I understand the intuition you use to affirm that argument, I imagine others do too. At t=1 the sequence has ended, and the lamp must be either on or off. — Lionino
There's something going on here about ends and limits. I understood that the issue here is that although the series does have a limit, it doesn't have an end. As an abstract concept, one need not be particularly puzzled by this. But when you locate the series in time, it gets difficult.Me and fishfry have insisted that this is a case of missing limit. — Lionino
Of course it does. I can't wait to see how it all plays out.Yes ok, but that supports the possibility that in the future, our current preoccupation with "mind as computer" will look as dated as "mind as waterworks" of the Romans. — fishfry
My word, there's a discovery! A hypothesis that is more unreasonable than God! This should get a Nobel prize of some sort.That it explains nothing? I agree. Like saying "God did it." Or saying the Great Sky Computer (GSC) did it. Except that God is not restricted to being a computation, whereas the GSC is, making God a less unreasonable hypothesis. — fishfry
Yes, I do remember our earlier discussion of this. I don't pretend I understand them, but I do admit they exist - my allowing them or not is irrelevant.If you allow the transfinite ordinals, the sequence 1, 2, 3, ... has the limit ω. And even if this seems unfamiliar, it's structurally identical to the sequence 1/2, 3/4, 7/8, ... having the limit 1, which is much more familiar. — fishfry
Did someone mention a starting-point of no axioms? It would be indeed be like playing chess with no rules - or discussing infinity.What is the starting point of no axioms? It's like playing chess with no rules. — fishfry
Of course it does. I can't wait to see how it all plays out.
Though there is at least one case where the idea got transformed and returned with a vengeance. I mean the Pythagoras' and Plato's idea that ultimate reality is mathematical, meaning the only reality is the mathematical as opposed to the physical, world, returns as the idea that the physical world is mathematical. Weird. — Ludwig V
That it explains nothing? I agree. Like saying "God did it." Or saying the Great Sky Computer (GSC) did it. Except that God is not restricted to being a computation, whereas the GSC is, making God a less unreasonable hypothesis.
— fishfry
My word, there's a discovery! A hypothesis that is more unreasonable than God! This should get a Nobel prize of some sort. — Ludwig V
If you allow the transfinite ordinals, the sequence 1, 2, 3, ... has the limit ω. And even if this seems unfamiliar, it's structurally identical to the sequence 1/2, 3/4, 7/8, ... having the limit 1, which is much more familiar.
— fishfry
Yes, I do remember our earlier discussion of this. I don't pretend I understand them, but I do admit they exist - my allowing them or not is irrelevant. — Ludwig V
What is the starting point of no axioms? It's like playing chess with no rules.
— fishfry
Did someone mention a starting-point of no axioms? It would be indeed be like playing chess with no rules - or discussing infinity. — Ludwig V
No evidence of your interpretation here. — Ludwig V
Fair enough, but to go on, as Plato does, to accuse the sophists of deliberate deception or wilful blindness is completely unjustified (except when, as in the Protagoras,(?) Gorgias (?) someone boasts about doing so – though it doesn’t follow that everyone that Plato accuses of rhetoric and sophistry did so boast.). — Ludwig V
But accepting that connection is a long way from accepting that he had any doubts about the validity of his conclusions. — Ludwig V
Believe it or not, that's an incredibly helpful remark. Not only do I understand and agree with it, but it also enables me to get a handle on what metaphysics is. Sorry, clarification - I am referring to the whole sentence, not just the last five words.It's a metaphysical hypothesis that the world "follows" the math. — fishfry
I had to look Tegmark up. No disrespect, but he does illustrate the observation that intellectuals are not exempt from normal human desires for fame and fortune, no matter how much they protest the contrary. There's also a normal human pleasure in astonishing and shocking the tediously orthodox Establishment.Far less likely than God. It's ironic that the intellectual hipsters mock God and flock to simulation theory, which is a far less likely hypothesis. — fishfry
Yes, we had that discussion as well. You may remember that I had reservations. Same, but not identical, structures, I would say. But I don't expect you to like it. It doesn't matter until it becomes relevant to something.That's why I prefer the 1/2, 3/4, 7/8, ... example. Same structure in more familiar clothing. — fishfry
My apologies. I should have restricted my remark to those who dream up paradoxes. Though perhaps even that is wrong. They may be exploiting the rules themselves, rather than merely breaking them. The mathematical rules for infinity don't seem particularly helpful in resolving these problems.Mathematicians have incredibly precise rules for infinity. The rules are the axioms of ZF or ZFC set theory. — fishfry
