Where is the result of the operation denoted? — Metaphysician Undercover
already denoted — Metaphysician Undercover
Otherwise there would be absolutely no purpose to the "=" because "2+1" on its own does not say 3. — Metaphysician Undercover
Otherwise there would be absolutely no purpose to the "=" because everything which 2+1 equals would already be said simply by saying "2+1". — Metaphysician Undercover
Therefore "2+1" would denote an infinite number of things — Metaphysician Undercover
and that would make interpretation impossible — Metaphysician Undercover
equations would be absolutely useless because the right side would just be saying the exact same thing as the left side — Metaphysician Undercover
You'd never solve any problems that way, because the problem would be solved prior to making the equation. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you didn't know that the two sides signified the exact same thing already (meaning the problem is solved) you could not employ the equals sign. — Metaphysician Undercover
But your account of the meaning of mathematics is not compatible with the ordinary formulation of mathematics, so if your account were to have any consequence, then it would need to refer to some other formulation.
— GrandMinnow
As I said, if this point is of relevance then the discussion is pointless. — Metaphysician Undercover
A contradiction is a statement and its negation. You have not shown any contradiction in what I said. The fact that '1', '2' and '2+1' each denote distinct numbers is not a contradiction.
— GrandMinnow
I can't believe that you do not understand the contradiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
Let' take the expression "2+1". Do the symbols "2" and "1" refer to distinct objects. If so, then there are two objects referred to by "2+1", and it is impossible, by way of contradiction, that "2+1" refers to only one object. — Metaphysician Undercover
The sequence of steps is not the process, it is the description of the process. That this is an important distinction is evident from the fact that the very same process may be described in different ways, different steps, depending on how the process is broken down into steps. — Metaphysician Undercover
Abstraction is simply how we interpret things — Metaphysician Undercover
No they are not different things. '4+2' and '10-4' and '6' are different names for the same thing.
— GrandMinnow
You agreed that they are different things which have the same result, or the same value. — Metaphysician Undercover
Why do you want to say that adding 2 to 1 is the exact same thing as taking 3 from 6 — Metaphysician Undercover
why treat properties as if they are any sort of object? — Metaphysician Undercover
I suspect that another big obstacle for you is that you don't understand that usually mathematics is extensional, not intensional.
— GrandMinnow
I've argued elsewhere that the axiom of extensionality is a falsity. — Metaphysician Undercover
In other words, equal things may be considered as the same thing. And that's clearly false. — Metaphysician Undercover
When we say that there is an even number of chairs, this means that the group of chairs can be divided into two groups. — Metaphysician Undercover
we are invited to be critical of formulations — Metaphysician Undercover
there is no need to offer an alternative formulation — Metaphysician Undercover
As I said, you equivocate: — Metaphysician Undercover
Which is the case, do "1" and "2' each signify distinct numbers, or does "2+1" signify a number? You can't have it both ways because that's contradiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
it is contradictory to say that "2+1" represents one number, because there are two numbers represented here. — Metaphysician Undercover
that the same quantitative value is predicated of the chairs in my dining room, and the musicians on that album, doesn't make that predicate into an object. — Metaphysician Undercover
what is signified by "6-3" is not the same as what is signified by "2+1". You agree about this. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you say that they have the exact same value, then we are using "equal" in the way I suggested. — Metaphysician Undercover
you are very clearly talking about two distinct processes represented by "2+1", and "6-3". — Metaphysician Undercover
Two distinct and different processes can have the same end result, and so those processes can be said to be equal. — Metaphysician Undercover
Does this imply, that in mathematics you judge a process according to the end result? — Metaphysician Undercover
If so, then how do you propose to judge an infinite process, which is incapable of producing an end result, like those referred to in the op? — Metaphysician Undercover
You are invoking an imaginary object represented by "2", just like a theologian might invoke an imaginary object represented by "God". — Metaphysician Undercover
You've been arguing that 4+2 is 6, and 10-4 is 6, and that there is potentially an infinite number of different things which are 6. — Metaphysician Undercover
The number of chairs is referred to by "6". There is a specific quantity and that quantity is what is referred to with "6". I don't see where you get the idea of an object from here. There are six objects which form a group. The group is not itself the object being referred to, because the six are the objects. Therefore the quantity must be something other than an object or else we'd have seven, the six chairs plus the number as an object, which would make seven. — Metaphysician Undercover
You're just making an imaginary thing, like God, and handing a property, "even " to that thing — Metaphysician Undercover
When we use the symbol "2", we use it to refer to a group of two things. like chairs or something. — Metaphysician Undercover
Why assume that there is something other than a quantity, an object called 6? — Metaphysician Undercover
where and how are we going to find this object?. — Metaphysician Undercover
you're claiming two nouns, 2 and 1, are one noun signified as "2+1". — Metaphysician Undercover
GM claims that in the context of "2+1" there is only one object referred, and "2" and "1" do not each refer to a distinct object. — Metaphysician Undercover
The issue I am looking at, is not how things are viewed by "ordinary mathematics", it is what is meant by the mathematical concepts. — Metaphysician Undercover
If we adhere to how things are viewed by mathematics, as if this is necessarily the correct view of things — Metaphysician Undercover
No, "2" and "1" signify values. — Metaphysician Undercover
Or do they sometime signify values and other times signify arguments — Metaphysician Undercover
I see no way that a function, which is a process, could have a value. That's like saying that + has a value. — Metaphysician Undercover
It is the mathematical object that is the number of chairs, and is the number musicians on the album 'Buhaina's Delight', and is the value of the addition function for the arguments 4 and 2 ...
