There was a process which placed the dots where they are, therefore they were ordered by that process — Metaphysician Undercover
This is what Tones and I discussed earlier. How can we count a specific number of points without assigning some sort of order to them? To count them we need to distinguish one from the other by some means or else we do not know which ones have been counted and which have not been counted. — Metaphysician Undercover
without any order — Metaphysician Undercover
The order which they have is their actual order — Metaphysician Undercover
What is added or multiplied is the quantity or number of individuals. The number is of the individual, a predication, and what is added or subtracted is the individuals, not the number.
— Metaphysician Undercover
That's just a plain contradiction from one sentence to the next. — Luke
I simply don't accept it as a realistic notion of "truth", and don't want to waste my time discussing it. — Metaphysician Undercover
Physicists, engineers, and others, applying mathematics in the world have a huge impact on the world in which I live [...] bad mathematics will have a bad effect. — Metaphysician Undercover
That people vehemently support and defend fundamental axioms which may or may not be true, refusing to analyze and understand the meaning of these axioms, simply accepting them on faith — Metaphysician Undercover
The order which they have is their actual order, whereas all those others are possible orders. — Metaphysician Undercover
the term "random" — Metaphysician Undercover
I looked at the Wikipedia entry — Metaphysician Undercover
The part that doesn't make sense is when you move deeper into the theory. This is just like mathematics. — Metaphysician Undercover
When I was seven years old I had no idea what an abstraction is, or what a concept is. I didn't understand this until much later when I studied philosophy. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is why mathematics really is like religion. We are required just to accept the rules, on faith, follow and obey, without any real understanding. — Metaphysician Undercover
What else could demonstrate falsity other than a reference to some form of inconsistency?.
— Metaphysician Undercover
Falsity is semantic; inconsistency is syntactical.
Given a model M of a theory T, a sentence may be false in M but not inconsistent with T. — TonesInDeepFreeze
An axiom is expressed as a bunch of symbols, so it must be interpreted.
— Metaphysician Undercover
Formulas don't have to be interpreted, though usually they are when they are substantively motivated. — TonesInDeepFreeze
If in interpretation, there is a contradiction with another principle then one or both must be false.
— Metaphysician Undercover
It might not be a matter of principles but of framework. Frameworks don't have to be evaluated as true or false, but may be regarded by their uselfulness in providing a conceptual context or their productivity in other ways. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Notice there is an exchange of "equal" and "same"
— Metaphysician Undercover
Even though there is nothing wrong with taking 'equal' to mean 'same', the axiom of extensionality doesn't require such mention.
Az(zex <-> zey) -> x=y.
"=' is mentioned, but not "same". — TonesInDeepFreeze
he teacher insisted no, the numeral is not the number. So it took me very long to figure out that the numeral was not the "number" which the teacher was talking about, and that the number was just some fictitious thing existing in the teacher's mind — Metaphysician Undercover
If mathematics requires self-deception, then this does not make sense to me, and so I will not proceed. — Metaphysician Undercover
I learned to play a musical instrument, and it always made sense to me, right from the start. — Metaphysician Undercover
Math is like religion — Metaphysician Undercover
I look at truth as corresponding with reality. — Metaphysician Undercover
If mathematics requires self-deception — Metaphysician Undercover
how to count, and simple arithmetic, addition, subtraction multiplication, division made sense to me right from the start. It was only later, when they started insisting that there existed a number, distinct from the numeral, that things started not making sense. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you think you can interpret the rules as we go — Metaphysician Undercover
The inherent order is the exact spatial positioning shown in the diagram. — Metaphysician Undercover
at first, the subject makes no sense — fishfry
What else could demonstrate falsity other than a reference to some form of inconsistency?. — Metaphysician Undercover
An axiom is expressed as a bunch of symbols, so it must be interpreted. — Metaphysician Undercover
If in interpretation, there is a contradiction with another principle then one or both must be false. — Metaphysician Undercover
Notice there is an exchange of "equal" and "same" — Metaphysician Undercover
As I've argued in other threads, if we adhere to the law of identity, this is a false use of "same". — Metaphysician Undercover
I had difficulty even in grade school — Metaphysician Undercover
will you simply assert that mathematics is far superior to philosophy — Metaphysician Undercover
How do you propose that one proceed toward "learning the subject", when the most basic principles in that subject do not make any sense to the person? — Metaphysician Undercover
If an axiom is false then the proof is unsound. — Metaphysician Undercover
If we assume that a set necessarily has an ordering — Metaphysician Undercover
by what principle can we say that each of these many possible orderings constitutes the same set? — Metaphysician Undercover
What type of entity is an "element", such that the identity of a unity of numerous elements is based solely in the identity of its parts with complete disregard for the relations between those parts? — Metaphysician Undercover
Isn't this a sort of fallacy of composition? — Metaphysician Undercover
Team U will prove its claim possibly in only 1 step. Team S will prove its claim only in n steps.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I've no problem with that; but to be more precise, we don't know U will prove its claim in 1 step. — InPitzotl
You're mixing metaphors. — InPitzotl
"Cherries to cherries" sounds more like apples to apples — InPitzotl
George [...] Joe — InPitzotl
There's just the single point I'm uninterested in — InPitzotl
There exists no black dogs... in Saskatchewan. There exists a black dog... in Uzbekistan. — InPitzotl
cherry pick — InPitzotl
Sowe'll[you'll] disregard your comment about it, after I've pointed out it was not apropos.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
FTFY. — InPitzotl
I have no interest in what you care about.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
That is clearly false, because you keep replying to me and "merely stating" things directly to me. — InPitzotl
The neutrality of the terms has nothing to do with my lack of interest in what you're telling me. — InPitzotl
as I argued with TIDF earlier in the thread. There are many ways to determine a quantity without referencing an ascending order. — Metaphysician Undercover
"f(0) if f(0) is 1 is less than f(0) if f(0) is 2" is gibberish. — InPitzotl
That's entirely correct. You didn't say anything there about who has "burden of proof". — InPitzotl
That the burden of proof is the main subject of the thread doesn't entail that you can't also comment on individual points that have arisen. — InPitzotl
What is meant by declaring "the situation" to be that second thing and not that first thing you don't state — InPitzotl
but there's some implication that you really, really want me to care about that second thing and to not care about that first thing. — InPitzotl
If you want me to be interested in Team-A-winning — InPitzotl
Person A sustains his claim when he proves there is a black dog. Person B sustains his claim when he proves there is not a black dog. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Whether Team C [could end] early depends on whether ExBx is true or ~ExBx is true.
