Yay!! Thanks a tonne :) — keystone
I agree that the program you describe halts, however, I'll focus on Turing's version, by agreeing that the program that computes 0.333... to an arbitrarily fine precision halts.
I agree that by definition that's what it means for a number to be a computable number, so by definition 0.333... is a computable number.
I agree that by that definition pi is a computable number. — keystone
I agree that no program can compute pi to infinitely fine precision.
You might even agree with me that no program can compute 0.333... to infinitely fine precision. — keystone
We extend in a natural way the operation of Turing machines to infinite ordinal time, and investigate the resulting supertask theory of computability and decidability on the reals. The resulting computability theory leads to a notion of computation on the reals and concepts of decidability and semi-decidability for sets of reals as well as individual reals. — Hamkins
My understanding is that a program halts if it reaches a point where it completes its execution and stops running. Do you actually disagree with this definition of halt? — keystone
You are employing a straw man argument. I'm saying that the program that computes 0.333...to infinitely fine precision does not halt, and you are saying that the program that computes 0.333... to an arbitrarily fine precision does halt. I agree with you, but your argument doesn't address my point. — keystone
I believe the term 'computable number' applies to a number which can be represented by an algorithm. Am I wrong? If so, it is a very misleading name because the definition makes no mention of computers, finite resources, or anything of the sort. I would much rather call them 'algorithmic numbers' but let's stick with the current terminology. — keystone
I believe the term 'halt' applies to the execution of the algorithm. If it cannot be executed to completion then it does not halt. — keystone
Your failure to see the above distinction relates to one of my central complaints about the current (bottom-up) view of mathematics: mathematicians too often obfuscate the program (the algorithm) with it's execution (the generation of output by the algorithm). And it doesn't help that we call both the program and it's output the same thing: numbers. This is where I'm trying to bring clarity to the situation by redefining terms (such as what it means to be a rational vs. a real), but it turns out that such efforts just makes you think I don't know what I'm talking about. — keystone
Shouldn't the first principles be self-evident? — keystone
We experience continua and finite numbers all the time in our physical reality. The same cannot be said about points and transfinite numbers. It is the points which must be constructed from first principles. It is infinity which must be derived, not axiomatized into existence. — keystone
Euclid's line is so simple -- breadthless length. It's hard for anyone to say that's not self-evident. And I can easily construct a point from that line - I cut it and the midpoint emerges. The bottom-up view is far less self-evident. Somehow combining sufficiently many objects of no length results in an object of length. And even though nobody has a good explanation of how this works we nevertheless proceed by saying that the continuum constructed in this fashion is paradoxically beautiful and only to be seriously discussed by the experts. Really? — keystone
You expect a deeper structure to my line, such that, say, when I cut line (0,4) at point 2 that this involves identifying a pre-ordained point and isolating it by means of a cut. That's not what I'm proposing. My line has no deeper structure or additional properties beyond continuity and breadthless length. — keystone
I've come to realize that I've been heading down the wrong path by saying that my line is a bundle of 2ℵ0
2
ℵ
0
points. — keystone
I ended up here because I was defending against your arguments that my line has gaps. It turns out that my defense has just made you expect a structure to these points. It is better for me to just claim as a first principle that the line is continuous. As such, I'd like to discard the 'bundle' argument. — keystone
Instead, the structure you are looking for comes from the cutter, not the line. I can cut line (0,4) anywhere I want and label the midpoint that emerges '2'. In labelling that point '2' I am making an agreement with myself that any subsequent cut I make, I will label it to maintain the structure we have come to expect with numbers (as captured by the SB tree). For example, if I subsequently cut the line (2,4) I agree to label it with a number between 2 and 4. — keystone
In the top-down view, the cutter/mathematician plays a central and active role in maintaining structure and, moreover, actualizing objects....not unlike the the observer in QM...hmmm.... — keystone
In the philosophy of mathematics, intuitionism, or neointuitionism (opposed to preintuitionism), is an approach where mathematics is considered to be purely the result of the constructive mental activity of humans rather than the discovery of fundamental principles claimed to exist in an objective reality.[1] That is, logic and mathematics are not considered analytic activities wherein deep properties of objective reality are revealed and applied, but are instead considered the application of internally consistent methods used to realize more complex mental constructs, regardless of their possible independent existence in an objective reality. — Wiki