— GrandMinnow
I really don't know what you could possibly mean by this. — Metaphysician Undercover
"2+1" means to put two together with one, and 2+1 equals "6-3", which means to take three away from six. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, if "sqrt" represents an operation, then "sqrt(2)" represents that operation with a qualifier "(2)". — Metaphysician Undercover
"+" represents an operation. So there are two distinct values, "2", and "1" represented, in "2+1", along with the operation represented by "+". — Metaphysician Undercover
that's a false assumption which I've discussed on many threads — Metaphysician Undercover
You and I are equal, as human beings, but we are in no way identical with each other. "Equals" is clearly not another word for identical with. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you agree that a symbol has a meaning, which is not necessarily an object? — Metaphysician Undercover
there is no need to assume that "2" or "3" represent objects. We'd have to look at how the symbols were being used, the context, to determine whether they represent objects or not. — Metaphysician Undercover
When I say that there are 6 chairs in my dining room, "6" refers to a number, but this is the number of chairs; the chairs are the objects and the number 6 is a predication. — Metaphysician Undercover
The number is not an object — Metaphysician Undercover
it is something I am saying about the chairs — Metaphysician Undercover
just like when I say "the sky is blue", blue is not an object. — Metaphysician Undercover
sqrt(2)" represents an operation — Metaphysician Undercover
what does it mean for a process to resolve to an object — Metaphysician Undercover
we cannot produce the precise object which "sqrt(2)" is equivalent to — Metaphysician Undercover
quantitative value "2+1" is equivalent to a definite quantitative value represented by "3" — Metaphysician Undercover
Having a definite quantitative value is what makes the number an object — Metaphysician Undercover
the goal when using mathematics is to measure things — Metaphysician Undercover
which is to assign to them definite quantitative values — Metaphysician Undercover
algorithm (described completely with finite characters) which if executed to completion — Ryan O'Connor
Cauchy Sequences — Ryan O'Connor
why do we even need to assume that irrational 'numbers' exist? Why not assume that irrationals are the algorithms that we actually work with? — Ryan O'Connor
I can accept that the square root operation is closed over the 'reals', but that doesn't mean it's closed over the real numbers. — Ryan O'Connor
[Many philosophers of mathematics] simply don't know enough math to comment intelligently on the subject of mathematical existence. — fishfry
I didn't say it isn't perfectly fine English. I said you haven't properly identified the subject signified with "there", to which "exists an object" is predicated. — Metaphysician Undercover
"Existence" is a word which is being used here as a predicate. — Metaphysician Undercover
I do have a problem with infinitesimals — Ryan O'Connor
the foundations — Ryan O'Connor
set theory — Ryan O'Connor
If set theory properly lies at the foundation of mathematics then (I believe) it should have no loose threads (e.g. paradoxes). — Ryan O'Connor
Do you believe that infinite processes cannot be completed? — Ryan O'Connor
Set theory itself (at least at the level of this discussion), as formal mathematics, does not say "an infinite process can be completed". Set theory doesn't even have vocabulary that mentions "completion of infinite processes". And the assumptions of set theory are the axioms. There is no axiom of set theory "an infinite process can be completed". — GrandMinnow
infinite sum — Ryan O'Connor
Imagine having a discussion with a child — Ryan O'Connor
If they ask a question, one way of addressing it is to add layers of complexity to the issue such that it is beyond their grasp — Ryan O'Connor
pile on a dozen textbooks — Ryan O'Connor
and say 'ask me when you know what you're talking about' — Ryan O'Connor
I'm here to learn — Ryan O'Connor
We don't need gatekeepers — Ryan O'Connor
we need people to help the litterers learn how not to litter — Ryan O'Connor
feel free to ignore my messages — Ryan O'Connor
if you're inclined to help then I welcome it — Ryan O'Connor
I don't think you will enjoy us talking informally about potential [problems with the current philosophical foundations for math] — Ryan O'Connor
If you don't want to talk informally, or if you want to disregard Zeno's paradox due to its informal presentation that is fine — Ryan O'Connor
Do you want to live in a country where the 'scenic trails' are exclusive to the 'privileged rich'? — Ryan O'Connor
You are trying to find a way to reject my ideas without understanding them — Ryan O'Connor
