Are you sure we should call something like d=0.5∗g∗t2 a mathematical truth? I thought it was only true on some interpretation; as it stands, it has no meaning. — J
@RussellA: Eventually, after many attempts, we invent the equation , discover that it works, and keep it.................We know it works, but we don't know if it is a necessary truth.
"Are the equations being imposed or simply reflected in the mathematics?" — schopenhauer1
Some neo-Logos philosophies might say the mind cannot but help seeing the very patterns that shape itself. — schopenhauer1
I can imagine a type of pattern whereby the mind works (X), and a pattern whereby the world works Y, and X may be caused by Y, but X is not the same as Y. — schopenhauer1
Is our language contingently relating with the world or necessarily relating to the world. — schopenhauer1
I can see a sort of holistic beauty in the aesthetic of the language reflecting the world because it is derived from (the patterns) of the world. — schopenhauer1
I can see a sort of nihilistic "contingency" in the aesthetic of language never really derived from, but only loosely reflecting the world. — schopenhauer1
Are mathematical truths necessary truths
Following the schema "snow is white" is true IFF snow is white as a definition of "truth", then "d=0.5∗g∗t2" is true IFF d=0.5∗g∗ — RussellA
What do you mean that the equation d=0.5∗g∗t2 has no meaning? — RussellA
Both. For 100 days we observe the sun rise in the east, and invent the rule "the sun rises in the east". The rule reflects past observations, but is no guarantee that the rule will still apply in the future. We impose the rule on the world, in the expectation that the rule will still apply in the future. — RussellA
Some neo-Logos philosophies might say the mind cannot but help seeing the very patterns that shape itself.
— schopenhauer1
I'm with Kant on that. — RussellA
I can imagine a type of pattern whereby the mind works (X), and a pattern whereby the world works Y, and X may be caused by Y, but X is not the same as Y.
— schopenhauer1
Exactly. A postbox emits a wavelength of 700nm ( Y) which travels to the eye which we perceive as the colour red (X), where our perceiving the colour red in the mind was caused by the wavelength of 700nm in the world.
There is the general principle that an effect may be different in kind to its cause. For example, the effect of a pane of glass breaking is different in kind to its cause of being hit by a stone. — RussellA
Aesthetics is perceiving a unity in the whole from a set of disparate parts. For example, the magic of a Monet derives from the artist's deliberate attempt to create a unity out of a set of spatially separate blobs of paint on a canvas. Such a unity exists only in the mind of the observer, not in the world, in that one blob of paint of the canvas has no "knowledge" as to the existence of any other blob of paint on the canvas. Patterns only exist in the mind, not the world.
As patterns don't ontology exist in the world, but do exist in the mind, to say that patterns in the mind have derived from patterns in the world is a figure of speech rather than the literal truth. — RussellA
Perhaps it is more the case that the aesthetic brings meaning out of the meaninglessness of nihilism. It is the aesthetic that discovers the unity of a whole within disparate parts, finds patterns in randomness and seeks sense out of senselessness. For example, the aesthetic of Picasso's Guernica shows us the possibility of a greater good born out of the nihilism of war, and the aesthetic of the mathematical equation shows us a greater understanding born out of a nihilistic Universe that is fundamentally isolated in time and space. — RussellA
I understand. Do you think there are mathematical truths that are independent of what is the case in the world? Plain old theorems, in other words? — J
My understanding of truth is that it is defined by the schema "snow is white" is true IFF snow is white, where "truth" is the correspondence between propositions in language and equations in mathematics and what is the case in the world.
If I am correct, then if a proposition in language or an equation in mathematics is independent of what is the case in the world, then by the definition of truth, such a proposition or equation can neither be true nor false. — RussellA
Unum in the same sense as in non-dualism, advaita, non divided. — Wayfarer
My understanding of truth is that it is defined by the schema "snow is white" is true IFF snow is white, where "truth" is the correspondence between propositions in language and equations in mathematics and what is the case in the world. — RussellA
Or perhaps indivisible, and that seems to be a bit different. A chicken is indivisible. To divide it is to lose your chicken. — Leontiskos
There was consensus among the scholastics on both the convertibility of being and unity, and on the meaning of this ‘unity’ —in all cases, it was taken to mean an entity’s intrinsic indivision or undividedness. — Being without One, by Lucas Carroll, 121-2
For example, the magic of a Monet derives from the artist's deliberate attempt to create a unity out of a set of spatially separate blobs of paint on a canvas. Such a unity exists only in the mind of the observer, not in the world, in that one blob of paint of the canvas has no "knowledge" as to the existence of any other blob of paint on the canvas. Patterns only exist in the mind, not the world.
As patterns don't ontology (sic) exist in the world, but do exist in the mind, to say that patterns in the mind have derived from patterns in the world is a figure of speech rather than the literal truth. — RussellA
the neo-logos philosophies might say something like, "If nature has patterns, and our language has patterns, and we are derived from nature, it may be the case that our language is a necessary outcome of a more foundational logic". — schopenhauer1
I am afraid we are not rid of God because we still have faith in grammar. — Nietszche
This is the principle that animates all living beings, from the most simple up to and including humans. it is why, for instance, all of the cells in a living body develop so as to serve the overall purpose of the organism. So the 'one-ness' of individual beings is like a microcosmic instantiation of 'the One'. — Wayfarer
By referring to "accurate representation," you've introduced an epistemologically normative factor that is nowhere implied in the first three factors. — J
Maybe "it just is"? But isn't that super-convenient for us?
