Why should anyone take this hypothesis serious, and ontologize such an abstract cow, anyway...? — jorndoe
By a semi-idealist reasoning, there's an "abstract cow" that somehow exists "objectively" and independently of all else, sort of in it's own ("timeless") realm of reified abstracts.
(I'm just using the term "semi-idealist" a bit broadly here; you get the gist.) — jorndoe
Gödel was a mathematical realist, a Platonist. He believed that what makes mathematics true is that it's descriptive—not of empirical reality, of course, but of an abstract reality. Mathematical intuition is something analogous to a kind of sense perception. In his essay "What Is Cantor's Continuum Hypothesis?", Gödel wrote that we're not seeing things that just happen to be true, we're seeing things that must be true. The world of abstract entities is a necessary world—that's why we can deduce our descriptions of it through pure reason.
....Platonism was an unpopular position in his day. Most mathematicians, such as David Hilbert, the towering figure of the previous generation of mathematicians, and still alive when Gödel was a young man, were formalists. To say that something is mathematically true is to say that it's provable in a formal system. Hilbert's Program was to formalize all branches of mathematics. Hilbert himself had already formalized geometry, contingent on arithmetic's being formalized. And what Gödel's famous proof shows is that arithmetic can't be formalized. Any formal system of arithmetic is either going to be inconsistent or incomplete.
...Gödel made it harder not to be a Platonist. He proved that there are true but unprovable propositions of arithmetic. That sounds at least close to Platonism. That sounds close to the claim that arithmetical truths are independent of any human activity. Philosophers of mathematics can certainly avoid the Platonist conclusion but, so long as they don't just "bypass Gödel," they have to do fancy footwork. Even Wittgenstein, who said his task wasn't to address Gödel's theorems, couldn't help returning to them again and again. He argued about them in his class with Alan Turing. And of course Turing's own work, his demonstration that we can't solve the halting problem (roughly, knowing whether a given computer program will produce a result given an input or will grind away forever), itself entails Gödel's first incompleteness theorem.
How exactly is this abstract cow supposedly related to the cows in the world?
Can you provide the reason as to why that is? I think the reason is that if all particular cows in the world were to disappear today, there would still remain the abstract cow in our minds; and therefore the abstract cow is independent of the particular cows in the world. But this argument is refuted by Aristotle who states that although the idea remains in our mind, it was originally abstracted from the particular cows. In other words, if no particular cows existed in the first place, then we would never have conceived the idea of abstract cow, and therefore the abstract cow originated from the particulars. I think this is also what @Wayfarer was explaining in his first post above. Therefore the "realm of reified abstracts" is an unnecessary hypothesis.By a semi-idealist reasoning, there's an "abstract cow" that somehow exists "objectively" and independently of all else, sort of in it's own ("timeless") realm of reified abstracts. — jorndoe
The objective existence is possessed by the actual computer screen with black and white dots on it that forms the shape of a 2-D cow. In this instance, the objective existence of the "abstract cow" has taken the physical form of a monitor emitting white light. This is why many different minds can now see the "abstract cow" in this shared forum.In my adventures, I occasionally encounter a discussion going back to Plato (at least).
Let me just try a different angle.
8zqp0hvrke0ql5tq.jpg
Most can easily identify that as a cow.
Not a "real" cow, just a drawing, but there are many cows in the world, that just go about their business on their own.
By a semi-idealist reasoning, there's an "abstract cow" that somehow exists "objectively" and independently of all else, sort of in it's own ("timeless") realm of reified abstracts.
(I'm just using the term "semi-idealist" a bit broadly here; you get the gist.)
Of course this hypothesis spurs a few questions.
How exactly is this abstract cow supposedly related to the cows in the world?
Why should anyone take this hypothesis serious, and ontologize such an abstract cow, anyway...? — jorndoe
How exactly is this abstract cow supposedly related to the cows in the world?
Why should anyone take this hypothesis serious, and ontologize such an abstract cow, anyway...? — jorndoe
[...] Then there's the issue of how things in the world can change but still instantiate a the transcendental Platonic Form. — darthbarracuda
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