What does this have to do with philosophy? It's pure Math. — Alkis Piskas
The point that you seem to be missing is that it's a simply a matter of definition -and definition alone- that powersets don't contain "all subsets" of the "original set". The original set IS the "set of all that exists". To conclude that the original set does not exist is nonsensical. It is borne of a failure of conceptual understanding on your part. — ThinkOfOne
I address something like that here. The set of both metals weighs 3g but none of its members weigh 3g. It doesn't then follow that we should treat the existence of this set as being additional to the existence of each of its members, else the total weight of things which exist would be 6g, which is false in this example. — Michael
This is a category error namely in that sets never weigh anything — Kuro
When I meet a married couple I don’t meet a married couple and the husband and the wife. Meeting the married couple is meeting the husband and the wife, and vice versa. The married couple isn’t an entity that’s additional to the husband and the wife, even though there are things we can say about the married couple that we can’t say about the husband or the wife individually.
If you try to say that the married couple and the husband and the wife all exist, and so 3 things exist, you’re counting the husband and the wife twice (or rather, 1.5 times each). — Michael
The point that you seem to be missing is that it's a simply a matter of definition -and definition alone- that powersets don't contain "all subsets" of the "original set". The original set IS the "set of all that exists". To conclude that the original set does not exist is nonsensical. It is borne of a failure of conceptual understanding on your part.
— ThinkOfOne
Powersets do contain all subsets of their original set, this is a well-proven theorem by Cantor that any elementary introduction to set theory should teach you. The set of all exists, by its very definition, includes the cardinality of a set strictly larger than it is, and is therefore incoherent/a contradiction (the proof of this is a very trivial exercise: Suppose E, then there exists P(E), P(E) is cardinally larger than E, therefore there exists x's that are members of P(E) and not E and thus E isn't E).
This does not mean the things that exist, like my keyboard or this screen, do not actually exist, but rather they cannot all be collected into set. If your standards of "conceptual understanding" is mathematical inconsistency, this is a problem on your end. — Kuro
All that needs to be decided is whether or not to allow "all subsets" of "all that exists" to be members of "all that exists".
Either way:
1. There is a set of "all that exists"
2. There is a powerset for "all that exists"
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
You seem to have missed the point. There is a distinction that needs to be made between the definition of a SET and the definition of a POWERSET. They are not one and the same. — ThinkOfOne
But that something is a member of a set isn't that it exists. For example, Santa doesn't exist and so isn't a member of E, but it is a member of the set {Santa}. — Michael
No equivocation at all between "is a member of some set" and "exists", it's not a matter of conflating the concepts rather simply a matter of logical entailment. It's incoherent (and inconsistent) for anything to be a member of a set but also simultaneously not exist. — Kuro
The "existence" of mathematical objects in mathematical anti-realism is different to the "existence" of mathematical objects in mathematical realism. — Michael
The "existence" of mathematical objects in mathematical anti-realism is different to the "existence" of mathematical objects in mathematical realism. — Michael
Correct, hence why platonism and nominalism about mathematics here is far-reaching and beyond the closer phenomenon at hand, being just that universal set itself. — Kuro
. Everything that exists is a physical object. The set of all that exists is the set of every physical object. — Michael
There's one thing that the platonist and nominalist would still agree on, in that contradictory sets, like the Russell set, or this universal set, do not exist because they're incoherent (and so would their existence). Certainly the nominalist needs not raise the issue of whether any sets exist at all to just say that this one set does not exist — Kuro
This is not to say that there's some different theory of existence necessarily being employed by the platonist or the nominalist (of course, there can), but the nominalist and platonist can perfectly disagree in using the same sense of existence (say, as a second-order predicate of concepts a la Frege, or as an instantiation of properties a la Russell) — Kuro
If you assume physicalism, the set of all that exists, let alone the set of anything, since sets are not physical objects neither identical to their physical members nor the collection of their physical members (the proof of this is simple: suppose it is the case, then submerge that same set under a further set, which is mathematically non-identical!) — Kuro
I don't understand how this addresses my argument. Can you specify which step you disagree with?
