But numbers, and other ‘objects of reason’, are real in a different way to sense objects. And that is a stumbling block for a culture in which things are said to either exist or not. There is no conceptual space for different modes of reality (leaving aside dry, academic modal metaphysics). Which is why we can only think of them as kinds of objects, which they’re actually not. They’re really closer to kinds of acts. — Wayfarer
Do infinitesimals exist (in the platonistic sense)? — Michael
Do mathematical objects exist in some exotic realm, awaiting discovery? — jgill
And it has changed character from a descriptive and predictive tool to an enormous game, unbounded in some aspects, with recently formulated foundational rules. — jgill
I've always thought of these little critters as part of the metaphysics of mathematics — jgill
Platonism about mathematics (or mathematical platonism) is the metaphysical view that there are abstract mathematical objects whose existence is independent of us and our language, thought, and practices.
Do infinitesimals exist (in the platonistic sense)? - 3. Infinitesimals exist according to some number systems but not others. — Michael
This IS the mistake we do.Starting with the natural numbers, which are ways to distinguish objects and converse about quantities, mathematics has grown to virtually unimaginable proportions over the millennia — jgill
You can believe that numbers and other abstracta really and truly exist without being a mathematical platonist. You merely assert that they exist because we have created them, and they will cease to exist if we also cease. — J
You can believe that numbers and other abstracta really and truly exist without being a mathematical platonist. You merely assert that they exist because we have created them, and they will cease to exist if we also cease.
— J
What about the laws of logic, like the law of the excluded middle? Does that cease to obtain in the absence of rational sentient beings? — Wayfarer
Meaning whatever reality they possess is contingent - so they can’t ‘really and truly exist’. — Wayfarer
I tend towards objective idealism - that logical and arithmetical fundamentals are real independently of any particular mind, but can only be grasped by an act of rational thought. — Wayfarer
What about the laws of logic, like the law of the excluded middle? Does that cease to obtain in the absence of rational sentient beings? — Wayfarer
You seem to be suggesting that one of these logics is correct. — Michael
There really is privileged metaphysical structure; we're just not sure about the terms to use. — J
Those kinds of ideas are all generally Platonistic. — Wayfarer
Popper's "Third world" differs from Plato's world of forms in that it is entirely an artefact of language and culture and is thus constantly changing. This is in contrast to the changeless world of Plato's forms. — Janus
This IS the mistake we do.
We START from natural numbers as it's the natural place to start for counting. It basically a necessity for our situational awereness, hence even animals can have a rudimentary simple "math"-system. Yet simply as mathematics has objects that are not countrable, starting with infinity, infinite sequences and infinitesimals, whole math simply cannot be based on natural numbers. This is the reason why Russell's logicism faced paradoxes. Not everything was discovered. That there exist the uncountable should make it obvious to us that natural numbers and counting isn't the logical ground on which everything mathematical is based upon. — ssu
How does the issue of correctness arise? — J
Couldn't both types of logic exist platonically -- awaiting discovery by sentient beings? To put it another way, if you believe that any abstracta can exist platonically, why draw the line at a single, putatively correct logic? — J
Yes, because that's what we do. Presumably the sort that don't interact with the world are pure maths, the ones that do, applied. — Banno
I don't think it makes any sense to say that they platonistically exist in New Foundations but don't platonistically exist in ZFC. We can only take the approach of mathematical fictionalism and say that they exist according to New Foundations but not according to ZFC. — Michael
I was thinking about things like the Fibonacci sequence. It shows up in a lot of places that have nothing to do with human consensus. There's something about the structure of math that matches up to the structure of the universe in some ways — frank
And the structure of the universe isnt the product of imaginative construction? Wittgenstein would say you’re being tricked by your own grammar, that is, by hidden suppositions that project themselves onto the ‘real’ world and then seem to arise from that outside. — Joshs
Suppose I say, "x exists according to Harry." You say, "x does not exist according to Sally." What is the subject of the dispute between Harry and Sally? Are they in disagreement about x, or about what 'exists' means? — J
So rather I am expressing skepticism towards those who would claim mathematics is 'objectively real', and also pointing out the contradiction in the term 'mathematical platonism'.
Note that I am not saying that science shows us what is real, rather it seems to heavily suggest the existence of an underlying reality because it is able to make models of how that reality works to a degree that is at least accurate enough for our human endeavors.
The core of what I'm saying is that, as Plato argued, it is very difficult to even access the reality that underlies our world of sense experience, let alone make statements about this reality.
Yet this is just assuming the conclusion. At best you've argued for a sort of nescience on this question, but skepticism and agnosticism are not the same thing as rejecting a thesis. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Ok, why can't this involve numbers, which are essential to modern science? Can we infer what biology and evolution tells us about how our sense organs work in some way corresponds to reality, but not that the math that underpins these finding does? Why is that? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Your position seems far more similar to Locke, Hume, Kant, etc. To be sure, Plato acknowledges a distinction between reality and appearances, but he does not suppose that reality is some sort of noumenal "reality as divorced from all appearances." Indeed, his supposition is that threeness, circles, etc. are more real than the world of sensible appearances because they are more intelligible/necessary/what-they-are. This is, in an important sense, the exact opposite of supposing that reality is the world with all appearances (including intelligibility) somehow pumped out of it or abstracted away. — Count Timothy von Icarus
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