There's nothing actually infinite about the line. What is infinite is the potential for the cutter to make 2ℵ0
2
ℵ
0
cuts to the line. — keystone
But since (1) an infinitely precise computable irrational cut requires the completion of a supertask, — keystone
(2) non-computable irrational cuts cannot be algorithmically defined and (3) the cutter can only ever perform finitely many cuts, this potential can never be completely actualized. When working in 1D, the mathematician will forever be stuck working with a finite set of lines and points. However, because the mathematician can continue to make arbitrarily many more cuts (i.e. any natural number of cuts), that set can grow to be arbitrarily large (i.e. have any natural number of elements). — keystone
Of course that's possible (and likely). After all, that's why these ideas are being discussed in this chat forum and not eternalized in the Annals of Mathematics. But since yelling 'I'm not crazy' only makes one sound crazier, I won't challenge this point further and hopefully the ideas will eventually speak for themselves. — keystone
I know how it sounds, that's why I'm reluctant to talk about QM and paradoxes at this time. — keystone
When I communicate the fundamentals, you ask for the implications. When I communicate the implications, you ask for the fundamentals. — keystone
My only hope is that at some point the fundaments become coherent to you, after which the implications will naturally follow. I admire you for sticking with me for this long given that you think my ideas have so far been incoherent. — keystone
I ask ChatGPT to give me the Latex equivalent of an expression and I insert that Latex string with the math tag. — keystone
set theorist Joel David Hamkins is investigating Infinite-time Turing machines. — fishfry
You seem to be unhappy that abstract math doesn't climb into the wiring cabinet and start patching cables. Do I have that right? I don't think you don't know what you're talking about. I think I don't know what you're talking about. I'm throwing out guesses. You don't like infinities, ok there's finitism. You want things to be algorithmic, ok there's constructivism. You want there to be a minimal positive real, ok that's computer arithmetic. None of it sticks. Why do you reject the doctrines you espouse? — fishfry
Shouldn't the first principles be self-evident?
— keystone
Of course not...non-Euclidean geometry... — fishfry
If I stipulate that every mathematicians that ever lived is a bad person for doing whatever you think they did ... would it help? Can you step back a tiny bit and see that if every smart person who ever lived is a dummy acting from bad faith ... well, maybe it's you, and not them. — fishfry
Abandoning the entire bundle argument? So the real line is no longer made of a countably infinite union of overlapping open intervals, each characterized by a particular computable number it contains? I thought that was a pretty good thing to achieve agreement on. You are abandoning this now? — fishfry
As far as gaps go, they're important. The completeness property, aka the Least Upper Bound property, aka Cauchy-completeness, is the defining characteristic of the real numbers. Accept no substitute! If someone tries to sell you a model of the real numbers, ask them if it's complete! Mathematical shopping advice. — fishfry
Do you know the infinite complete binary tree? — fishfry
Ah, well that's like the active intelligence of intuitionism. — fishfry
Well you are a long way from making that many cuts when you start by denying even countable infinity!! Isn't that a little inconsistent? — fishfry
Very difficult to get a model of the real numbers while denying infinite sets. It's been tried, really. — fishfry
Jeezus. That ain't workin'. Maybe some control characters in there. And don't use ChatGPT, it rots your brain. Lot of foolishness floating about in the culture lately. — fishfry
Ok. I get that you feel enthusiastic about this. I'm on your side. I hope you can work out your ideas. I do think they are a little half-baked at the moment. That's an honest assessment. — fishfry
If one proposes a mathematics without infinite sets, then that is fine, but the ordinary mathematics for the sciences uses infinite sets, which are not derivable from the rest of the set theoretic axioms, thus requiring an axiom. — TonesInDeepFreeze
For that matter, we don't physically experience breadthlessness, so breadthlessness is itself an idealization, just as infinitude is an idealization. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The notion of length is quite coherent. In context of the reals, length is a property of segments not of points. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Who said anything equivalent with "the continuum constructed in this fashion is paradoxically beautiful and only to be seriously discussed by the experts"? Specific quotes are called for. Otherwise the claim is a flagrant strawman. — TonesInDeepFreeze
It has been proposed in this thread that a sequence converges as n gets arbitrarily large. A sequence is a function. A function has a domain. If the domain is not infinite, then n cannot be arbitrarily large. — TonesInDeepFreeze
