His version is idiosyncratic though. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Nice. That's the sort of playfulness we get by adopting these considerations. I can't help you with re-defining smoothness for Taxicab space, but since every point is on a corner I don't see how the path can be differentiable, and hence smooth.Here's a Proofs and Refutations - the source of Lakatos' concept of lemma incorporation - inspired investigation into square circles. — fdrake
That's the take-away. It's related to what I was trying to show with Banno's game - in which any rule can be undermined; but also, and yet again, to the analysis of language in A nice derangement of epitaphs....logical impossibility isn't all it's cracked up to be... — fdrake
Basically I see the appeal of Aristotle and common sense as a mistaken appeal — Moliere
Material logic — Count Timothy von Icarus
Historically logic is the thing by which (discursive) knowledge is produced. When I combine two or more pieces of knowledge to arrive at new knowledge I am by definition utilizing logic. — Leontiskos
word searches are neither good arguments nor good ways of informing yourself about philosophy. — Count Timothy von Icarus
A tale. One of the pre- socratics - I forget which - "proved" that air becomes colder under pressure by blowing on his figure. The breath feels cold. And we all know that a wind is cold. Hence, he disproved that gases under pressure increases in temperature. Do we take this as a refutation of thermodynamics? — Banno
logical impossibility isn't all it's cracked up to be — fdrake
A quick look at the Open Logic Project will show you how logic grows, tree-like, each system depending on, but slightly different from, the others. It's already "off the ground"."Pure logic" as you describe it could never get off the ground because it would be the study of an infinite multitude of systems with absolutely no grounds for organizing said study. — Count Timothy von Icarus
More than OK.Therefore it's ok to do pointless investigations. — frank
Basically I see the appeal of Aristotle and common sense as a mistaken appeal -- it makes sense of the world, but need not hold for all empirical cases: There are times when a person is in contradiction with themself, or an organism has a contradictory cancer, or a social organism is composed of two opposite poles (hence Hegel's use of contradiction in attempting to understand a social body or mind). — Moliere
And I, for one, take up the liar's paradox as a good example of an undeniable dialetheia: A true contradiction. — Moliere
And I, for one, take up the liar's paradox as a good example of an undeniable dialetheia: A true contradiction. — Moliere
Knowing something about logic and the context helps to understand why the liar paradox is of interest. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Well, your post would appear obtuse to the layman, and maybe it just is. — Leontiskos
What is round is not pointy — Leontiskos
A circle is, by definition, a set of points Euclidean equidistant from one central point. — fdrake
Importantly, doing this would not be wrong, as such. It's just one approach amongst many. The error here, if there is on, would be to presume that this was the only, or the correct, approach - that it's what we ought do....you could insist that we're not talking about a circle when we're talking about sets equidistant from a point in the taxicab metric. — fdrake
"An interesting question arrises". There are two values for the limit - 2 and √2. So the space is not smooth, unless we re-define "smooth". — Banno
Me going through the maths there isn't an attempt to side with ↪Cheshire over @Banno, because being able to explore the conceptual content of the allegedly logically impossible should tell you that logical impossibility isn't all it's cracked up to be. You do have to ask "which logic and system?", and "what concept am I not formalising right?" or "what concept is making the weird shit I'm imagining weird?".
But that's cheating, of course. "Monster barring" in Russell's terms.Trick question. As long as you are talking about tiny triangles the sides add up to more than the diagonal. No matter how small they get. So the only question is what do the sides add up to in one tiny triangle. Then multiply by the number of triangles to get 2. A triangle is not a diagonal! — EnPassant
Seems to me that it remains unclear what "material logic" is
But is our preference for systems arbitrary? — Count Timothy von Icarus
But we don't pick systems arbitrarily. — Count Timothy von Icarus
It's not the case that the Earth, baseballs, and basketballs are all just as triangular as they are spherical just because it is possible to define a system where this is so.
To affirm that would be to default on the idea that any statement about the world having priority over any.
So it's bits of applied logic and ontology and model theory and metalogic. Fine.What about the summary here is unclear? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Imagine you start at a point, and you go 1 step north and 1 step northeast
The taxicab metric says you've travelled 2 total units - you add the steps.
The euclidean metric says you've travelled sqrt(2) total units - you measure the line. — fdrake
A circle in taxicab geometry, a set of points defined as equidistant from a single point, looks a lot like a square in euclidean space. — fdrake
I could also insist that it is a circle, and how are we to decide between your preference and my preference? — fdrake
The derivative of a curve... — fdrake
A circle is, by definition, a set of points Euclidean equidistant from one central point.
And thus we've revealed what sneaky hidden presumption you had through lemma incorporation. — fdrake
Take all the points Euclidean distance 1 from the point (0,0) in the Euclidean plane. Then delete the point (0,0) from the plane. Is that set still a circle? Looks like it, but they're no longer equidistant from a point in the space. Since the point they were equidistant from has been deleted. — fdrake
If we go by Leontiskos intuition that round things cannot be pointy in any context, well the Earth is in trouble. — fdrake
I just wouldn't call them circles to my students learning shapes. — fdrake
I agree. The everyday conceptual content of Earth (the concept), baseballs (the concept) and basketballs (the concept) are that they are round.
How do you decide whether it's fit for task? Well I suppose you decide on a task by task basis.
If the presupposition is that all systems are equal, our preferences for them arbitrary, then of course logical impossibility is pretty much meaningless.
But we don't pick systems arbitrarily. — Count Timothy von Icarus
But they are. You have an odd assumption that points are stipulative, as if we could delete a point or as if a point could have spatial extension. The set of points is still equidistant from a point. This idea of "deleting" points mixes up reality with imagination. — Leontiskos
And why is this? Is it not because of what those things actually are? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Sure. So with the "raindrop" addition example, isn't the appropriateness of the system determined by the real properties of rain drops? — Count Timothy von Icarus
I am all on board with the idea that the tools will vary with the job, but it seems to me that to explain why some tools are better for some jobs than others requires including properties of "things in the world." — Count Timothy von Icarus
Even when we speak of "concepts," it seems to me that there is plenty of evidence to support the claim that our cognitive apparatus is shaped by natural selection, and this in turn means our thinking and our preferences, relate to "how the world is." — Count Timothy von Icarus
Let's change track. You tell me exactly what you mean by a circle with an intensional definition, and we'll go with that. Then do the same for roundness and pointy! — fdrake
A circle is a plane figure bounded by one curved line, and such that all straight lines drawn from a certain point within it to the bounding line, are equal. The bounding line is called its circumference and the point, its centre. — Circle | Wikipedia
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