I’m not talking about the universal set. I’m talking about the set of all that physically exists. These are not the same thing. — Michael
This set would violate the pairing axiom by being subsumed through a superset as well as the foundation axiom by there being sets disjoint from A. The axiom of empty set would also be false. This is all very trivial! — Kuro
The universal set is the same as "the set of all that exists". In physicalism, "all that exists" is just physical stuff (though this does not mean "existing" and "being physical" having the same meaning, just that they coextend)
This is contradictory because, as explained to you several times, it would violate the pairing axiom, the foundation axiom as well as Cantor's theorem which I spoke of earlier. — Kuro
We can assume, when doing maths, that sets exists even if sets do not exist. A physicalist, who doesn’t believe that sets exists, can make use of ZFC set theory.
In using ZFC set theory, this physicalist can define the set of all that physically exists. Within ZFC, this isn’t contradictory because it isn’t a universal set. — Michael
This is an explanation of a relatively simple set-theoretic result, since we've already fixed the set theory we're operating in. I'm quite appalled that it requires this many replies and/or elaborations. — Kuro
The set theory we’re operating on is the one in which sets exist, and so the set of all that physically exists isn’t a universal set. — Michael
First-order logic, including set theory (a theory in the language of FOL), are extensional, so in the case of "everything" and "physical stuff" then if they coextend they're salva veritate substitutable. — Kuro
So how is it that mathematical anti-realists, like physicalists, can use set theory? — Michael
hen the mathematical anti-realist can use set theory to define the set of all that physically exists in my cupboard, or all that physically exists in England, or all that physically exists in the one and only universe. None of these are a universal set within ZFC. — Michael
The physicalist takes that all that exists is physical. In set theory, the universal set is the set of all that exists. Therefore, per extensionality, these are substitutable salva veritate and, per the axiom, the same. — Kuro
But sets don’t exist if physicalism is true, and so following this reasoning the physicalist cannot define any set. Given that the physicalist does define sets when using set theory, his physicalism plays no role, and so, when using set theory, sets exist and the set of all that physically exists isn’t a universal set (as the universal set includes sets which don’t physically exist). — Michael
Then I think the problem is with the wording of the discussion. In ZFC, urelements are not allowed. Everything is a set. But in the real world things exist which aren’t a set, e.g apples. If you had worded this as saying that the universal set in ZFC is impossible then I wouldn’t have even bothered replying. I thought this was talking about more than just pure maths. — Michael
It was. Using "normal set theories" like ZF or ZFC was your suggestion, not mine. I was evaluating your proposal from a much more generalized perspective and showing how it's untenable even with a set theory tamed to be "physicalist-friendly"- this was discarded per your call — Kuro
Then you need to be more explicit with your argument. What sort of things are members of your premised set of all that exists? Urelements like apples, in which case we’re not using ZFC, or only sets, in which case it has no relevance to real life where non-sets exist. — Michael
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. — Kuro
But no theorem will say that something is bigger than itself. — god must be atheist
What does the power set axiom state precisely? What IS a powerset? — god must be atheist
So yes, there could be a set that has everything in it. — god must be atheist
A powerset of some set X is composed precisely of itself and all its subsets — 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
but pray tell what the cardinality of a set is. — god must be atheist
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