One is welcome to work it out in some other way. But then the natural question is: What are your primitives, formation rules, axioms and inference rules? — TonesInDeepFreeze
It was claimed that Russell's paradox is "still there". In what specific post-Fregean systems is it claimed that the contradiction of Russell's paradox occurs? — TonesInDeepFreeze
Back to the poster who claims to offer an alternative to classical mathematics: The word 'isolate' keeps coming up. What is a rigorous mathematical definition of 'isolate'? — TonesInDeepFreeze
It was claimed that the interval (0 1) is not an infinite union of disjoint intervals. It is false that the interval (0 1) is not an infinite union of disjoint intervals.Ostensively: (0 1/2) U [1/2 3/4) U [3/4 7/8) U ... — TonesInDeepFreeze
'Dedekind cut' is not defined in terms of 'gaps', nor 'executions', nor algorithms. 'Dedekind cut' is mathematically defined and we see mathematical proofs that the set of Dedekind cuts is uncountable. — TonesInDeepFreeze
In practice, applied mathematicians do not actually use infinite sets. — keystone
Who said anything equivalent with "the continuum constructed in this fashion is paradoxically beautiful and only to be seriously discussed by the experts"? Specific quotes are called for. Otherwise the claim is a flagrant strawman.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
[...] I think it's better for me to just take that statement back. — keystone
generate the infinite sequence (which is described with finite characters and, as per Turing, halts if executed.) — keystone
I see this informal forum conversation as the journey which may be slowly taking me toward that destination or may be leading me toward the junkyard to dump my ideas. Either way, this journey is useful to me. — keystone
It was claimed that Russell's paradox is "still there". In what specific post-Fregean systems is it claimed that the contradiction of Russell's paradox occurs?
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I think it's best for me to just take this claim back. — keystone
Back to the poster who claims to offer an alternative to classical mathematics: The word 'isolate' keeps coming up. What is a rigorous mathematical definition of 'isolate'?
— TonesInDeepFreeze
In earlier posts I described 'potential' points which existed only in bundles that can be isolated by means of a cut. I have since scrapped that idea. Instead of proposing that cuts isolate points, I am now proposing that cuts create points. — keystone
!⥱ — keystone
Let f be the function whose domain is the set of natural numbers such that:
f(0) = (0 1/2)
for n>0, f(n) = [(2^n - 1 )/2^n (2^n+1 - 1)/2^n+1)
The range of f is an infinite partition of (0 1). — TonesInDeepFreeze
Defining a line as the union of smaller lines would be a circular definition — keystone
'Dedekind cut' is not defined in terms of 'gaps', nor 'executions', nor algorithms. 'Dedekind cut' is mathematically defined and we see mathematical proofs that the set of Dedekind cuts is uncountable.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
In the context of computation, this distinction is moot since we can only ever speak of arbitrarily many cuts. — keystone
I'm willing to withdraw my comment about uncountably many cuts made to countably many rationals. — keystone
If we inspect the outcome of a real cut, we cannot determine what real algorithm was used to make that cut. — keystone
when executing real cuts we are forced to select a fractional interval at some finite depth in the Cauchy sequence of intervals, and whatever that interval may be could correspond to potentially aleph_0 different real cuts. — keystone
In my post directed to both you and TonesInDeepFreeze, I either directly or indirectly addressed a lot of your shared points. Below are my responses to your unshared points. Please let me know if I failed to respond to any of your points. — keystone
Computers - Clearly physical computers are limited by our finite observable universe, but I think that we are also in agreement that the abstract computers of mathematics also cannot be infinite. They can be arbitrarily large but are nevertheless finite. I'm interested in abstract computers, not physical computers. — keystone
Infinities - I think it's impossible to model a continuum using a finite set of indivisibles. However, I'm proposing that we model a continuum using an evolving finite set of divisibles. As we make cuts, the finite set grows, but it remains finite. As we make joins, the finite set shrinks, but never becomes empty. — keystone
Algorithmic - I don't want to use algorithms to construct indivisibles. I want to use algorithms to deconstruct (i.e. cut) divisibles (i.e. continua). — keystone
Minimal positive real - I'm not saying that there exists a minimal positive number. — keystone
Rather, I'm saying that we can generalize the output of algorithms by using a placeholder. So when I say that we cut (0,1) arbitrarily many times to produce an arbitrarily small number, I'm not saying that we can make infinitely many cuts or that there exists an infinitely small number. Rather, I'm saying that you can pick a positive number as large as you please and divide 1 by it. — keystone
