the difference in meaning that AC has in the two different systems — sime
The axiom of choice holds trivially as a tautology in sets constructed in higher-order constructive logic — sime
So one could even say that absence of LEM implies AC (or perhaps rather, that AC is an admissible tautology in absence of LEM). — sime
when speaking of AC not in the sense of an isolated axiom, but in the commonly used informal vernacular when speaking of choice principles in their structural and implicational senses — sime
that is true for ZF, since it is built upon classical logic — sime
intuitionistic set theory, in which choice principles and LEM are approximately equivalent as documented in the SEP article on the axiom of choice. — sime
the axiom of choice is equivalent to the law of excluded middle — sime
captures the essence of Cantor's views on infinity. — TheMadFool
The choice of number 2 is irrelevant to my argument. — TheMadFool
The analogy is perfect.
— TheMadFool
You still have not addressed my rebuttal.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
The analogy is perfect [...] — TheMadFool
I'm fairly confident that what I wrote would've brought a smile to his face. — TheMadFool
He was a deeply troubled man I believe, in no small measure due to Leopold Kroenecker's scathing criticisms of his life's work. — TheMadFool
There's a precise 1-to-1 correspondence between 2 and K — TheMadFool
You haven't addressed it — TheMadFool
The analogy is perfect. — TheMadFool
he defines infinity as a set whose members can be put in a 1-to-1 correspondence with the set of natural numbers. — TheMadFool
Please address the proof. I'll restate it here. — TheMadFool
Suppose K = {K}. Let ~x=K and ~xeK. Then ~ {x K} = K but K e {x K}. — TonesInDeepFreeze
[the analogy] makes so much sense. — TheMadFool
You understand what "inherent" means don't you? — Metaphysician Undercover
The question is whether or not it is possible for a set to be free from inherent order, i.e. having no inherent order, as fishfry claimed. You still don't seem to be grasping the issue. — Metaphysician Undercover
I cannot say what the inherent order is, for the reasons explained. Do you have a problem with those reasons? Or do you just not understand what I've already repeated? — Metaphysician Undercover
I changed my mind on that days ago — Metaphysician Undercover
Order is a spatial-temporal concept [bold added] — Metaphysician Undercover
They have no spatial-temporal separation, therefore no means for distinguishing one from the other, they are simply assumed to exist as a set. How do you think it is possible to order them when they have been conceived by denying all principles of order.? To introduce a principle of order would contradict the essential nature of these things. — Metaphysician Undercover
Temporal/spatial was just one type of order, fishfry and Lluke gave examples of many other types. So we're not restricted to temporal/spatial order in our attempts at understanding the nature of inherent order. — Metaphysician Undercover
Take K and make it an element of a set thus, {K} and what happens? It's, according to how it's defined, K again. That didn't quite go as planned, did it? — TheMadFool
{{K}} = {K} = K which in plain English means K can't be made a member of another set. — TheMadFool
The whole exercise involving K = {K} is akin to claiming that b × 1 =/= b. — TheMadFool
A set can't contain itself. Period! — TheMadFool
We would also have to look into the smallest unit of thought which I reckon is a single concept, each assigned an exclusive symbol of its own. — TheMadFool
it becomes more a linguistic issue than a logical one. — TheMadFool
Is the sense of this reproducible here, in a conversational way. in a non-onerous number of sentences? — tim wood
"Doesn't work" seems about as meta-mathematical as it can get. — tim wood
Nowhere in the paper so far as I can understand it does he make clear either that or why it doesn't work with true. — tim wood
True as not a formal concept? — tim wood
logically, these two arguments are identical, their premises are identical, their conclusions are too. — TheMadFool
The way it seems to me, there's no point in talking about a book - the book being a message of some kind - in terms of how many words are in it. Similarly, proofs - logical entities - shouldn't be viewed as symbols. — TheMadFool
Why exactly he settled for provability over true would be interesting to know. — tim wood
Did he recognize that truth is a metamathematical notion, not part of the mathematics itself? — tim wood
What I find problematic with defining proof length in terms of numbers of symbols in one is that it seems to miss the point — TheMadFool
proof "lengths" must be measured, if possible, in terms of how many logical steps are taken from the start (premises) to the end (conclusion). — TheMadFool
natural deduction seems to employ a classical method which consists of 3 propositions, 2 premises and 1 conclusion — TheMadFool
If you wish to view the law of identity as a "mystical" principle — Metaphysician Undercover