Well, I'm almost certain there isn't. But my disagreement with you prompted me to look more closely and acknowledge something that feels like error in one or two respects.i don't think there is a correct opinion here. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, I understand your account of this. It's important to add that Plato thinks that the sophist mimics the philosopher and what he says is accounted rhetoric because it mimics the speech of the philosopher. (He didn't have a concept of logic as we think of it.) The mimicry is the reason why he condemns both the man and what he says. How does he distinguish mimicry from the real thing? Mimicry seems to be true, but is not. So, in the end, the distinction between the two in his writings is the distinction between those who agree with him and those who do not. I'm not trivializing Plato. It is a universal problem.It appears like either the sophist is a type of philosopher, or a philosopher is a type of sophist. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, you are right. I was not accurate. Sorry.The issue is not the validity of the conclusions, it's the soundness. — Metaphysician Undercover
I had noticed. Which is why I keep trying to suggest other approaches. With little success, I admit.But when we try to understand how the premises are wrong, then there is disagreement amongst us, because we really can't demonstrate exactly what the premises ought to be replaced with. — Metaphysician Undercover
In my reply to this quotation, I saidIt appears like either the sophist is a type of philosopher, or a philosopher is a type of sophist. — Metaphysician Undercover
This was a mistake. I intended to spare you unnecessary verbiage in my reply. But what I said was annoying and unnecessary. I'm sorry.Have you ever read C. L. Dodgson's article on Achilles and the Tortoise? It faces the problem head-on. I won't spoil the plot. — Ludwig V
I have agreed repeatedly that we can't "count all the natural numbers backwards" since an infinite sequence has no last element. — fishfry
a. I said "0", 30 seconds after that I said "1", 15 seconds after that I said "2", 7.5 seconds after that I said "3", and so on ad infinitum
b. I said "0", 30 seconds before that I said "1", 15 seconds before that I said "2", 7.5 seconds before that I said "3", and so on ad infinitum
Here is our premise:
P1. In both (a) and (b) there is a bijection between the series of time intervals and the series of natural numbers and the sum of the series of time intervals is 60.
However, the second supertask is metaphysically impossible. It cannot start because there is no largest natural number to start with. Therefore, P1 being true does not entail that the second supertask is metaphysically possible.
Therefore, P1 being true does not entail that the first supertask is metaphysically possible.
Tegmark's trolling. And the world is mathematical to us just as it's sound to a bat. The world does whatever it's doing. We do the math. — fishfry
Tegmark's trolling. And the world is mathematical to us just as it's sound to a bat. The world does whatever it's doing. We do the math. — fishfry
Certainly mathematics is, in a sense, fixed. But what we are talking about it is applied mathematics. It seems pretty clear that arithmetic and geometry originated in severely practical needs of large empires. But it does seem to have taken off on its own, as it were, as a theoretical enterprise. Here, we are talking about applied mathematics.That is the view that mathematical is somewhat of an empirical endeavor. Many disagree however, and think that mathematics is something fixed and representative of the world. — Lionino
I do, but Zeno's division of the task didn't seem to make anything impossible. To read Aristotle, Zeno seems to believe in the discreetness of anything of magnitude, directly contradicting Aristotle's physics of the day, which were his opinions pretty much by definition. Much of his opinions held for millenia. Some still do.So when someone describes the situation in a way that seems to make that fact impossible, why don't we just reject it as inapplicable? — Ludwig V
Not an example of a physical impossibility. Yes, i agree that physical impossibilities can be turned into fiction. Did I say otherwise?But we allow physical impossibilities into fiction all the time. They even crop up in philosophical examples. "The sun might not rise tomorrow morning"
The state of Achilles is that he is even with the tortoise. It's admittedly not final because he continues on after the task of overtaking it is complete and takes the lead. There's nothing about that where physics stops being relevant.Your point about the final state not being defined is about logic, not physics (despite some people thinking that it is about physics).
A list of valid options is not a definition of a state.In any case, the final state is defined. It must (on or off) or (0 or 1).
Synonym?Wouldn't it be more accurate to say that it is undetermined?
They are, or at least the existing ones are. None of the ones you listed was an existing step.But it would be absurd to say that every state in the series is indeterminate.
Says the proponent that time stops.The time length is irrelevant. — Metaphysician Undercover
To me it was just another wording, but apparently so since I see it referenced verbatim on so many discussions. Interesting is the total lack of mention of the tortoise.I gave you Aristotle's wording.