Again, set theory rises to the challenge of providing a formal system by which there is an algorithm for determining whether a sequence of formulas is indeed a proof in the system. So whatever you think its flaws are, that would have to be in context of comparison with the flaws of another system that itself rises to that challenge. — GrandMinnow
If there is no way to reinterpret the Axiom of Infinity — Ryan O'Connor
When working with ZF, we are always dealing with finite statements. — Ryan O'Connor
isn't a forum like this a good place to discuss [half-baked ideas]? — Ryan O'Connor
Do limits require the existence of infinite sets? — Ryan O'Connor
Do you believe that there are any paradoxes related to the set theoretic axiomatization of mathematics — Ryan O'Connor
how much education should a person have before initiating a discussion on a philosophy forum like this? — Ryan O'Connor
What resolution of Zeno's paradox are you satisfied with? Limits can be used to describe a process of approaching a destination but they cannot describe arriving there. So how does one arrive at some new destination? — Ryan O'Connor
Are your and fishfry's posts in agreement? — Ryan O'Connor
videos — Ryan O'Connor
it's unreasonable to expect a formal theory to be perfected in isolation. — Ryan O'Connor
When Descartes developed analytic geometry, I suspect that he didn't present axioms — Ryan O'Connor
Zeno's paradox, derivative paradox, dartboard paradox) are not paradoxical with this view because this view is void of actual infinity — Ryan O'Connor
with a few lines of code I can create a program to list all natural numbers even though it is impossible for the program to be executed to completion — Ryan O'Connor
I believe that if we abandon Platonism by replacing the actual infinities with potential infinities that the mathematics will stand. This is what I mean when I say it's a philosophy issue, not a mathematical issue. — Ryan O'Connor
Division by zero can be handled by the Fregean method of definition. And I addressed Godel previously; you don't know what you're talking about with regard to Godel. Morevover, as you mention what you consider to be flaws in classical mathematics, as I said before, you have not offered a specific alternative that we could examine for its own flaws. Again, set theory rises to the challenge of providing a formal system by which there is an algorithm for determining whether a sequence of formulas is indeed a proof in the system. So whatever you think its flaws are, that would have to be in context of comparison with the flaws of another system that itself rises to that challenge.With the 'Whole-from-Parts' view we can't put brackets around everything and call it math. There is no set of all sets. We cannot talk about division by zero. We can't avoid Gödel statements. — Ryan O'Connor
there can also be an unmeasured 'potential' state where a proposition is neither true nor false — Ryan O'Connor
Isn't 'not a number' a reasonable option to be included in the outcome space of the proof √2. — Ryan O'Connor
Why do we need all mathematical objects to actually exist? — Ryan O'Connor
Interpretation 1: Any finite list of primes is incomplete.
Interpretation 2: There exist infinitely many primes.
These two interpretations may seem equivalent but they're not because the second makes an unjustified leap to assert the existence of an infinite set. — Ryan O'Connor
I believe ZF and Peano arithmetic just need to be reinterpreted. — Ryan O'Connor
I simply think we shouldn't interpret ZF in certain platonic ways. — Ryan O'Connor
Real numbers are never used in applied mathematics. Every number that we have ever used in a calculation is rational. — Ryan O'Connor
ZF just needs to be reinterpreted. This is largely an issue of philosophy, not mathematics. — Ryan O'Connor
Aren't you beginning your proof with an assumption, that irrationals are numbers? — Ryan O'Connor
Why can't it simply be an algorithm? — Ryan O'Connor
My view is that we don't need to 'decide' every mathematical statement because 'undecided' is a valid state. — Ryan O'Connor
My view is in total agreement with the foundations of calculus. — Ryan O'Connor
Understanding the sense of mathematical existence statements - such as the existence of irrational numbers - does require subscribing to mathematical platonism. — GrandMinnow
He did not prove that √2 is an irrational number. — Ryan O'Connor
won't there always be undecidable statements? — Ryan O'Connor
Why is it necessary to have a number system which is complete? — Ryan O'Connor
And we can do exact arithmetic using any rational number — Ryan O'Connor
The mainstream approach to giving the number √2 existence requires us to assert the existence the Platonic Realm (which I equate with an infinite computer), — Ryan O'Connor