1. Physicalism is true (assumption)
2. Everything that exists is a physical object (from 1)
3. The set of all that exists is the set of all physical objects (from 2) — Michael
(1) entails that no sets exist, including that set in (3) — Kuro
the assumption in 5, that the powerset is literally empty — Kuro
I think there's a difference between saying "there is a set of all that exists" and saying "the set of all that exists, exists". The mathematical anti-realist will assert the former but reject the latter. — Michael
I didn't say that it's empty. Similar to the above, there's a difference between saying "the set has members" and saying "the members of this set exist". The mathematical anti-realist will assert the former but reject the latter. — Michael
Sets do not have meontological members, because set-membership itself is a relation requiring that there are two relata of the set and the given member, yet the necessary condition can't be satisfied when one of the relata quite literally isn't there. Since Santa does not exist, {Santa} as a set doesn't exist in the real world (though there are possible, hypothetical universes out there where Santa does exist, and thus the singleton exists as well). — Kuro
So, the power set isn't empty, but as all of its members are sets, and as sets don't exist, none of its members exist. As such, it doesn't follow from the fact that the power set has more members that there exist things which aren't in the set of all that exists. — Michael
As I said before, I think you're equivocating on the word "exists". Being a member of a set isn't the same thing as existing (if physicalism and mathematical anti-realism are true). — Michael
No equivocation at all between "is a member of some set" and "exists", it's not a matter of conflating the concepts rather simply a matter of logical entailment — Kuro
1. Physicalism is true (assumption)
2. The set of all that physically exists is {apple, pear, ...}
3. The power set of this is {{}, {apple}, {pear}, {apple, pear}, ...}
4. No member of the power set physically exists
5. Therefore, the power set is not proof that there are things which physically exist and are not members of the set of all that physically exists — Michael
(1) entails that no sets exist, including that set in (3) regardless of its incoherent status. It could be any ordinary set, like a set of an apple, someone's toenail & an ant. A set whose members are physical objects is not itself, as a set, physical (for obvious reasons: it'd entail infinite interpenetration) — Kuro
The members of the set in (2) physically exist, but the set itself doesn't per physicalism. — Kuro
In even asserting that the set is anything, like having the property of "containing apple as a member", you get back to existential commitments. — Kuro
Mathematical anti-realists and physicalists are quite capable of doing maths with sets. — Michael
I'm aware. What is the relevance of that? I'm not saying that the set physically exists. I'm only saying that the power set doesn't prove that some things physically exist which are not in the set of all that physically exists. — Michael
So you're saying that if mathematical anti-realism is true then there is no set of all that exists, because there are no sets? And so your very argument, which uses sets, depends on mathematical realism being true? — Michael
There's one thing that the platonist and nominalist would still agree on, in that contradictory sets, like the Russell set, or this universal set, do not exist because they're incoherent (and so would their existence). Certainly the nominalist needs not raise the issue of whether any sets exist at all to just say that this one set does not exist, which is the first point I made in this post: the fact that this universal set, the set of all that exists, is contradictory. — Kuro
No? I'm saying that the non-existence of the set of all that exists is an issue far prior to the philosophy of mathematics (namely because it's an issue provable in mathematics): the existence of the set is contradictory, so both platonists, who are realists about other sets, and nominalists, realists about no sets whatsoever, would agree it doesn't exist. — Kuro
1. The set of all that physically exists is {apple, pear, ...}
2. The power set of this is {{}, {apple}, {pear}, {apple, pear}, ...}
3. No member of the power set physically exists
4. Therefore, the power set is not proof that there are things which physically exist and are not members of the set of all that physically exists — Michael
The set of all that physically exists isn’t contradictory, which is what that argument shows. — Michael
The other issue is that, obviously, this still instantiates the same contradiction (4-5) in my initial argument: the powerset is either not larger than its set because there aren't more members in it than in the set, falsifying either the powerset axiom or this set's status as a powerset, or there is no set of all that exists.
FWIW, this is technically not a valid argument since 6 seems to only follow from (what I assume are crudely skipped steps for brevity's sake) the assumption in 5, that the powerset is literally empty, which not only is an issue in the terms I explained earlier (falsifying the powerset axiom or just giving up the nonexistence of that set), this still never means that the powerset is empty. That falsifies the axioms we use for set building, namely in that we can join any urelement or set into a further set containing just that set or urelement (being a singleton), but if the members of that set can't be joined into singleton supersets, let alone the powerset itself, then we've falsified several of our basic set theoretic apparatus just to suppose the existence of this set (which still manages to be incoherent, regardless: this doesn't actually make a powerset of a non-empty set empty!) — Kuro
This "physicalism-constrained set theory" fails — Kuro
I’m not taking about that though. Use normal set theory. The set of all that physically exists is not contradictory. It might not be, within set theory, the set of all that exists, but if physicalism is true then everything that actually exists is a member of the set of all that physically exists. — Michael
The non-existence of the universal set in ZF, ZFC and so on is a well established mathematical theorem in those set theories. — Kuro
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