Wikipedia says that the decimal representation of the Golden Ratio is 1.618033988749894...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_ratio
Do you disagree with this? — keystone
the Golden Ratio is irrational. As such, how are we going to describe it with the positive rationals? There is no "last" set of turns that can describe the GR, since there will always be more to describe. — Count Timothy von Icarus
However, if we could fully describe one irrational with the rationals than it stands to reason that we should be able to do this with others through a different series of turns. However, that can't be the case given the aforementioned. — Count Timothy von Icarus
It is not an abstract object, but rather a property of abstract objects, ratios being necessarily relational. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The complete series of decimals or turns wouldn't be the ratio though, even if such a series was finitely possible. — Count Timothy von Icarus
How do you finitely and completely describe these mathematical entities (irrational numbers)? — keystone
Pi is the ratio of circumference to diameter of a circle. The Golden Ratio can be defined as the ratio of a particular line segment to another - you can look it up on Wikipedia. Other irrationals, have at it. — jgill
Since these expansions are non-ending they do not completely describe the mathematical entities they represent. — jgill
Do you think a Cauchy sequence of positive rationals can be used to describe the Golden Ratio? If so, whats the fundamental difference here?
On the Stern-Brocot tree, might irrationals be all the infinite strings which do not end in R_repeated or L_repeated?
Do you think some irrational numbers have conditional existence while others do not?
Wouldn't numbers be an abstract object? In any event, I think this comes down to my contention that the irrational number corresponding to the GR is not identical with the GR unless it is instantiated as a ratio.Or are you making a claim about numbers in general requiring abstract objects to exist?
Am I understanding correctly that you believe there is no decimal representation of the Golden Ratio? If that's the case, do you believe there are 2 solutions to the equation x^2-x-1=0? Are you saying something subtle here, such as there are 2 solutions but we can't represent them in decimal form?
Do you think a Cauchy sequence of positive rationals can be used to describe the Golden Ratio? — keystone
might irrationals be all the infinite strings — keystone
On the Stern-Brocot tree, might irrationals be all the infinite strings which do not — keystone
Golden Ratio is irrational. As such, how are we going to describe it with the positive rationals? — Count Timothy von Icarus
[Phi] is not an abstract object, but rather a property of abstract objects — Count Timothy von Icarus
I don't think an infinite series can encode an irrational number while remaining itself rational — Count Timothy von Icarus
However, infinity is not a rational number because it is undefined as to its status as an integer — Count Timothy von Icarus
A ratio is necessarily a relationship — Count Timothy von Icarus
I call it "second-order abstract." — Count Timothy von Icarus
In the formalist interpretation of mathematics, where "an entity is what it does," — Count Timothy von Icarus
I don't think an infinite series can encode an irrational number while remaining itself rational — Count Timothy von Icarus
I'm saying a decimal number is just an encoding of a pattern/abstraction, it isn't identical with it. — Count Timothy von Icarus
To answer that question, we would need a mathematical definition of 'describe'.
Meanwhile, GR [Phi], like any real number, is the limit of a Cauchy sequence of rationals. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Real numbers are not sequences. Real numbers are equivalence classes of Cauchy sequences of rationals. And a real number is the limit of a Cauchy sequence of rationals. — TonesInDeepFreeze
So, you can't just magically add Phi as a node to this tree. — TonesInDeepFreeze
We could simplify by taking the complete infinite binary tree....But there is no irrational number represented by a node in that tree. Period. — TonesInDeepFreeze
What is your definition of 'completely described'? — TonesInDeepFreeze
common definitions of real numbers — keystone
My impression is that finite SB strings describe 'destinations' (numbers) and infinite SB strings describe 'journeys' (unending processes with no destination). My issue is that I don't see how decimals are any different. Why can't we say that (non-repeating) infinite decimals are journeys that are described by unending processes (e.g. limits) and not 'destinations' (numbers)? — keystone
look up some of Metaphysician Undercover's posts — jgill
Sorry, but that's an invitation to a crazy train — TonesInDeepFreeze
If 4 shares an identity with 2+2, 3+1, 5+ -1, 8/2, etc. then the P≠NP problem — Count Timothy von Icarus
If a unique description of an abstract objects, e.g., a number, is that number [...] then [unacceptable consequent] — Count Timothy von Icarus
The set of all equations that are "equal" to any number X is infinitely larger than the set of reals as they cannot be set in 1:1 correspondence. — Count Timothy von Icarus
In the formalist interpretation of mathematics, where "an entity is what it does,"
— Count Timothy von Icarus
Where can I read that that is a formalist interpretation? — TonesInDeepFreeze
every real has a decimal representation, it is not common to define 'is a real number' that way. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Also, I don't know how easy are the definitions of addition and multiplication compared with the definitions of those operations with equivalence classes of Cauchy sequences or Dedekind cuts. — TonesInDeepFreeze
No, the paths are not real numbers. First, a path is a sequence of edges, not a sequence of nodes. Second, a sequence of nodes is not a real number. Rather the limit of the sequence is a real number. — TonesInDeepFreeze
A description is a linguistic object. A description is not a real number. — TonesInDeepFreeze
As for arithmetic on the Stern-Brocot tree — keystone
No, the paths are not real numbers. First, a path is a sequence of edges, not a sequence of nodes. Second, a sequence of nodes is not a real number. Rather the limit of the sequence is a real number.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Feeding the aforementioned algorithm the string RL, it will treat it exactly as the golden ratio. If RL looks like the golden ratio and it behaves like the golden ratio, why do you not say that it is the golden ratio? — keystone
all real numbers [...] are paths on the Stern-Brocot tree — keystone
we don't feel inclined to say that 2=1.9 — keystone
Who are you trying to convince here? Philosophers who consider definitions optional?
— jgill
This is a chat forum, not a journal. We should be allowed to spitball here. — keystone
Choo choo! All aboard the crazy train!
And this has nothing to do with P vs. NP, which is a problem in mathematics that understands that 4 is the same object as 2+2.
Right, a description of a number and the number are not the same objects.
Wrong. An equation is a certain kind of formula. In an ordinary mathematical theory (such as set theory, which is the ordinary theory for the subject of equinumerosity) there are only countably many formulas. But there are uncountably many real numbers. It's true that the set of equations is not 1-1 with the set of reals, but it's the set of reals that is the greater.
"And this has nothing to do with P vs. NP, which is a problem in mathematics that understands that 4 is the same object as 2+2."
I don't think most mathematicians particularly care that much about the philosophy of mathematics. — Count Timothy von Icarus
"Wrong. An equation is a certain kind of formula. In an ordinary mathematical theory (such as set theory, which is the ordinary theory for the subject of equinumerosity) there are only countably many formulas. But there are uncountably many real numbers. It's true that the set of equations is not 1-1 with the set of reals, but it's the set of reals that is the greater."
I think you are confusing the set of all computable functions with the set of all equations. — Count Timothy von Icarus
We are talking about the set of all equations, which is the size of the set of all solution sets for all equations. — Count Timothy von Icarus
So as you can see, there are infinitely more equations than reals — Count Timothy von Icarus
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