We need to make a distinction between the core mathematical idea and language with which it's communicated. For example, the Pythagorean Theorem was known and used in various forms long before the formalization of bottom-up number-based systems. And it will continue to hold value even if we move past bottom-up number-based systems to top-down continuum-based systems. I'm not proposing that any such mathematical idea is wrong. — keystone
And even IF I'm right, it doesn't mean that bottom-up number-based systems are useless. They would remain useful in the same sense that Newtonian mechanics remains useful (it just cannot be used to describe our reality at a fundamental level). But yes, I agree that it is likely me who is the dummy. I am likely experiencing the Dunning–Kruger effect. But nevertheless ideas should be challenged on their merit, not on how unlikely it is for an important math idea to originate from an engineer on a chat forum. — keystone
I had to abandon the bundle argument, in part because it seems to imply a structure that's not there. — keystone
For example, I never proposed that the real line was made of a countably infinite union of overlapping open intervals. Rather, I proposed that a computer can begin to cut the line but it will never exhaust cutting such that the line is divided into infinitely many partitions. — keystone
I agree that a number-based system that has gaps cannot be used for calculus. However, a continuum-based system begin with a continuous line, and if all we do is make cuts, there will never be a state of the system where gaps are present. — keystone
I agree that the SB-tree and the infinite complete binary tree capture the same information. In fact, the binary tree might be preferable since binary is the language of computers. However, I prefer the SB-tree since it places fractions at the nodes. As described in my post to both you and TonesInDeepFreeze, I see binary numbers as algorithms operating on fractions. Since paths down the binary tree can also be seen are algorithms operating on fractions, I feel that the distinction between a node and a path is less clear with the infinite complete binary tree. — keystone
Yes, I do think my view falls near the intuitionist camp. — keystone
I think it's impossible to model a continuum using a finite set of indivisibles. However, I'm proposing that we model a continuum using an evolving finite set of divisibles. — keystone
I genuinely appreciate this sentiment. Given that my ideas continue to get reformulated throughout this discussion, I could only agree that they are in the baking process (and to be realistic, they are likely less than half-baked at this point). I also want to acknowledge that when the baking is complete the end product may not be anything anyone wants to eat! — keystone
I propose that non-computable irrationals are inaccessible and unnecessary, and that a real can only be a rational or a computable irrational. — keystone
I'm not commenting on your other post — fishfry
I understand the previous post was lengthy, and I know you don't owe me anything. However, I wonder if this marks the end of our discussion. I'm unsure how to keep it going since anything more might just be more words to skip over. If you have any advice on how to continue, I'd appreciate it. If you'd prefer to end our conversation here, I accept that and thank you for the discussion! — keystone
Didn't say that, just got a little overwhelmed by all the line items. I'll take a look at it. — fishfry
But what about my point about constructivism? If you reject the noncomputable reals, you're a constructivist. — fishfry
Suppose I grant that you have some alternative construction of the reals. What of it? All models of the reals are isomorphic to one another. — fishfry
My point exactly. If you have an alternative view of the reals, nothing changes. — fishfry
I don't see what ideas you've challenged. — fishfry
It took weeks for me to understand your bundles, and just when I did, you took them away. — fishfry
"Binary numbers" aka real numbers can never be algorithms, since there are way too many of them. There are uncountably many reals and only countably many algorithms. — fishfry
Sigh. I am not getting much from this latest post. — fishfry
Let me know when (or if) you have a system with formation rules, axioms and inference rules. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Depends on what you mean by "applied". Ordinary mathematics, even as used for basic applied interests such as speed and acceleration use ordinary calculus, which is premised in infinite sets. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Oh ok, that's great to hear. Yeah, sorry for the large number of line items... — keystone
You're right, I'm likely a constructivist/intuitionist. I say 'likely' because there's a lot of material to go through, and I need more time to fully understand it all. However, my views align with the key principles of constructivism. My main frustration with the material I've found so far is that it doesn't seem to address what I'm talking about... — keystone
Given this, it's pretty clear that I'm not constructing the familiar reals. — keystone
I think it is more correct to say that I have an alternate view of continua for which reals only play a supporting role. If mathematics were reformulated to be entirely absent of actual infinities would that be significant? — keystone
I'm working towards a foundation free of actual infinities. — keystone