To put it in simple terms (borrowed from Sider), are we really not in a position to say that the Bleen people have gotten something wrong?
Well, perhaps, but how can "accuracy" be a factor at all? What would make something an "accurate representation," to use your phrase, and of what is it a representation? None of the three factors talk about how such an idea could arise.
To put it in simple terms (borrowed from Sider), are we really not in a position to say that the Bleen people have gotten something wrong? — J
chickens — J
I think what's strange about this problem is that the setup makes human beings helpless before the implacable necessity of mathematics, and that's the wrong story to tell. — Srap Tasmaner
In real life, a case like this is more likely to play out this way: you've got these 23 thingamabobs, and there's talk of splitting them three ways. You say, "Won't work," and someone less numerate than you says, "Well, let's just try." As they fail, with a puzzled look, they say, "Wait, I messed up somewhere. Let me start over." You will want to explain to them that it's impossible, because 23 is not only not a multiple of 3, it's a frickin' prime.
What's of primary interest here is that you, because of your relative expertise in mathematics, understand the situation better than the person who, even after trying and failing several times, still believes it might be possible. — Srap Tasmaner
what is your alternative? — Leontiskos
Either way the math/reality constrains our options. — Leontiskos
there is very little difference between the less numerate and the more numerate. The less numerate just takes a few more minutes — Leontiskos
Well, I know it's all off-topic for this thread, but that passage you quoted resonated with me. — Wayfarer
In an artificially bounded task like this — Srap Tasmaner
Life is not like that. — Srap Tasmaner
Either we find a creative way to complete this subtask (making do with rough equality ― 7 or 8 each, cutting the strawberries, if that's an option, or switching measures, say from units to weight, and so on) or we mark this path off in the search and backtrack until we find a path. — Srap Tasmaner
Reality, sure, but mathematics is how we conceptualize our situation and can inform both our choice of action and our method. Mathematics is adverbial. — Srap Tasmaner
Anywhere you want to look, it is plain as can be that thinking and acting mathematically is empowering for humans, not some implacable constraint. — Srap Tasmaner
But for the general distinction in approaches, which this little problem illustrates, the entire business world disagrees with you, the natural sciences disagree with you, the various branches of engineering disagree with you. — Srap Tasmaner
I think J's OP is interesting. It is something like: if mathematical necessity is not self-supporting, then whence is the necessity derived? — Leontiskos
But, all organic life displays just the kind of functional unity that a painting does, spontaneously. Those patterns most definitely inhere in the organic world. DNA, for instance. — Wayfarer
Because if within a world absent of observers, spatial and temporal relationships had no ontologically existence, then there would be no way of spatially and temporally relating disparate things together, meaning that in the world there would be no patterns, as a pattern can only exist if its parts are somehow related together. — RussellA
do the patterns that we see exist in the world or only in our mind — RussellA
A pattern has a unity because of the particular way things are spatially and temporally related to each other, where the whole is more than the sum of its parts. — RussellA
One might push back on Aristotle's categories sure, but science certainly uses categories. The exact categories are less important than the derived insights about the organization of the sciences. And the organization of the sciences follows Artistotle's prescription that delineations should be based on per se predication (intrinsic) as opposed to per accidens down to this day.
This is why we have chemistry as the study of all chemicals, regardless of time, place, etc. and biology as the study of all living things as opposed to, say: "the study of life on the island of Jamaica on Tuesdays," and "the study of chemical reactions inside the bodies of cats or inside quartz crystals, occuring between the hours of 6:00am and 11:00pm," as distinct fields of inquiry. Certain sorts of predication (certain categories) are not useful for dividing the sciences or organizing investigations of phenomena (but note that all are equally empirical).
Of course, there have been challenges to this. The Nazis had "Jewish physics" versus "Aryan physics." The Soviets had "capitalist genetics" and "socialist genetics," for a time. There are occasionally appeals to feminist forms of various sciences. But I think the concept that the ethnicity, race, sex, etc. of the scientist, or the place and time of the investigation, is (generally) accidental to the thing studied and thus not a good way to organize the sciences remains an extremely strong one.
That said, if all categories are entirely arbitrary, the result of infinitely malleable social conventions, without relation to being, then what is the case against organizing a "socialist feminist biology," "astronomy for leap years," and a "biology for winter months," etc ?
They certainly wouldn't be as useful, but that simply leads to the question "why aren't they useful?" I can't think of a simpler answer than that some predicates are accidental and thus poor ways to organize inquiry. We could ground this in the structure of things but it seems it might be simpler to ground it in phenomenology and the quiddity (whatness) of things as experienced. We can think here if how Husserl imagines changes to the noema (object of thought) and considers which changes force it to become an entirely different sort of thing.
Is this meant to be Tarski's view? Surely he didn't talk about what was the case in the world -- only about the correct relations between language and metalanguage. If one language has to be "about the world," then we wouldn't have any logical or mathematical truths at all, or at least that seems to be the necessary consequence. I don't think Tarski intended this. Unless I'm mistaken, he included these kinds of truths in his schema. — J
Within the modern correspondence theory, "snow is white" is also within the object language whilst snow is white is a fact in the world. — RussellA
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