Regarding our deplorable school curriculum - missing logic, missing critical thinking, missing ethics, missing philosophy, and more missing items - it's unclear as to whether this is malice aforethought (the state wants to control us by crippling our minds) or an honest mistake (the system we live in is such that critical thinking isn't necessary, ergo an added burden, to make a living). — Agent Smith
Children, some adults tell me, ask tough & interesting (philosophically) questions. They have this quizz phase in their lives during which parents & elder siblings are bombarded with questions of all and sundry kinds. Perhaps philosophers (re their obsession with questions and answering them) "suffer", in that sense and to that extent, from Peter Pan syndrome (a child trapped in a man's body). — Agent Smith
A point of clarification: Social harmony (sometimes) comes at the cost of individual happiness (utilitarianism in the dock). — Agent Smith
Then there's the Sawyer family problem (Texas Chainsaw Massacre) - a group of sadists might find torturing/killing/cannibalizing other people improves/enhances peace amongst themselves. — Agent Smith
In that case (if you agree with what I said) ethics can't be about its function in our lives i.e. it isn't a tool per se, like a knife whose design can be worked on over time to improve performance. — Agent Smith
Perhaps we're being held back by old ideas (in re ethics) that though invented for a social purpose, now appear not to be so - forgotten knowledge/wisdom? — Agent Smith
What of the argument that ethics presupposes morality? — Mww
And if that is the case, might ethics indeed be an artifact of moral theory? — Mww
yes, Ethics presupposes morailty. — Garrett Travers
Cool. But then, if ethics presupposes morality, then ethics is necessarily conditioned by it, which may not be sufficient to consider ethics an artifact, per se, but ethics in general remains a consequence of morality in principle, I would think. — Mww
As long as morality comes first; all else is social anthropology or empirical psychology, neither of which interests me personally. — Mww
He's claiming that consciousness has the power to detect reality, not that reality is made of math. It's time to put this to bed — Garrett Travers
Is the math in the detector or in the reality being detected? If the world is is such that our mathematical concepts fit it so well, then we could say that math is platonic in that we are equipped in Kantian fashion with categories that order nature mathematically. In such a view, we don’t have direct access to nature as the thing in itself, and so can’t claim that nature itself has such characteristics. Alternately, we could argue that the math isnt just in our categories but really is a property out there in the world. This is a different understanding of Platonism, placing the forms not in our heads but out there. — Joshs
Scientists have long used mathematics to describe the physical properties of the universe. But what if the universe itself is math? That's what cosmologist Max Tegmark believes. — Joshs
If my idea is wrong, physics is ultimately doomed, — Joshs
The notion of mathematical truth goes beyond the whole concept of formalism. There is something absolute and "God-given' about mathematical truth. This is what mathematical Platonism, as discussed at the end of the last chapter, is about. Any particular formal system has a provisional and 'man-made' quality about it. Such systems indeed have very valuable roles to play in mathematical discussions, but they can supply only a partial (or approximate) guide to truth. Real mathematical truth goes beyond mere manmade constructions — Joshs
elaborate on this last point about anthro and psych. — Garrett Travers
those investigate humanity and its behaviors generally, albeit under empirical conditions, without due regard for man’s intrinsic metaphysical nature. — Mww
An Alaskan Inuit elder, back in The Day, when I commented how cool it was that they used snowmobiles instead of dog sleds......in giving me a glance reserved for young, white, practically useless cheechakos said, we love our things so much we are forgetting ourselves. — Mww
As an aside, it is contradictory to say that which presupposes is the conditioned. Something you might wish to reconsider. — Mww
Penrose here is not saying that math exists in the universe, but that the truth that can be gleaned from the universe through the implementation of mathematics goes well beyond the confines of what we that it could be used for. Math is more a langauge for reality, rather than reality itself. — Garrett Travers
This ideal world was regarded as distinct and more perfect than the material world of our external experiences, but just as real — Joshs
This has gotten to the point where this topic has been completely derailed by an insistence on asserting that math is an objective fact of the universe, when we all know, and all scientists know, that it isn't. And Penrose is not claiming that it is. — Garrett Travers
Boy, you do a lot of whining. — Joshs
I am not a mathematical platonist, but Penrose is. — Joshs
There are mathematical objects.
Mathematical objects are abstract.
Mathematical objects are independent of intelligent agents and their language, thought, and practices. — Joshs
Mathematical objects are independent of intelligent agents and their langauge, thought, and practices... in the Platonic Realm of the Forms....Which doesn't exist. Even from Penrose's own view, his concept of the material world of mathematics is in that of the Forms, not in this material universe. Do you understand now? — Garrett Travers
I understand that you have an intense need to reduce complexities and ambiguities in ideas to caricatures. Perhaps philosophy isn’t a good match for you. — Joshs
Platonism must be distinguished from the view of the historical Plato. — Joshs
Just as electrons and planets exist independently of us, so do numbers and sets. — Joshs
And just as statements about electrons and planets are made true or false by the objects with which they are concerned and these objects’ perfectly objective properties — Joshs
To place this sentence: "Perhaps philosophy isn’t a good match for you."
In the same statement as this sentence: "In short, mathematical objects are just as “real” as ordinary physical objects."
Is the kind of irony even numbers cannot be used to quantify. Which, judging from your strange, implacable commitment to pseudo-science - which Mathematical Platonism is by definition - qualifies it as just as "real" as ordinary physical objects. — Garrett Travers
So, if you don't agree with this view, and you know I said no scientist abides by it, and you've been arguing for it anyway, even though we were talking about the nature of ethics, then I'm gonna need to know why you've been wasting time on this absolute quackery instead of addressing what was the topic of this forum — Garrett Travers
Mathematical platonism isn’t supposed to be science. It’s metaphysics. You may not agree with this particular kind of metaphysical position, but the nature of metaphysics is that such that it stands as the ground and condition of possibility of scientific thought. Therefore it is not amenable to validation or falsification through empirical investigation, but only through philosophical argument. — Joshs
You may not agree with this particular kind of metaphysical position, but the nature of metaphysics is that such that it stands as the ground and condition of possibility of scientific thought. — Joshs
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