Not necessarily. The Diagonal paradox can be extended to a sequence of smooth curves that converges to a limit curve in the complex plane in which the disparity of lengths is infinite. — jgill
Why can't we just choose to say the set of all sets that do not contains themselves is the highest in order and so is not included in itself? What in math or language requires that include itself in itself? — Gregory
Mathematicians have a long career of coming across inconsistencies and hurriedly changing the rules so that this particular inconsistency no longer counts. — Treatid
Second: Mathematicians have a long career of coming across inconsistencies and hurriedly changing the rules so that this particular inconsistency no longer counts. — Treatid
I think Axiomatic Mathematics is wholly mistaken. — Treatid
But if we consider the question in the context of the hyperreal number line - that is, the real number line augmented by adding infinite values at each end, namely Aleph-null and h, the goalposts move. — alan1000
This is a natural process. You seem to take a pejorative view of mathematical evolution. — fishfry
No changing of the rules. — jgill
There is mathematics - and there is the justification/explanation of mathematics.
Applied mathematics is concerned with whether the results are useful. I'm more than fine with this.
It is where pure mathematics tries to establish a foundation of knowledge that I am disgruntled. The effort is laudable - but mathematicians have gotten themselves stuck in a dead end and appear unwilling to extricate themselves.
Axiomatic Mathematics is the show piece of mathematics within which reside logic, formal languages and the majority of mathematical proofs.
But it doesn't work. Axiomatic Mathematics can't define axioms. As deal breakers go - this is one. — Treatid
There is an argument that a flawed system is better than no system. "We know axiomatic mathematics is flawed - but it is better than nothing". — Treatid
Except that axiomatic mathematics without axioms isn't merely flawed - it doesn't exist. The axiom bit is not negotiable. You can define axioms or you can't.
As it stands, axiomatic mathematics strives to find the essence of meaning by stripping away extraneous fluff like relationships.
In fact, meaning resides entirely in those relationships. — Treatid
All progress in modern thought is emphatically despite axiomatic mathematics. The presumption of objective truth has been a catastrophic mistake in modern thought. — Treatid
There is nothing to be lost by discarding axiomatic mathematics. — Treatid
As it happens, we can describe relationships. The thing that axiomatic mathematics is trying to dispose of is exactly where knowledge, understanding, meaning and... everything is. — Treatid
Mathematics' insistence that the path to truth is in defining inherent properties is holding back human progress. — Treatid
To be fair - mathematics is merely making explicit general societal assumptions. By making implicit assumptions explicit, mathematics makes it much easier to understand what our assumptions are and consider them critically. — Treatid
I do think that the idea of an objective universe is a dead end and mathematicians should have examined their failures more critically. And we still need the rigour and pedantry of the mathematical process. — Treatid
You have your basic facts all wrong. — fishfry
People study the 15th century British kings and queens — fishfry
You put too much effort in a post towards someone who won't learn from disagreement. In another thread, he said that he is quite sure about he was talking about, and in the same post he said that the twin paradox is a paradox in Newtonian physics only and not in relativity.
I had to read through that individual's entire post to realize it didn't make any sense. No matter. Maybe something I wrote was interesting to someone.
— Lionino
People study the 15th century British kings and queens
— fishfry
Study who? — Lionino
You put too much effort in a post towards someone who won't learn from disagreement. In another thread, he said that he is quite sure about he was talking about, and in the same post he said that the twin paradox is a paradox in Newtonian physics only and not in relativity. — Lionino
I had to read through that individual's entire post to realize it didn't make any sense. No matter. Maybe something I wrote was interesting to someone. — fishfry
Sorry did I get my history wrong? Not sure what you meant. I was making the point that people find value in studying all kinds of stuff so why not math. Was my analogy off the mark? — fishfry
Your quote includes something I didn't say. So I am not sure what you are replying to. — Lionino
No, it was a contrarian joke implying that people (me) don't study them. — Lionino
Speaking of category theory, I came in contact with it (again) to explore the subject of vector spaces with irrational dimensions. Naturally, vector spaces traditionally defined have a dimension n, n E N, naturally because the set of its basis can't have π elements, but something like that is the case of fusion categories, if a mathoverflow user is to be trusted. — Lionino
It is where pure mathematics tries to establish a foundation of knowledge that I am disgruntled. The effort is laudable - but mathematicians have gotten themselves stuck in a dead end and appear unwilling to extricate themselves. — Treatid
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.