Okay, I was too rash to take the bundles away. I think they're a useful way for us to find common ground. One thing I need to make clear though is that when I write (0,4) I'm referring to a bundle between point 0 and point 4. — keystone
I comment on this in the long post which you haven't responded to. — keystone
Your line items are helpful to you, and that is the ultimate goal. Technically it doesn't matter whether I ever understand your ideas or not, as long as I am useful as a sounding board. So if you will take the glass half full approach to my not relating to your charts and graphs and lists, then you can feel free to keep posting them and my eyeballs will feel free to be glazed. — fishfry
Check out this guy. — fishfry
constructivism seems more reasonable...But intuitionism...that's just a little out there for my taste. — fishfry
You're not constructing the familiar reals? First time I'm hearing this. Maybe you're constructing the computable reals. Is that what you're doing? — fishfry
I'm pretty sure, but have no specific info about this, that people already decided you can't do analysis, that is calculus and the theory of the reals, without the axiom of infinity. But I could be wrong. I think if you could do analysis without the axiom of infinity that would be impressive. — fishfry
But infinities are one of the most fun and interesting part of math! I always liked infinities. I think I just don't understand the psychology of someone who doesn't like the axiom of infinity.
Tell me, what makes you interested in trying to do math without infinite sets? — fishfry
I would interpret that as your intuition that the open intervals with rational endpoints are a basis for the usual topology on the reals. All the open sets are unions (perhaps infinite) of open intervals with rational endpoints. But then again ... do you allow infinite unions and intersections of sets? Do you want to get rid of infinitary operations as well as infinite sets? — fishfry
Did I miss a post? Or do you mean the long list of definitions and principles that glazed my eyes a bit? — fishfry
Sorry I'm still confused. Did you mean the big list? — fishfry
I possess concepts that would be found in an introductory calculus textbook — keystone
Such books don't axiomatize the principles used. And those books make use of infinite sets. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I think even constructivist and intuitionist set theories have a version of the axiom of infinity. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I'd like to know whether a "no complete, only potential, infinity" concept has been axiomatized in a way that would be to the satisfaction of cranks if they were ever to actually learn about such things. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You give me link to some unidentified video so that I would have to take my time to watch through to find out, or guess, what it is you want me to know about it. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Trying to make my ideas clearer so that your eyes might not glaze over has indeed helped me collect my thoughts. I've also benefitted in other of your recommendations, such as construtivism which I really appreciate. So thanks for the glass half full. But there will come a point where no further progress can be made if I can't produce post that you are able to digest. — keystone
I do plan to do a deeper investigation into Constructivism and certainly Brouwer will be a part of that. Thanks. — keystone
I, on the other hand, am particularly drawn to intuitionism because I find it to be the least 'out there'. In this perspective, what exists are not infinite, eternal abstract objects in some inaccessible realm, but rather the finite set of objects currently being 'thought' by active computers. In my view, if the number 42 is not presently within the thoughts of any computer, then 42 does not currently exist. — keystone
In line with my intuitionistic view, I'm not constructing any infinite set, rather constructing computable reals one cut at a time. More importantly, I can stop at any point and still have a working system. There's no need to complete the impossible task of constructing all the real numbers...after all, computers do math without ever having the complete set of real numbers in memory. — keystone
I disagree with this decision. I believe it is possible to perform analysis without relying on the axiom of infinity. — keystone
While I don't have formal rules or detailed structures yet, I possess concepts that would be found in an introductory calculus textbook, or perhaps an introductory engineering calculus textbook. Admittedly, this is a significant claim that requires substantial support...it's just that your eyes glaze over... — keystone
Cantor's proofs are quite fascinating. Many people, often labeled as "infinity cranks," argue that actual infinities are riddled with contradictions. These individuals are in the minority, as most mathematicians do not share this view. I'm intrigued by the idea of a mathematics that does not rely on actual infinity, as I believe this approach is more aligned with true mathematics. It promises to be free of contradictions and brings with it the potential for beauty and advancement. — keystone
