See Popper
— J
I don't recall this - where is it? — Banno
That's one way of using ∃ as a quantifier and as a predicate - in this case, ∃!, such that ∃!t=df∃x(x=t). — Banno
I wonder what you mean when you say that numbers are real.
— Janus
That they have a common reference, that the value of a number is not a matter of opinion or choice. — Wayfarer
There are three clear ways of using "is". Quantification, "There is something that is green"; equivalence: "Superman is Clark Kent"; and predication: "Wayfarer is a human".What say you? — Wayfarer
That capacity, if it is anything, consists in the capacity to have something count as... An act of social intentionality of the sort that underpins much of our world.I can't help but think that it's obvious that humans do indeed have a 'non-sensory capacity for understanding mathematical truths' — Wayfarer
I had in mind his Three Worlds conception, — J
institutional facts — Banno
This raises the issue of how the meaning of a quantifier can differ, and what the other meanings could be. And it is this issue that we tackle, arguing that one cannot make sense of variation in quantificational apparatus in the way that the quantifier-variance theorist demands. — Quantifier Variance Dissolved
Your article says "We learn about ordinary objects, at least in part, by using our senses." — Banno
I wasn't quite able to follow your point here. Are we in agreement that advocates of quantifier variance have failed to give an adequate account? ThatThose quantifiers are introduced differently, and as the paper "Quantifier Variance Dissolved" notes that provides a strong argument for a form quantifier variance without a reduction of quantifier meaning to underlying entity type it quantifies over, and without committing yourself to the claim that there's a whole bunch of equally correct logics for the purposes of ontology. — fdrake
and that this has not been provided?a mere difference in the domain of quantification is not enough to deliver a difference in the meaning of the quantifiers, rather a difference in the rules that govern the quantifiers would be required.
Seems an odd position for you to be defending.Quine’s belief that we should defer all questions about what exists to natural science is really an expression of what he calls, and has come to be known as, naturalism.
Along the same line of thought, a number (and any other mathematical entity) is a set of neurons that form a specific structure in my brain.
— bioByron
There's a real problem with this view. If "seven" is a structure in your brain, then your "seven" is not the same as my "seven", which would be a distinct structure in my brain.
But when we each say seven is one more than six, we both mean the same thing.
Hence we must conclude that "seven" is not just a structure in your brain. Rather, it is in some way common to both you and I.
Plato answered this problem by positing a world of forms in which we both share. I think there are better answers, to do with how we use words. — Banno
Quine’s belief that we should defer all questions about what exists to natural science is really an expression of what he calls, and has come to be known as, naturalism. — Banno
I just think there is a category error in supposing that numbers must exist or not exist.
Rather, they are something we do. A way of talking about things. A grammar. — Banno
I think there are better answers, to do with how we use words. — Banno
you want to deploy the indispensability argument, no? — Banno
So i think we can pass the argument back to those who might support quantifier variance, and ask them to set out explicitly what it is they might mean. — Banno
Quantifier-Variance is the doctrine that there are alternative, equally legitimate meanings one can attach to the quantifiers – so that in one perfectly good meaning of ‛there exists’, I may say something true when I assert ‛there exists something which is a compound of this pencil and your left ear’, and in another, you may say something true when you assert ‛there is nothing which is composed of that pencil and my left ear’. — Bob Hale and Crispin Wright
I’m not arguing in favor of it. I’m asking why it’s even necessary. I’m questioning the claim that ‘according to our best epistemic theories, mathematical knowledge ought not to be possible.’ It obviously is possible, so what does that say about the shortcomings of ‘our best epistemic theories’? — Wayfarer
I've tried to have you fill this out explicitly. If what you say here were so we would have a neat case of quantification variance to work with - the difference between real and existent. But i do nto think you have been able to proved a coherent account.My intuition about the matter is simply that numbers are real but that they don't exist. — Wayfarer
I'm thinking that in order to make explicit quantifier variance we would need a case in which it is clear that the difference between two languages was not found in the domain, but in their quantification.I don't think we've laid to rest, or explained, the doubts that Hale and Wright express. — J
This is pretty clearly a case in which one language has in its domain a thing which is a compound of this pencil and your left ear, and the other does not.I may say something true when I assert ‛there exists something which is a compound of this pencil and your left ear’, and in another, you may say something true when you assert ‛there is nothing which is composed of that pencil and my left ear’. — Bob Hale and Crispin Wright
I'm not so enamoured with causes. Nor do I take evolutionary explanations as inherently fundamental.All activities have causes, right? — Count Timothy von Icarus
I've tried to have you fill this out explicitly. If what you say here were so we would have a neat case of quantification variance to work with - the difference between real and existent. But i do nto think you have been able to proved a coherent account. — Banno
I don't agree with the premise of the argument - that naturalism is our "best" epistemic theory. — Banno
Quine’s belief that we should defer all questions about what exists to natural science is really an expression of what he calls, and has come to be known as, naturalism
"why are social practices what they are? why do they evolve the way they do? etc." — Count Timothy von Icarus
"Numbers are something we do," suggests the question: "why are numbers something we (and animals) do?" All activities have causes, right? — Count Timothy von Icarus
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