If we assume that there is no [the inherent order], then we assume that the world is fundamentally unintelligible. — Metaphysician Undercover
So we don't know that there is an inherent order, we assume that there is, because that is the rational choice. — Metaphysician Undercover
I would consider that most good ontology is based in mysticism. — Metaphysician Undercover
i cannot tell you the inherent order. It's not something that can be spoken,. — Metaphysician Undercover
Temporal/spatial was just one type of order, fishfry and Lluke gave examples of many other types. So we're not restricted to temporal/spatial order in our attempts at understanding the nature of inherent order. — Metaphysician Undercover
truth of a determined order is dependent ONLY [bold and all-caps added] on our concepts of space and time. — Metaphysician Undercover
in the case of ordering, truth or falsity is dependent on the truth of our concepts of space and time [...] I think it can be demonstrated that each and every order imaginable is dependent on a spatial or temporal relation. To the right, left, or any such pattern, is spatial, and ANY INTELLIGIBLE SENSE OF "PRIOR" IS REDUCIBLE TO A TEMPORAL RELATION. I REALLY DO NOT THINK THERE IS ANY TYPE OF ORDER WHICH IS NOT BASED IN A SPATIAL OR TEMPORAL RELATION [bold and all-caps added]. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you truly think that there is some type of order which is intelligible without any spatial or temporal reference, you need to do a better job demonstrating and explaining it. — Metaphysician Undercover
to grant to them "no inherent order" by denying them all spatial-temporal relations, you cannot now turn around and talk about their possible orders. ORDER IS A SPATIAL-TEMPORAL CONCEPT [bold and all-caps added] — Metaphysician Undercover
Surely, "first" does not mean "highest quality", or "best", in mathematics, so if it's not a temporal reference, what is it? — Metaphysician Undercover
You cannot remove the necessity of spatial-temporal positioning for those individuals, and still claim that the name refers to the individuals. — Metaphysician Undercover
It was my suggestion that "order" is fundamentally temporal — Metaphysician Undercover
If it can't be understood without spatial or temporal reference, then there clearly is a need for space and time in math, or else all mathematics would be simply unintelligible. — Metaphysician Undercover
And understanding them is what requires spatial and temporal reference. The number 5 has no meaning, and cannot be understood without such reference. — Metaphysician Undercover
the ordering of numbers requires a spatial or temporal reference. — Metaphysician Undercover
If mathematics talks about an order which is not temporally, nor spatially grounded, then I think such a mathematics would be nonsensical. I've seen some people argue for a "logical order" which is neither temporal nor spatial, but this so-called logical order, which is usually expressed in terms of first and second, is always reducible to a temporal order. — Metaphysician Undercover
What is this act which you call "the collecting of the objects into a set"? Wouldn't such an act necessarily create an order, if only just a temporal order according to which ones are collected first? — Metaphysician Undercover
I have opted for a sort of compromise to this problem of justifying the pure a priori, by concluding that time itself is non-empirical, thus justifying the temporal order of first, second, third, etc., as purely a priori. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you want to define numbers by order, then you assign temporality as the difference between 1 ,2,3 and 4. — Metaphysician Undercover
You are arguing a philosophy of truth. — Metaphysician Undercover
empirical validation isn't relevant.
— Wayfarer
That's exactly what makes arguing for mathematics as the purveyor of truth, dogmatism. — Metaphysician Undercover
if I stated an order, it would be a representation, imposed from my perspective, and therefore not the order which inheres within the object, the inherent order. — Metaphysician Undercover
As I explained, the objects, as existing objects, have an inherent order — Metaphysician Undercover
The inherent order is the true order, which inheres in the arrangement of objects. — Metaphysician Undercover
The inherent order, if we were to attempt to describe it, would contain all the truthful relations between those beings — Metaphysician Undercover
The inherent order is the true order, which inheres in the arrangement of objects. — Metaphysician Undercover
Order is the condition under which every part is in its right place. — Metaphysician Undercover
'is prime' is a predicate, not an ordering.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
It is a predicate which refers to relations with others, therefore an order. — Metaphysician Undercover
according to fishfry ordering was removed, abstracted away, — Metaphysician Undercover
If you are having difficulty with "inherent order", it is fishfry's term as well — Metaphysician Undercover