The argument is the same with space. He says "time is not composed of indivisible moments any more than any other magnitude is composed of indivisibles". Space qualifies as an 'other magnitude'.The matter of instants appears irrelevant here, and the problem seems to be with the assumed nature of space, rather than time.
I said no such thing. Zeno very much is reported to have concluded such things.Like above, noAxioms insisted Zeno did not conclude that the faster runner could not overtake the slower, — Metaphysician Undercover
There's something going on here about ends and limits. I understood that the issue here is that although the series does have a limit, it doesn't have an end. — Ludwig V
I don't think the calculus is relevant. In any case, I understood that it stated the problem rather than solving it - calculating the result to as close an approximation you aspire to, but never absolutely. I wouldn't be surprised if I got that wrong.Also keep in mind that physics was absolute back then, and calculus was unheard of. — noAxioms
If you accept that Twin Earth is not physically possible, there's no need to argue about the sun example. Maybe your imagination is richer than mine.Not an example of a physical impossibility. — noAxioms
Monochrome = (black, white or grey all over)? Red = (indefinite number of shades of red)? Sibling = (brother or sister)? Parent = (Mother or father).A list of valid options is not a definition of a state. — noAxioms
I don't know, what do you think? I had in mind that every step is defined by the formula, which cannot be applied to any step unless it's predecessor is determined (except for the first step.) I wouldn't go to the stake for one or the other.Synonym? — noAxioms
Yes. The first step exists if you are looking forward, but if you are looking backward, it doesn't. But in the normal world, the first step is the last step - i.e. exists whichever direction you are looking or even if you are not looking at all. This is Berkeley's world.They are, or at least the existing ones are. None of the ones you listed was an existing step. — noAxioms
I don't quite get what "anti-realist" means here. But you are right. I was trying to articulate the idea that counting is not a determinate description, but a system for generating determinate descriptions; we have to apply the system and discover what pieces of the number system apply in each case. Actually, one could see some sense in saying both that the mathematics is derived from the world and that it is imposed on the world.His analogy/metaphor implies that mathematics is something that we impose onto the world instead of something that we derive from the world. His position is anti-realist therefore. If he was right, platonism about mathematics wouldn't be such a strong position today. — Lionino
Socrates (as presented by Plato) considered himself wiser than anyone else because he knew he didn't know anything, which doesn't seem to leave much room for anyone else (at least in Athens) to be a philosopher. However, his dialogues with sophists do not show Socrates treating them disrespectfully and this is something of a puzzle. The orthodox interpretation regards Socrates' respect as ironic. Maybe it is. But maybe Plato's practice was a bit less dismissive than all this implies. — Ludwig V
Says the proponent that time stops. — noAxioms
I suspect Zeno believed his premise to be false... — noAxioms
Believe it or not, that's an incredibly helpful remark. — Ludwig V
Not only do I understand and agree with it, but it also enables me to get a handle on what metaphysics is. Sorry, clarification - I am referring to the whole sentence, not just the last five words. — Ludwig V
I had to look Tegmark up. — Ludwig V
No disrespect, but he does illustrate the observation that intellectuals are not exempt from normal human desires for fame and fortune, no matter how much they protest the contrary. There's also a normal human pleasure in astonishing and shocking the tediously orthodox Establishment. — Ludwig V
That's why I prefer the 1/2, 3/4, 7/8, ... example. Same structure in more familiar clothing.
— fishfry
Yes, we had that discussion as well. You may remember that I had reservations. Same, but not identical, structures, I would say. But I don't expect you to like it. It doesn't matter until it becomes relevant to something. — Ludwig V
My apologies. I should have restricted my remark to those who dream up paradoxes. — Ludwig V
Though perhaps even that is wrong. They may be exploiting the rules themselves, rather than merely breaking them. The mathematical rules for infinity don't seem particularly helpful in resolving these problems. — Ludwig V
Given P2, what is the first natural number not recited? I seem to remember having asked you this several times already.
— fishfry
— Michael
There isn't one. I've answered this several times already. That's what it means for me to accept P1.
But you need to prove P2. You haven't done so. — Michael
So we're back to my post here:
a. I said "0", 30 seconds after that I said "1", 15 seconds after that I said "2", 7.5 seconds after that I said "3", and so on ad infinitum — Michael
Tegmark's trolling. And the world is mathematical to us just as it's sound to a bat. The world does whatever it's doing. We do the math.
