Tree's rocks and stars can exist as composites without the labels tree, rock, or star. — universeness
I would say that all combinations exist regardless of the mind..........But who says that parts of an object need to be in causal contact? — litewave
Infinite number of objects doesn't seem sensible? — litewave
I'm sorry but I'm not familiar with the math you are talking about and what the meaning of "set", "powerset", or other terms you are using. Because of I don't know if it is proper for one to say something like "Suppose that all that exists forms a set" and then label a set "E".Suppose that all that exists forms a set. Call this set E. It follows from the powerset axiom that there'd exist a powerset of E, P(E). Recall that from Cantor's theorem, the cardinality of a powerset is strictly larger than its set. 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. Though if there exists things that are not members of the set all of that exists, then the set of all that exists is not the set of all that exists.
By proof from contradiction, we're allowed to suppose that our premises are at fault by entailing a contradiction. We're left with:
1. There is no set of all that exists
2. There is no powerset for every set
Since the powerset axiom is ubiquitous in various mathematical set theories, we're only left with (1). This is to say that there does not exist a set of all that exists. — Kuro
In Mathematical Platonism, sets exist in the world as abstract entities. The parts don't need to be in causal contact. Yet the parts must be connected in some way in order for the set to exist. How exactly ? How are things in the world abstractly connected ? By what mechanism ? — RussellA
For a world to start off with 3 objects and end up with an infinite number of objects because of the ontological existence of sets doesn't seem sensible. — RussellA
If the Milky Way Galaxy exists as an abstract entity, by what mechanism do you propose that the parts are connected, parts that could be 87,000 light years apart ? — RussellA
If the parts exist, their collection necessarily exists too. There can be no parts without their collection and there can be no collection of parts without the parts. The parts and their collection are connected by necessity. — litewave
There are just all possible (logically consistent/self-identical) collections, from the empty ones to infinitely large ones. After all, what would be the difference between a possible collection and a "real" collection? — litewave
In Mathematical Platonism — RussellA
The point being made is that if I have two coins then it's not the case that I have the first coin and I have the second coin and I have a pair of coins, such that I can be said to have 3 things. — Michael
That a pair of coins exist just is that the first and the second coin exist. The mistake made is to treat the existence of the pair of coins as being distinct from the existence of the first and of the second coin. — Michael
You also have the collection of the two coins, which is a third collection (the two coins being the first two collections); it's just a different kind of collection and it is not a coin. — litewave
You don't have the collection in addition to each of the two coins. It's really a very simple point, what's hard to understand? — Michael
If you don't have the collection in addition to each of the two coins, what is the collection then? — litewave
That would be like saying Joe Biden exists and the President of the United States exists, therefore at least two people exist, which is an invalid inference. — Michael
Joe Biden is identical to the current President of the United States - it is the same object. But if a collection is an object, what is it identical to? It is obviously not identical to any of its parts. So it must be a different object than any of its parts. Hence, a collection of two coins is a different object than any of the two coins.That depends on your mode of speaking. You can talk about a collection as being a single object if you want, but you can't then say that because the collection is a single object and because each of its members is a single object then there are three objects. That would be like saying Joe Biden exists and the President of the United States exists, therefore at least two people exist. — Michael
No, it's not, you made two references to the same object. — universeness
But if a collection is an object, what is it identical to? It is obviously not identical to any of its parts. — litewave
A coin collection is a set that means more that a number of individual coins as the collective can be related in many different ways compared to treating the coins as unrelated units. The sum becomes more than its parts. — universeness
It's identical to the sum of its parts. If you say that the collection exists in addition to each of its parts then you count each of its parts twice; once when counting the parts themselves and once when counting the collection. This really is such a simple point, I don't understand the objection. — Michael
"Sum" is just a different name for "collection". If the collection is an object that is not identical to any of its parts then it is a different object than any of its parts - simple, isn't it? The collection is an object in addition to its parts. You dismiss this object because it coincides with the parts but it is something else than any of the parts. — litewave
I am saying that the existence of the collection is identical to the existence of each of the coins — Michael
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