do not actually matter at all when doing actual mathematics. They can be self-contradictory all you like, just like a poem can. — Olivier5
Foundations of mathematics is nearly a separate field of study, and unnecessary for the doing of mathematics. — Srap Tasmaner
I think the liar paradox meets mathematics at division by zero. If "I am lying" creates a paradox, then what about (a^2-b^2)/(a-b)=a+b? That "sentence" is true except when a=b, in which case we are purporting to divide by zero, which we cannot do, because no such operation is defined in mathematics. Thus, where a=b, the purported division does not "fail" or "create a paradox." It is gibberish. — Remarkl
On the one hand, I think I agree with Turing about contradictions mattering, but on the other hand it does seem clear to me that practice and intuition is the foundation of theory not the other way around, and you don't really need the theory, even when it comes to mathematics, insofar as foundations counts as the theory, to practice. — Srap Tasmaner
↪Olivier5
Allowing contradictions in how you do calculus would cause all modern bridges to fall down. Does that matter? Is it different from the point about foundations? — Srap Tasmaner
Instantaneous velocity means what, precisely? — Ennui Elucidator
Do I have to be able to answer that question to build bridges? — Srap Tasmaner
As Berkeley puts it (making adjustments for the given example),1
Hitherto I have supposed that [t] flows, that [t] hath a real increment, that o is something. And I have proceeded all along on that supposition, without which I should not have been able to have made so much as one single step. From that supposition it is that I get at the increment of [5t2], that I am able to compare it with the increment of [t], and that I find the proportion between the two increments. I now beg leave to make a new supposition contrary to the first, i.e. I will suppose that there is no increment of [t], or that o is nothing; which second supposition destroys my first, and is inconsistent with it, and therefore with every thing that supposeth it. I do nevertheless beg leave to retain [10t], which is an expression obtained in virtue of my first supposition, which necessarily presupposeth such supposition, and which could not be obtained without it: All which seems a most inconsistent way of arguing... (The Analyst, §XIV)
Well, it is just amusing you picked calculus as the place for no contradictions. Perhaps I misread you. — Ennui Elucidator
Allowing contradictions in how you do calculus would cause all modern bridges to fall down. Does that matter? Is it different from the point about foundations? — Srap Tasmaner
So, could the liar paradox cause a bridge to collapse?
— Banno
On balance, I think the answer might be yes.
The real harm will not come in unless there is an application, in which a bridge may fall down or something of that sort [] You cannot be confident about applying your calculus until you know that there are no hidden contradictions in it.
— Turing
And it's yes in part because of Turing. Nowadays engineers will to some degree rely on software to design bridges. It is fact that software complexity has created enormous challenges, and that it is not nearly so simple to verify correctness as one might wish. (In some fields like aircraft design there are strict, explicit standards for the provable correctness of programs, and still ... 737.) — Srap Tasmaner
There is so much complexity I find it hard to believe that a little meaningless self-reference of the kinds we are talking about will gum up the cogs in the machinery. — T Clark
Wittgenstein made the point in Philosophical Remarks (IIRC), that whilst such inconsistencies would lead to physically untrue predictions if applied blindly, there is no reason why the occurrence of such events would discredit uses of the system for which inconsistency plays no role. And since it is impossible to predict the existence of mathematical inconsistency before it arises (due to the the second incompleteness theorem), there is no reason to fret about the possibility a priori. We only need to patch our systems as we go. — sime
Why yes. What's in our mind at some point translates into real material structures like bridges, that are designed by someone using mathematics. If you allow contradictions to spread uncheck in engineers' minds and in their math, you may well end up with poorly conceived bridges. — Olivier5
Maths is made up. — Banno
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