Why do you talk of everything, such as 'all the open sets'? I can't imagine a computer holding this infinite set in memory. I'd rather talk about what I know is possible, such as a computer which holds a few open intervals with rational endpoints. As for infinitary operations, my long post with many bullets (let's call it the bullet post) addresses my view. — keystone
Yes, the bullet post. — keystone
One of the best ways you can respond to someone who brings a problem to you is to just ask them to explain it all to you in detail. — fishfry
There's nothing at stake for me here. I enjoy trying to relate your ideas with things I know in math, but there's never going to come a point where I "digest" this. — fishfry
Do these three computers each instantiate the existence of the same number 42? And how would you know? — fishfry
In finitism (rejecting the axiom of infinity) we can do a fair amount of number theory, but not analysis. You can't do calculus, you can't do physics. You can do finite approximations, but the underlying theory is infinitary. — fishfry
You should research that claim rather than just proclaim it. This is one of the reasons I am never going to "digest" your ideas. Many clever people have given these matters considerable thought. You should do a literature search on this idea to clarify your thinking. — fishfry
Can you see that grandiose claims made without sufficient background come down to untrained feelings and intuitions? Not that there's anything wrong with that. But it supports my belief that there is nothing to digest. — fishfry
I think you have a bad idea, not in the sense that it's absolutely wrong; but in the sense that you have a very naïve understanding of what's involved, so that it seems grandiose. — fishfry
Why? Infinitary set theory is perfectly clear of contradictions. Well, as far as we know. — fishfry
Are you a Cantor crank by any chance? — fishfry
The open sets were your idea. — fishfry
Did I post this Andrej Bauer article, Five Stages Of Accepting Constructive Mathematics? — fishfry
Someone could show me a diagram or list that was 100% correct and brilliant, and my eyes would still glaze. — fishfry
Agreed. But sometimes the person will not see the flaw in their argument unless explicitly identified by someone else. — keystone
By "digest" I didn't mean to suggest that you would accept it. But there's value in being able to entertain a thought without accepting it. — keystone
If a human thinks of a duck and somehow in their computations the duck behaves exactly like the mathematical object 42, then (within that person's thoughts) the duck represents an instance of the number 42. As the old saying goes, "If it swims like a 42, and quacks like a 42, then it probably is a 42." I think we both agree that absent of an intentional being giving mathematical meaning to the duck (or to electrical activity within a computer), no mathematics is going on. — keystone
But if at a later time the human's thoughts of the duck do not correspond to the number 42, then the duck is no longer an instance of 42. The number 42 is contingent on thought. It's existence is temporary. — keystone
If we frame our views within this context, the difference is that you believe in an infinite consciousness whose thoughts eternally encompass all numbers. On the other hand, I believe there is no such preferred consciousness; rather, there are only finite consciousnesses whose thoughts can hold only a finite number of numbers at any given time. — keystone
Computers perform calculus, and everything they do is finite. So, you're essentially arguing that there's a disconnect between the theory and the practice. Remember, in the case of calculus, the practice came first, and mathematicians later developed an actual-infinity-based theory to justify the practice. Might it be possible that a potential-infinity-based theory could provide a better justification for the practice? This one-minute video by Joscha Bach, titled "Before Constructive Mathematics, People Were Cheating," eloquently captures my view: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jreGFfCxXr4 — keystone
While I haven't done much research on logic, I have a reasonably strong grasp of basic classical calculus. I understand that continuity is essential for classical calculus—my view starts with continua. I also understand that limits are essential for classical calculus—my view achieves the same ends by using arbitrariness. If you don't want to entertain my ideas simply because clever people weren't able to make calculus work within a finitist framework, that's fine as well. But let's be clear—it's not that you can't digest my ideas; it's that you won't entertain them. — keystone
I understand how my claims appear. I'd like to support my position but it's quite hard if you don't look at my figures or words. You ask for the beef but the only comments you respond to are the bun. — keystone
I believe my view is naïve in the same sense that Naïve Set Theory is naïve (minus the contradictions). — keystone
Joscha Bach seems quite confident that classical mathematics is filled with contradictions. — keystone
Paraconsistent logic is an attempt at a logical system to deal with contradictions in a discriminating[clarification needed] way. Alternatively, paraconsistent logic is the subfield of logic that is concerned with studying and developing "inconsistency-tolerant" systems of logic, which reject the principle of explosion. — Wiki