— fishfry
That is the view that mathematical is somewhat of an empirical endeavor. Many disagree however, and think that mathematics is something fixed and representative of the world. — Lionino
Certainly mathematics is, in a sense, fixed. — Ludwig V
But what we are talking about it is applied mathematics. It seems pretty clear that arithmetic and geometry originated in severely practical needs of large empires. — Ludwig V
But it does seem to have taken off on its own, as it were, as a theoretical enterprise. Here, we are talking about applied mathematics. — Ludwig V
I think what fishfry means to say is that mathematics is the way the world is represented to us. That's the point of the comparison with what sound is to a bat. I would rather say that mathematics is the way we represent our world to ourselves. — Ludwig V
It's true that the mathematical techniques we use are fixed - though we also develop new techniques, as in 17th century calculus or non-Euclidean geometries. But we have to work out how they can be applied to specific phenomena. — Ludwig V
But you just proved P2 yourself! You agreed that under the hypothesis of being able to recite a number at successively halved intervals of time, there is no number that is the first to not be recited. — fishfry
Since I don't know what "reality" means in its philosophical sense (which I designate by "Reality", but I do know, roughly, what you mean by "the limit of our theories", I would prefer to say "The limit of our theories is Reality". I'm of the school that teaches that the philosophical sense is metaphysics, and nonsense. But, since I arrived on these forums, I've had to recognize that, in philosophical discourse, "Reality" is a term in regular use and with some level of common understanding.As if reality is the limit of our theories. — fishfry
Not the only tool. We have sound as well. Not that we know everything, thank God.Or worse. Our math is like the bat's echoes. Just the only tool we have to understand the world, but greatly limited. And we think we know everything. — fishfry
Well, I would certainly want to get him to explain what he means by "is". That might slow him down a bit.The universe isn't just described by math, it "is" math. Which is a category error so massive that Tegmark must be trolling. The equations of motion describe the planets, they aren't the planets themselves. The map is not the territory. Just as the source code for a program must be executed on hardware in order to do anything.
Tegmark must be trolling. There is no other explanation. That so many take him seriously is a good reason to be skeptical of experts, celebrity scientists, and "public intellectuals." — fishfry
I don't think there was anything wrong with your explanation. There's no such thing as the bullet-proof, instantly comprehensible, explanation. On the contrary, it helps to allow people space to turn what you say round and poke it and prod it. It's part of the process of coming to understand a new idea.The example is so familiar to me that I thought it would add clarity. To the extent it got in the way, perhaps I should rethink how I present the idea. — fishfry
Quite so. It's a sequence, but also a chain, because each point of the sequence depends on its predecessor. The reason it's not defined at the limit is that we can never follow the chain to its' conclusion - even thought the conclusion, the end, the limit, is defined.The lamp's defined at each point of the sequence, but it's not defined at the limit. — fishfry
I'm asking, in what sense? Surely math has never been fixed. It's always changing. It's a human activity. — fishfry
Originated as, yes. But that doesn't restrict how math is seen today. — fishfry
I agree with all of that. But I think it is very, even hideously, complicated.I think you are agreeing with me. Abstract today, applied tomorrow. Or often the reverse. We invent new abstract math to help us understand some real world application. It goes back and forth. — fishfry
If you are referring to some kind of Platonic math that's already known by God, that we are just discovering, that's an entirely different discussion.
Am I understanding you correctly? — fishfry
Besides, math can't "represent the world," simply because there are Euclidean and non-Euclidean geometry. They can be used to represent the world; but they can't both be true, hence they can't both "represent the world." They can only be used to represent the world.
Math can not tell you what's true about the world. It can only be used to model various aspects of the world. That's different. — fishfry
The idea that mathematical entities aren't real, especially that they aren't abstract objects. — Lionino
So many questions about this.Many philosophers think mathematical objects are real objects that exist outside of space and time. — Lionino
It would be merely picky to ask whether "+" and "-" are objects, because it is obvious that they are operations to be carried out on objects. — Ludwig V
Does anyone deny that numbers exist? — Ludwig V
Does anyone claim that they are concrete in the way that bricks and timbers are? — Ludwig V
Oh, well. That changes everything. I thought I was talking to a platonist and trying to get him to face up to some of his problems. But that's a bit futile.I think only nominalism is really sensible when we get to the bottom of things. — Lionino
So you deny that numbers exist? Really?Putting it bluntly, nominalists and conceptualists and every kind of anti-realist strictly defined. — Lionino
Well, when was the notion of limits of a series introduced? Not back then I think. I'm not an expert in the history, but Zeno was definitely using techniques beyond the state of the art at the time. Good for him.I don't think the calculus is relevant. — Ludwig V
Where there's not-water? I accept that as a physical impossibility, yes, but overtaking a tortoise is not.If you accept that Twin Earth is not physically possible
Well illustrate. A list is not a parent, so I disagree with the '=' you put there. I'm sure there is a correct symbol to express that any member of that list satisfies the definition of parent.A list of valid options is not a definition of a state.
