I think that's exactly the correct response in that case. I hope it lasts. Do you think May will give in and invite him over at some stage, despite the unpopularity of such a move with the British people?For some reason revealing of my own unacceptable prejudice I'm slightly offended that you think I'm American. Anyway, I'm English, Our biggest problem is the BNP, UKIP etc., but the problem of Trump I see as an example, not an exception, and the British response has been instrumental. We've basically said that we don't want him over here to speak, that nothing he's got to say is of any interest to us. I think that's a very powerful expression of the contempt in which we hold his views, much more powerful than letting him over here and debating them, as if they had any kind of legitimate reasons that might require some thought. — Pseudonym
I don't agree that it does, but I was wondering who might be an example that strong view that Wayfarer mentioned some people holding. So now I know.hence invalidating Kant. — Agustino
If I could explain it, it wouldn't be an intuition.You keep repeating that Euclid's parallel postulate is not intuitive, but you don't explain why. — Agustino
For a start, there are plenty of people saying that Trump got elected from people reacting against what they saw as an excess of authoritarian political correctness, incorporating such things as harrassing people that express unpopular views. Even if that's only a tiny bit true, the effects are enormous - apparently it could even end up in a nuclear holocaust.I'm struggling to find an example from history which demonstrates the effect you're claiming, perhaps you could provide the examples you're working from? — Pseudonym
Then the issue would not have moved them to vote against whatever cause the students support. So they will vote based on some other (quite possibly irrational) consideration. But the bias against the progressive cause has been removed, so the expected number of votes against progressivity has reduced. That's a win for the progressive camp.Lets say the students behave and let the person speak, some academic responds in the media rebutting his racist claims (though what would have prevented him from doing so anyway I don't know but we'll skip over that for now). What difference would that have made to your voter? — Pseudonym
The voter will probably never hear what the racist says, because they didn't go to the rally, and the rally won't make the TV news, because it was only the violent demonstrations that made it newsworthy. The demonstrators were essentially providing free publicity for the racist's cause.what's going to happen when the racists speaks, tells everyone how badly treated white minorities are in some ghettos, how positive discrimination is robbing white people of jobs, how white girls can't even walk the street in areas dominated by immigrants? — Pseudonym
We differ there. I think people are impressed by dignified protest. I think of Gandhi and Martin Luther King. And Nelson Mandela only became an international hero after he had been in jail long enough, and conducted himself in such a dignified manner, that people had forgotten he was arrested for arms offences. In Northern Ireland the most notable phenomenon leading up to the Good Friday agreement was not the violence of the IRA and UDA, but the increasing size and prevalence of peace marches.People are not so impressed by dignified protest that they're going to turn away from the persuasive and powerful rhetoric that's saying exactly what they want to hear just because the opposition to it are well-behaved. — Pseudonym
Fair enough. I had assumed - wrongly, it now seems - that you were aligning with the group that @Wayfarer identified in this post ( ) that assume the discovery of non-Euclidean geometry undermines Kant’s understanding of a priori truth. If all you are suggesting is that Kant may have had a wrong idea about the necessity of the parallel postulate, then you are not adopting the assumptions of that group. The suggestion seems not to damage Kant's thesis at all, and I do not argue against it.The "criticism" was simply that if indeed he believed the axioms of Euclidean Geometry were metaphysically necessary, then Non-Euclidean geometries seem to falsify this notion. — MindForged
Nice!Another way of arguing: you could say that our intuition of space is actually non-Euclidean (or whatever happens to be the correct geometry of space, supposing non-Euclidean geometry is superseded), and Euclidean geometry was merely an empirical concept of that form. — Moliere
Unless I'm missing something, the 5th postulate would also be true for an elliptic surface, such as the surface of a sphere. In order to exclude elliptic geometries, the words ',and not on the other side' would have to be added at the end of the sentence.Let the following be postulated":
1. "To draw a straight line from any point to any point."
2. "To produce [extend] a finite straight line continuously in a straight line."
3. "To describe a circle with any centre and distance [radius]."
4. "That all right angles are equal to one another."
5. The parallel postulate: "That, if a straight line falling on two straight lines make the interior angles on the same side less than two right angles, the two straight lines, if produced indefinitely, meet on that side on which are the angles less than the two right angles." — wiki version of Thomas Heath's translation of Euclid
In a plane, through a point not on a given straight line, at most one line can be drawn that never meets the given line.
What I'm pointing out is that the words 'Euclidean Geometry' have a different meaning now from what they had in the 18th century. In the 18th century they just meant Geometry simpliciter, because Euclid was seen as the father of geometry and was considered synonymous with it, and because no other sort of Geometry was known and people imagined no other sort was possible.I don't think one can say he was still correct in insisting EG as metaphysically certain — MindForged
Two examples you might find interesting to contemplate:I'd love to put my idea to a test so I'd value hugely any examples of any situations where the model could or could not be applied as well as any questions. — BlueBanana
There were no admissions. You're making stuff up again.These are excellent admissions. — Thorongil
The curvature that gives us our fairly modest Earth gravity is a curvature of spacetime, not a curvature of space. The difference between the two concepts is crucial. IIRC, it is possible to have a spacetime that is curved but for which all spatial slices are flat. The curvature is only in the relation between space and time, not in the space itself.I'm not sure we can rely on geometry remaining Euclidean at human scales because if one takes general relativity into account then masses are warping spaces and causing gravitational geodesics that support our entire existence. — Perplexed
More made-up irrelevant nonsense. Nowhere did I say that police who shoot blacks are all white, or even predominantly white.Good, progress. Notice these things have nothing to do with being white. — Thorongil
Nobody but you said anything about epidemic levels.Asians are being racially abused on buses at epidemic levels?