You’ve probably heard the story of Penzias and Wilson, who struggled with persistent background noise on their radio receiver, initially attributing it to pigeon droppings. It turned out to be the cosmic microwave background radiation from the Big Bang, earning them a Nobel Prize. I believe Cantor has interpreted his incredible discoveries as mere pigeon droppings. — keystone
I don't think I mentioned open sets. — keystone
Funny you mention this. I skimmed through it a few days ago and then watched his YouTube lecture by that name yesterday. Now, I'm in the middle of his lecture on LEM. I'm really excited about watching his lectures. — keystone
Is your preferred format essay?? How did you become a mathematician and not an english major? — keystone
But seriously, how am I supposed to communicate my ideas to you? — keystone
This might not be the best chat forum etiquette, but would you be open to a Google Hangout? ...Please feel no need to even respond to that idea... — keystone
You said that numbers get instantiated when they appear in a computation. I asked you whether one number or several numbers get instantiated when various representations exist. Who determines that they act the same? Where is that process, that brings a number into existence? — fishfry
Is God watching all this and keeping track of everyone's version of each number? This seems like a cumbersome idea. — fishfry
I believe no such thing, what are you talking about? I believe in the axioms of ZF and not much else. They are purely a human artifact. — fishfry
It's hard to develop a theory of the reals without the axiom of infinity.....Even constructivists have infinite sets, not not noncomputable ones. — fishfry
But there is something to be said for infinitary math. Why shouldn't we enjoy having such a lovely theory of the infinite? What is the harm? — fishfry
You say, Start with a line. Make a cut. I don't know what these things are. — fishfry
You're just approximating the reals. — fishfry
And if it did, the contradictions would be repaired. People wouldn't stop doing infinitary math. — fishfry
I don't follow the analogy you're making. Cantor has underestimated or overestimated his discoveries? — fishfry
You have been making use of open intervals all along, haven't you? — fishfry
The noncomputable reals are telling us something. Infinitary math is telling us something. — fishfry
The history of math is expansive, never contractive. Nobody says, "Those complex numbers, they were a step too far." But they say that about infinitary math. — fishfry
I don't have an eye glaze factor when I'm coding, but I do when I do math. — fishfry
Are you getting frustrated? I'm sorry, I thought I was helping the best I can. — fishfry
I don't know why you are acting as if I'm not attending to what you say. I sense a difference of perspective that I'm not privy too. Everything seems fine at my end. — fishfry
I was trying to convey that the representation itself is not important; what matters is the behavior. If in my mind x+x=2, then x behaves like 1. Similarly, if y+y=2, then y also behaves like 1. In this scenario, 1 has multiple representations (x and y) in my mind, but that isn't an issue because they both behave the same. — keystone
But I must highlight that to conclude that x=1, I don’t work through an infinite checklist, considering all possible arithmetic equations involving 1. No, I'm mindful of the consistent and finite set of rules associated with the construction and arithmetic of the SB-tree (or equivalent tree), so all I need to do is declare that x will behave like the node occupied by 1. At that moment, I bring 1 into existence and it is representation in my mind is the character x. — keystone
We each are the god of the mathematical systems that inhabit our own minds. If we want to compare my (-inf,1) U 1 U (1,+inf) with your (-inf,42) U 42 U (42,+inf) we need to agree to the SB-tree and compare the nodes where my 1 and your 42 lie. If they correspond to the same node, then our systems are equivalent. While nobody explicitly does this, it's the unspoken agreement we make when comparing systems. I don't see why we would need a third party to arbitrate the comparison. — keystone
Since no human artifact can be infinite, is it fair to say that you believe in the axioms but not in the infinite objects they describe? — keystone
If so, this directly supports my thesis—forget about the existence of infinite sets and instead focus on the (Turing) algorithms designed to generate these infinite sets. — keystone
I'm receptive to a constructivist approach to the axiom of infinity. If were talking about computable infinite sets in the same way that Turing talked about computable real numbers I have no problems, provided we do not assert the existence of infinite objects. — keystone
What harm is there in relying on Newtonian mechanics when it performs admirably for slow-moving objects like ourselves? — keystone
Similarly, what harm is there in embracing General Relativity when the singularities it predicts are distant from our everyday experience? There's a certain beauty in their simplicity; as a mechanical engineer, I rely on Newtonian mechanics daily and will continue to do so regardless of advances in physics. — keystone
Yet, as physicists began pulling the loose threads of classical physics, a more fundamentally robust and aesthetically compelling framework emerged: Quantum Mechanics. There is something to be said for pulling the loose threads. — keystone
