this is you now setting your self-appointed standards for the site — apokrisis
I don't set any site-wide or general standards. Rather, I comment based on my own standards.
And there are moderators who actually are responsible for deciding the limits of tolerance. — apokrisis
Moderators don't censor cranks. And I don't advocate that moderators censor cranks. But that doesn't entail that I must refrain from my own comments about cranks.
have you achieved a measure of success? — apokrisis
Cranks never* come around to reason and knowledge. They go on for years and decades. They are, by nature, deeply stubborn and are narcissistic in criticizing the profound intellectual developments in mathematics over the last 200 years without feeling the slightest need to study to know anything about those developments.
But I find it worthwhile to post the corrections to the record. I don't have an inflated sense that this makes any "hill of beans" difference in the outcome of humankind or the world. It's just, for me, satisfying, even if only in principle, to articulate and enter my comments. And I believe it is constructive to do that.
And while I don't begrudge them the prerogative to do that, I don't begrudge myself the prerogative to refute it and denounce it.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
This speaks of a joyless rigidity to life. — apokrisis
Absolutely the contrary. I find real joy and solace in the fact that people are free to post what they like and I am free to reply as I like. Rather than the rigidity of disallowing people from posting as they like, I celebrate the freedom that they may post as they like and that I may reply as I like.
Moreover, it is presumptuous to extrapolate to life in general. Posting refutations to cranks doesn't nullify the joys of life such as friendship, art and study. Moreover, I find posting as I do to be a mildly gratifying pastime.
And you are mistaken if you think "actual maths" trumps "actual philosophy" on a philosophy website. — apokrisis
It's good that you phrased that as a conditional. Because indeed I don't think mathematics trumps philosophy. I said nothing like that. What I said, if you would be so kind as to reread it, is that when we bring in the actual mathematics as a subject of the philosophizing, then we should not misrepresent the subject we are talking about; we shouldn't misrepresent or cause confusions about how that mathematics is actually formulated.
/
* I've witnessed just one exception. Years ago, in a different discussion group, there was a poster who was abysmally confused about set theory, yet he kept posting ignoran, and blatantly incorrect purported proofs that set theory is inconsistent. Later, he kept popping up alternative formal proposals, but they were ill-formed nonsense. For a long time, I offered him suggestions on how he could fix his formalizations so they made sense. Gradually, he started to get the hang of it. Then it became clear that he is brilliant. Once he got his feet on the ground, he was able to propose a number of meaningful and interesting alternative foundational systems, to the point that he proved a result that was published, as a prominent logician took him under wing. Years ago he went way past my own meager knowledge, so that he talks about advanced subjects I can't even begin to keep up with. (Yet, he never seemed to let go of the habit of making large claims without adequate support or rigor; but he would retract and admit that he did have more work to do on it when it was pointed out to him.)