— noAxioms
Parent = (Mother or father).
I replied to this in the simulation topic since discussion of it seems to be of little relevance to this topic.Tegmark must be trolling. — fishfry
The two of us also seem to be on the same page.But you [Michae] just proved P2 yourself! You agreed that under the hypothesis of being able to recite a number at successively halved intervals of time, there is no number that is the first to not be recited.
This proves that all numbers are recited. — fishfry
Not in those words. "Does not allow for a minute to pass", like somehow the way a thing is described has any effect at all on the actual thing.I said that time stops? — Metaphysician Undercover
Anyway, I see nothing in any of the supertask descriptions that in any way inhibits the passage of time (all assuming that time is something that passes of course).The specifications do not allow for a minute to pass, that's the problem. — Metaphysician Undercover
The OP scenario is pure abstract, and it directly describes a state beyond the passage of a minute.I don't think so. I said that in the scenario of the op, 60 seconds will never pass.
Ah, it slows, but never to zero. That's the difference between my wording and yours. Equally bunk of course. It isn't even meaningful to talk about the rate of time flow since there are no units for it. The OP makes zero mention of any alteration of the rate of flow of time.But clearly time does not stop. In that scenario, time keeps passing in smaller and smaller increments, such that there is never enough to reach 60 seconds, but time never stops.
Not to put words in anybody's mouth, but such a statement depends heavily on the definition of 'exists'. For instance, does the number 37 have a location somewhere in our universe? When was it created? That references a definition of "is a object in our universe". If you define 'exists' as 'is an abstract concept in some mind somewhere', then 37 exists as long as somebody is thus abstracting. It's still a version of 'is part of the universe'.So you deny that numbers exist? Really? — Ludwig V
So you deny that numbers exist? Really? — Ludwig V
Is it perhaps because you think people should not say mathematics is thus and so, but be more specific? — Ludwig V
Or because people so often say that mathematicians think this and that when it is plain that only some mathematicians think those things? — Ludwig V
Yes. That annoys me as well. Though there has to be a little wriggle room, doesn't there? Philosophers, in particular, would be very constricted if such a rule were strictly enforced. Though I do agree that some philosophers would do well to be much more cautious than they are. For example, it is clearly wrong to treat the latest speculations from speculative cosmology as established fact.Because I think people should not claim X when whether X is far from being settled by specialists. Not exactly the same but close to how you put it: — Lionino
Yes. And as you say, they were beyond the state of the art at the time, so what he was doing needs to be rather carefully described (unless you are going to propose time travel.) It is very difficult to handle anticipations of later developments in historical texts. Some people have seen anticipations of Einstein in Berkeley. In a sense, they may be there. But I think that's merely a similarity rather than an anticipation. I don't know how to represent this case properly.Zeno was definitely using techniques beyond the state of the art at the time. — noAxioms
Yes, and I think that @Lionino may have been protesting at such ways of talking. If one is not a platonist, the way to say what you want to say is to conceptualise "real" in a non-platonic way. To outright deny that infinities exist is just attention-seeking. Though perhaps philosophers are not exempt from such a very human temptations.There are people today that say that there are no real infinities, whatever that means. — noAxioms
I've noticed a variety of extensions of the use of "=" lately, so I'm sorry if I misused it. I'm glad you recognized what I was trying to say.A list is not a parent, so I disagree with the '=' you put there. I'm sure there is a correct symbol to express that any member of that list satisfies the definition of parent. — noAxioms
Yes, for me, that is the most helpful approach. Different kinds of object - different modes of existence. If you haven't come across it before, you might find this reference useful.For me, numbers exist more like Superman exists or an equation exists rather than how my hand exists. — Lionino
The only downside I can think of is that it might lead to us conceding that God exists just because so many people believe that he/it does. But then, the same would apply to Zeus, Apollo, Thor, Loki, Horus, Ptah etc. So no-one could draw the conclusion that one is a believer in any of them.Fictionalism is an approach to theoretical matters in a given area which treats the claims in that area as being in some sense analogous to fictional claims: claims we do not literally accept at face value, but which we nevertheless think serve some useful function. — Stanford Encyclopedia - Modal Fictions
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