Team A might prove its claim and end early only if ExBx is true.
Team B cannot both prove its claim and end early.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Sure, but there are symmetric descriptions of each of these things for Team A, Team B, and Team C in all of those scenarios. — InPitzotl
According to you, I cannot prove my claim if my claim is false. That implies that being able to prove the claim true in the first place requires my claim to be a fact. — InPitzotl
What is the difficulty in proving ExBx when ExBx is true vs. the difficulty in proving ~ExBx when ~ExBx is true?
The comparison is meaningless. Convince me otherwise. — InPitzotl
I think burden of proof for claims applies in a wide variety of areas having nothing to do with winning debates. — InPitzotl
Person A sustains his claim when he proves there is a black dog. Person B sustains his claim when he proves there is not a black dog. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I might be corrected on this, but I don't recall making a claim about "burden of proof" in sense of a rhetorical obligation
— TonesInDeepFreeze
But you said:
Rather the situation is:
"Team A, you win if you prove there is a black dog; and Team B, you win if you prove there is not a black dog. "
— TonesInDeepFreeze — InPitzotl
"Burden of proof" is literally in the title of this thread. — InPitzotl
They're discovering the facts, not claiming what the facts are, as opposed to the Positive claimer and Negative claimer who both are claiming what the facts are.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
They're invoking P and arriving at either a proof of ExBx or a proof of ~ExBx depending on what the state of affairs are. And by our metric they expend the same exact effort Team A or Team B would in proving it. — InPitzotl
Here's the discussion leading up the black dogs — InPitzotl
the state of affairs is the same — InPitzotl
Team A, you win if you prove there is a black dog; and Team B, you win if you prove there is not a black dog.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Okay, you've made a claim that this is the situation. Back it up. — InPitzotl
Tell me what "Team A wins" has to do with negative versus positive claims in relation to burden of proof. — InPitzotl
what about Team C, who just wants to figure things out without making claims? — InPitzotl
I don't see a basis for your sarcasm.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
The basis is that you volunteered that you only talked about it because it was mentioned. — InPitzotl
a claim merely being negative or positive does not tell you which of the two claimants has a burden or what it is. — InPitzotl
I don't claim to understand what you intend to say with your chart.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
You replied to it. You said this:
That chart seems to capture discovery not proof. For example, the min in row 4 is 1 only because we discover that there is a black dog and give up trying to prove that there is not one. But that is not the task. The task is to prove there is not a black dog. — InPitzotl
So that wasn't so difficult. — InPitzotl
one of them is true, and one of them is false. And with the metric/method under consideration, we don't know which is which until either we find the black dog, or we searched all of the dog houses among the single set of dog houses. — InPitzotl
How nice of you — InPitzotl
but "black dog" only came into the discussion as an example because the discussion started to be about black dog as an example. — InPitzotl
What exactly is your problem with my table — InPitzotl
E = everything — TheMadFool
The question was "Which is easier to prove: ExBx or ~ExBx ?"
— TonesInDeepFreeze
No, that's not the question. The question is whether it's easier to prove a negative claim or a positive claim. — InPitzotl
Goldbach conjecture — InPitzotl
You're trying to tell me that you can compare the proof of a true thing being false to the proof of it being true — InPitzotl
or maybe that simply not knowing whether you're comparing the proof of a true thing being false to the proof of it being true or you're comparing the proof of a false thing being true to the proof of it being false makes sense out of it somehow. — InPitzotl
set theory is regarded as the basis for number theory, no? — Wayfarer
suffering from malnourishment during World War I.
So if ‘everything’ includes ‘every possible set’ - which it must do, otherwise it would be incomplete - then there couldn’t be such a set, because it would have to include itself. — Wayfarer
a 2007 BBC Documentary called Dangerous Knowledge. It's about four great and controversial mathematicians - Cantor, Boltzmann, Godel and Turing - all of whom died by suicide — Wayfarer
The original paper is in Jean van Heijenoorts's 'From Frege To Godel'.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
[,,,] I'm wondering if you could summarize. — fishfry
Did von Neumann anticipate the categorical approach — fishfry
while we flitter about, inconsequential moths circling your flame. — jgill
The winner takes first place and the runner up takes second place — fishfry
