Suppose that all that exists forms a set — Kuro
But the cardinality of P(E) can only be greater than E's if there exists elements in P(E) that are not members of E. — Kuro
If S is the set {x, y, z}, then all the subsets of S are
• {}
• {x}
• {y}
• {z}
• {x, y}
• {x, z}
• {y, z}
• {x, y, z}
and hence the power set of S is {{}, {x}, {y}, {z}, {x, y}, {x, z}, {y, z}, {x, y, z}}
Some people think of a set as being some abstract, Platonic entity that "exists" in some sense, distinct from its members? — Michael
The 'extra things' come from combination of the fundamentals — universeness
Right, so this is an issue of reification. Some people think of a set as being some abstract, Platonic entity that "exists" in some sense, distinct from its members? I'm not a mathematician but that just strikes me as nonsense. — Michael
Q1 - do "combinations" exist in the world when the world is not being observed ?
Is there any persuasive argument that "combinations" do exist in a mind-independent world ? I have yet to come across one. — RussellA
If a red apple and a green apple exist then I wouldn't say that three things exist: it’s not the case that a red apple exists and a green apple exists and the abstract, Platonic set of both apples exists. — Michael
The apple exists as a set of parts in the mind. When the mind believes that it is observing an apple in the world, for the apple to also exist in this observed world as the same set of the same parts would be an example of overdetermination. — RussellA
That's not true. The power set includes repeated members. Taken from the Wikipedia article: — Michael
Right, so this is an issue of reification. Some people think of a set as being some abstract, — Michael
Is there any persuasive argument that "combinations" do exist in a mind-independent world ? I have yet to come across one. — RussellA
Suppose x,y and z exist in the world.
This gives us 6 sets - (x) - ( y) - (z) - (x,y) - (x, z) - (y,z). — RussellA
Reification does not target merely the existence of abstract entities, otherwise it's simply another name for the philosophical position of nominalism — Kuro
Reification deals with treating abstract entities concretely — Kuro
You're confusing singletons with just the elements. x, {x}, {{x}}... so on are all not identical with each other, and for instance the singleton set {x} is a member of the powerset but not the set, whose member would be x. — Kuro
What doesn't exist only in the mind then? Non-composite objects? — litewave
Yes, a tree is a combination as is a grain of sand, a rock or a star. They need no lifeform to exist as combinations of fundamentals. — universeness
Taking sets to exist is the most natural interpretation of the existential quantifier in set theory without awkward paraphrases — Kuro
If combinations don't ontologically exist in a mind-independent world (aka relations) but do exist in the mind, then:
i) what exists in the mind-independent world are fundamental forces and fundamental particles. These fundamental particles may be called "objects", and are non-composite.
ii) a tree, which is a combination of parts, can only exist in the mind. — RussellA
Argument One against sets as combinations existing in the world
From before, if only 3 things were introduced into a world, and if sets as combinations did exist, then an infinite number of other things would automatically be created. This doesn't seem sensible. — RussellA
Argument Two against sets as combinations existing in the world
If combinations exist in the world, then an object such as an apple would exist as a set of parts. It would follow that one part 8cm distant from another part would be in combination — RussellA
If being in combination followed the physical laws of nature as we know them, then two parts could only be in combination once information had travelled between them at the speed of light. This raises a further problem. — RussellA
If being in combination was instantaneous, then the combination between two parts of the Milky Way Galaxy 87,000 light years apart would be instantaneous. But this would break the physical laws of nature as we know them, and would need to be justified. — RussellA
If, during the 87,000 years it took for the two parts to become in combination, one or both of the parts ceased to exist, then a combination would come into existence without any parts. This doesn't seem sensible. — RussellA
If combinations don't ontologically exist in a mind-independent world (aka relations) but do exist in the mind, then:
i) what exists in the mind-independent world are fundamental forces and fundamental particles. These fundamental particles may be called "objects", and are non-composite.
ii) a tree, which is a combination of parts, can only exist in the mind. — RussellA
Argument One against sets as combinations existing in the world
From before, if only 3 things were introduced into a world, and if sets as combinations did exist, then an infinite number of other things would automatically be created. This doesn't seem sensible. — RussellA
If being in combination was instantaneous, then the combination between two parts of the Milky Way Galaxy 87,000 light years apart would be instantaneous. But this would break the physical laws of nature as we know them, and would need to be justified. — RussellA
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