I have not looked into SIA — Ryan O'Connor
. . . that one person should not both write the textbook, and teach from it, and test the students on whether they know their stuff. But, arguing for or against that is going to be a topic of one of those later threads — Pfhorrest
I see that you're a retired math professor so I'm especially keen to hear your feedback, especially if you see a flaw in my argument. — Ryan O'Connor
A separation of research, teaching, and testing branches of education
is therefore analogous to a separation of legislative, executive, and judicial branches of government — Pfhorrest
You have to remember that these plots are topological so even though it looks linear in the first image I could have just as well drawn it with squiggles. — Ryan O'Connor
LoL. I'm sure the philosophy students in the room were aghast. — Ryan O'Connor
You don't know anything about it.
Yet you have persistent critiques of it.
How do you do it? — GrandMinnow
To me it is concerning that the foundations are so disconnected from the applications — Ryan O'Connor
Could this be an indication that further foundational work is required? — Ryan O'Connor
I'm no expert, but my impression was the math moved toward being totally mechanized, totally formal, totally computer-checkable — norm
How can ∞ represent a point? — Metaphysician Undercover
Hi ! I'll private-message you about that. — norm
Oh boy they're gonna gossip about the rest of us! — fishfry
After years of formal study (proof writing), I still would argue that intuition is primary and that math is a language — norm
In your professional research, did you have the feeling that you were investigating aspects of truths outside yourself that you were trying to find out about? — fishfry
One can take the viewpoint that symbolic math is a human endeavor; and that a thing has mathematical existence whenever a preponderance of mathematicians agree that it does. — fishfry
I'm lost on why the problem is such a big deal — Darkneos
Is this thread intended to find something akin to the p vs np problem (related to complexity in computing)? — emancipate
A lot of people are baffled by this topic for some reason, where I see this in a sense very apparent in mathematics nowadays to talk about the sort of lack of categorization, that can even at all begin or take place! — Shawn
(and perhaps you would even agree that the greatest value which y never reaches is 0) — Ryan O'Connor
Sure, but this is quite a conundrum towards the notion that everything in mathematics should or is determinate. — Shawn
Is this the result of one of your mathematical formulas ? — Pop
Scientists don't need to think about philosophy all the time but they do this often while doing theoretical physics — Gregory
Penrose's conformal cyclic cosmology says, according to his interviews, that the universe will expand until "it no longer knows what size it is". You have to think philosophically to unpack what that means — Gregory
The point being that philosophers can help scientists with conceptual orientation? — Banno
Their ideas bring paradigm shifts which allow scientist to frame theoretical matters in new ways. Philosophers don't do the measurements but measurements can never stand alone without conceptualization of them and those concepts have much to do with what is discussed in philosophy — Gregory
Namely, the decreasing amount of philosophers or scientists that exert too much of an effect on a field by making their name known.
Gödel did this to mathematics. — Shawn
Weak emergence, weak relationships > The emergent properties apparently aren't very strongly connected to the parts — Kaiser Basileus
. . . but science can't do without philosophy whether you like it or dislike it — Gregory
Emergence is identical to relationship — Kaiser Basileus
So what are you on about jgill? And I mean that question literally; I have no idea what you're actually objecting to. Incidentally, no, calculus doesn't give us the GH paradox... broken intuitions do. I also find it a bit strange to claim that calculus is used to define the object; rather, it's used to analyze the object (surface area/volume in this case — InPitzotl
What do you mean this has nothing to do with algebraic geometry? — InPitzotl
A penny for your thoughts — TheMadFool
Gabriel's horn is an object defined using algebraic geometry. Algebraic geometry defines points in a space using coordinates using number lines. Number lines are defined with real numbers. — InPitzotl
V = pi * (r approaching zero) * (r approaching zero) * (h approaching infinity) , (r approaching zero) * (h approaching infinity) = 1 — TheMadFool
If infinity = z then, — TheMadFool