It would be much easier if you would just roll with the intuitions for a little while so we wouldn't get stuck on the first step. Let's sweep through the whole idea informally and if it has any merit then we can sweep through again and formally define things. Think of a line as a piece of string. Think of a cut as what you do with scissors to partition the string. You're making this more complicated than it needs to be. — keystone
No, I'm not. Yes, I'm referring to (Turing) algorithms that produce rational approximations with arbitrary precision, but the algorithm itself is exact. The algorithm perfectly encapsulates the essence of the real. That's why I'm emphasizing the algorithm itself, not its output. — keystone
I agree to both sentences! (1) That's what I'm trying to do and (2) I'm just trying to throw a 'potential' in front of the 'infinitary math'. — keystone
Cantor has already received considerable acclaim, making it difficult to envision greater recognition for him. What I meant to convey is that Cantor unearthed something monumental, yet his interpretation was poop (actual infinities). I believe that in the future, it will be recognized that his true discovery lay in articulating the potential within continua and mathematics as a whole. — keystone
I'm using open interval notation to describe the bundle (line) the lies between its endpoints. This bundle cannot be described as an infinite set of individual points, because as I mentioned before, we can only talk about individual points when the line has been cut. For this reason, I'm reluctant to say that I've been proposing open sets. — keystone
I agree with this sentiment. Whether it's noncomputable reals, the halting problem, Gödel's incompleteness theorems, or the liar's paradox, they are all screaming at us that there is a potential in mathematics that cannot be fully actualized. But Classical mathematics aims to actualize everything, much like classical physics. They both suffer the same flaw...and I believe are both addressed with the same resolution: a top-down view. — keystone
Yeah, you're going to lose some things with constructive mathematics, be it LEM or the axiom of choice. But by and large I'm proposing a much more beautiful structure. Just as classical physics was a natural stepping stone to QM, actual-infinitary-math is a natural stepping stone to potential-infinitary-math. — keystone
I can reframe my examples in Python if that's your preference. The main drawback however is that my posts would get longer. — keystone
It's frustrating to think that I'm running out of ways to communicate my ideas so I'm starting to think that the conversation might end prematurely with the least desirable conclusion (that you don't know whether my ideas are right or wrong). — keystone
But perhaps it's too soon to talk about the end. I'm getting value out of every post you and I write so I'd be grateful if we keep going and just take it one day at a time. — keystone
It's just that at some point we'll need to talk beef and I'll need to figure out an alternative way to communicate the bullet post. — keystone
Well I didn't become a mathematician! I got to grad school and my eyes glazed. — fishfry
I agree with this sentiment. Whether it's noncomputable reals, the halting problem, Gödel's incompleteness theorems, or the liar's paradox, they are all screaming at us that there is a potential in mathematics that cannot be fully actualized. But Classical mathematics aims to actualize everything — keystone
And also, if I could make this request ... can you write shorter posts? Short and to the point. — fishfry
I'm fine with cutting strings. You have never explained to me how this serves as a new foundation for math. — fishfry
If you have a set of rules (a bottom up concept) that let you know when two representations denote the same number, then why do you need the computer? Why not just accept that the rules themselves bring all possible numbers into existence already? — fishfry
I believe in the mathematical existence of the abstract objects they describe. — fishfry
There simply aren't enough algorithms to generate all the sets. There are countably many algos and uncountably many subsets of the natural numbers. — fishfry
I'd ask you to accept that rather than continually expressing disappointment with my posts. — fishfry
So after all this time your interval notation does not not stand for its conventional meaning? — fishfry
Not true. I published papers when I was active that never assumed infinity was actualized....so, your statement is not entirely correct. — jgill
I think even constructivist and intuitionist set theories have a version of the axiom of infinity.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
But isn't it more like a potential infinity? — keystone
You give me link to some unidentified video so that I would have to take my time to watch through to find out, or guess, what it is you want me to know about it.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
To be honest it's because I didn't feel like continuing the dialogue with you because I find some of your comments offensive. — keystone
As always, I appreciate your comments and this dialogue. — keystone
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