Nobody but you said that racism was a factor, let alone the most significant one. FWIW I think the major factors are fear, poor training and lack of psychological screening.Sorry, but racism isn't anywhere near the most significant factor in why police shoot some black people
Find where I said that and quote it back to me, with link. You won't be able to find it, because I didn't say it. In fact I don't think I have used the word 'racism' at all in this thread, prior to this post (where I mention, but do not use it).you attribute the mere fact of a black man being shot by a police officer to racism.
For me they seem to. When I visualise many-dimensional branes colliding in even higher dimensional space, I visualise hanging, wobbly two-dimensional sheets banging into one another in 3D space. The calculations will be different from the 3D case but for me the visualisation has to remain 3D (or at most 4D - I sometimes use time as proxy for a fourth spatial dimension) as I am not capable of visualising anything higher.I wonder if those concepts could fit into the transcendental aesthetic since they're so far beyond the normal framework of space/time.
Did he do that? I don't know. I never read the original, being a secondary-source kind of chap. I think we'd need to dig out a quote, both in the original German and a diversity of English translations, and analyse it to see whether we can reach that conclusion from it. My loose observation about Kant scholarship is similar to that commonly made about economics: If we put n Kant scholars in a room there will be n+1 opinions about what Kant meant by any particular passage he wrote.Isn't the issue that Kant elevated the postulates of Euclidean geometry to the level of a metaphysical certitude
really? You were witness to every single time it was used, and knew exactly what each person that used it was thinking were you?not a single person who uses it fails to either implicitly or explicitly advance various prescriptions.
Your cool eloquence, the dazzling logic of your shining prose, has persuaded me. What can I have been thinking to say what I did?Bullshit on stilts. I can't believe people write this stuff with an apparent straight face. — Thorongil
Non-Euclidean geometry does follow Euclid's assumptions at the scales that are meaningful to humans. So there is no conflict.A quote from the essay that summarises the problem:
"....Geometry that fails to follow Euclid's assumptions is, according to Kant, literally inconceivable."
Frank Wilczek — Perplexed
All they need have is a dislike of bullying, which is a very common dislike. Regardless of whether such protests actually are bullying, they look like bullying when shown on the TV news, and that's enough to turn many uncommitted voters against whatever it is that the protesters represent.Consider firstly the effect such images would have on a theoretically equivocal voter. What views would they already have to hold in order that such images would actually persuade them one way or the other? — Pseudonym
That is only relevant if there is no debate about whether the person giving the lecture is a racist, and the person accepts the label themselves. In the real world, that is almost never the case. A more likely interpretation would beWhat I don't get then, is what kind of weird reverse psychology do we imagine would cause them, on seeing how violently a group of students do not want a racist to speak, to think "well I wasn't so sure about racism before, but I am now". — Pseudonym
Could you please elaborate on what that means? Does it just mean that the amendment protects a person from prosecution, or administrative sanction, for views expressed in a lecture, tutorial or more widely within public university grounds?I think it's well settled that the First Amendment applies to public colleges and universities. — Ciceronianus the White
This raises an interesting question about what we mean by 'detect', or 'perceive'. Specifically, do we want 'perceive' to mean the same thing as 'notice'?My sensory faculties just aren't refined enough to detect them. Does the paper exist when I'm not observing the resonances? A further inference still seems to be needed.
That quote is from a different article (this one), and what it refers to as 'the one stated above' is not the Diagonal Lemma.Tarski proved a stronger theorem than the one stated above, using an entirely syntactical method. The resulting theorem applies to any formal language with negation, and with sufficient capability for self-reference that the diagonal lemma holds. First-order arithmetic satisfies these preconditions, but the theorem applies to much more general formal systems. — Wiki
An interpreted language is strongly-semantically-self-representational exactly when the language contains predicates and function symbols defining all the semantic concepts specific to the language. Hence the required functions include the "semantic valuation function" mapping a formula A to its truth value ||A||, and the "semantic denotation function" mapping a term t to the object it denotes. Tarski's theorem then generalizes as follows:No sufficiently powerful language is strongly-semantically-self-representational. — wiki
It is though, as I explained in this post (which was on page 2 of 9, so it's understandable that it has been forgotten).The paper in my drawer is not heard. — PossibleAaran
Are you sure it can do that validly? The linked page states the lemma with a premise that restricts it to first-order languages, which I expect would rule out its use in a T-schema environment which I believe is higher order.The T-schema for instance uses the diagonal lemma and so can produce the Liar. — MindForged
I think all you're really doing is denying the possibility of self-reference, because the Liar is constructed within a semantically closed language — MindForged
I'm afraid I don't know what you are referring to with the words 'the Liar'. And also, I'm afraid I can't make anything of your first sentence. In my understanding, a sentence does not have a referent, it is names or symbols that have referents.If you are being "excruciatingly literal minded" then you wouldn't substitute the truth value in for the referent of the sentence. The truth-value is part of the sentence that's being referred to, that's the Liar. — MindForged
The liar sentence, as usually given, isThe liar isn't "False is false". — MindForged
I agree. It is not the self-reference alone that is the problem.Certainly not self-reference because, as you mention, there are self-referential sentences which don't pose a problem. Something else about the liar paradox (in conjunction with self-reference) causes the problem, but it isn't a given that this "something else" is the same thing for both "this sentence is false" and "this sentence is meaningless" (or "this sentence is either false or meaningless."). — Michael