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Responding to Ed George About Mathematics

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In another thread, Ed George insists that humans invented mathematics as a way to describe the behavior of phenomena, but that doesn’t mean mathematics is an intrinsic aspect of the universe, a part we discovered, not invented.  Here’s why that position is untenable.

Mr. George is correct that humans invent languages – the language of mathematics included.  Languages are systems of symbols that represent things.  For example, the word “sphere” can be expressed with different symbols in different languages, but the symbols all refer to the same thing – in this case, the form of an object in the real world.  That we invented the symbols and language to describe a real thing doesn’t mean we invented the real thing itself.

As Mr. George agrees, mathematics (in terms of this debate) is an invented system of symbols used to describe behaviors of phenomena (physics). 

However, humans did not invent those behaviors; we are only describing them using symbolic language.  Phenomena in the universe behave in, let’s say, “X” manner. X is a set of discoverable patterns.  We discovered those patterns and applied symbolic language to represent and calculate them. In the same way that “sphere-ness” is an inherent quality of something in the universe which we use the term “sphere” to represent, “mathematics” is a term we use to represent an inherent quality of the universe.

Yet, Mr. George denies that we can know whether or not we “discovered” these behaviors (which we call “mathematics”. Of course we did, and we use symbolic language to describe those qualities and behaviors we have discovered.

This same, simple logic can be applied more broadly.  We invented a symbolic language in order to refer to things we discover about our existence and the universe, as KF is pointing out, in terms of logical first principles.  We did not invent that 1+2=3; those symbols represent observable facts. We did not invent the principle of identity out of whole cloth; it represents an observable fact and, more deeply, a universal structure that human minds cannot escape, no matter how hard we try or imagine. As KF points out, it is responsible for our ability to have cognition at all or to invent and use language.  Logical first principles are a fact of our existence which we discovered – first as “X”, then using a string of symbols to represent.

Beyond observable facts, such symbolic language can represent other discoverable facts; such as, some things are impossible to imagine. Imagine that 1+2=4 in any observable way.  You can say the words or write the equation, but it is not possible to imagine it being a discoverable fact in any scenario.  It’s a nonsensical proposition, much like a 4-sided triangle. The inability to imagine a thing has other implications, but that’s for another conversation.

Language is the invention, but language is itself governed by certain necessary rules.  Those rules were entirely hidden to us in the beginning, but we know they were there because inevitably all languages follow those fundamental rules even if we are unaware of them, the first of which is the principle of identity.  Without that, language is impossible. 

These “X” characteristics of our universe and our existence are things we discovered and then used symbolic systems to represent.

Comments
H, you are talking with people who routinely have worked in hexadecimals and binary. The study of the logic of structure and quantity is culturally shaped but it is also constrained by the substance of structure and quantity. As has been repeatedly highlighted that starts with the import of distinct identity. The issue is not the cultural framing of the study, it is the necessary entity rooted substantial core. As has also been repeatedly highlighted. KF PS: You don't want to get me going on the Alinskyite rhetorical habit of red herrings led away to strawman caricatures soaked in ad homs and set alight to cloud, confuse, poison and polarise the atmosphere. This is a discussion on mathematics which of all things should be in-common. That it is manifestly not so is yet another indicator of the state of our civilisation and especially its formal and informal education systems.kairosfocus
December 15, 2018
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ET, some examples of math that have been invented are Arabic numerals and the common arithmetic algorithms we use, coordinate geometry, and the f' notation for derivatives. A common distinction is that mankind has invented the particular symbol systems that we use, but within those systems, once established, the logical consequences are then discovered as inevitable logical consequences. For instance, once the number system was extended to include complex numbers, Euler's Identity e^(i*pi)= -1 was discovered. And Euler's identity is a true fact irrespective of what symbol system is used (we might have used different symbols of i and pi, or a different way of indicating exponentiation, for instance), and it was just as true before we discovered it (just unknown) as it is now that we have discovered it. Are there any parts of what I written here that you agree with, and if so, which. Are there any parts you disagree with, and if so, which, and why>hazel
December 15, 2018
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H'mm: Without endorsing his full thesis (some sort of global math sim run as part of a quasi-infinite multiverse so far as I can see . . .), let's clip Tegmark:
Equations aren't the only hints of mathematics that are built into nature: there are also numbers. As opposed to human creations like the page numbers in this book, I'm now talking about numbers that are basic properties of our physical reality. For example, how many pencils can you arrange so that they're all perpendicular (at 90 degrees) to each other? 3 – by placing them along the 3 edges emanating from a corner of your room, say. Where did that number 3 come sailing in from? We call this number the dimensionality of our space, but why are there 3 dimensions rather than 4 or 2 or 42? [--> note, embedding of structure and quantity, simplified form] And why are there, as far as we can tell, exactly 6 kinds of quarks in our Universe? There are also numbers encoded in nature that require decimals to write out – for example, the proton about 1836.15267 times heavier than the electron. From just 32 such numbers, we physicists can in principle compute every other physical constant ever measured. There's something very mathematical about our Universe, and that the more carefully we look, the more math we seem to find. So what do we make of all these hints of mathematics in our physical world?
Mathematics, substantially is the logic of structure and quantity. Where, logic speaks to rational framework of principles. Some of that substance as I showed is inherent in there being a possible world W, i.e. that necessarily involves W = {A|~A} thus nullity, unity, duality thence by successive order types the naturals and even transfinites. From this, we go to rationals, irrationals, Reals thus continuum. This shows systematic structure and quantity embedded in space. That is already sufficient. At this point, I think there is something at worldview level that leads to the sort of resistance we have seen, but so far no substantial case has been made to explain it, at least from objectors. I am inclined to point to culturally diffused Kantian thought locked to cultural relativism and subjectivism. That is, the perceived ugly gulch between the phenomenal world of appearance (individual or collective) and the noumenal one of things in themselves, held to be inaccessible as all of our senses and reflective capabilities are fatally warped. From F H Bradley on, this has been shown to be self-referentially incoherent. In effect, to so claim to deny knowledge of the outer world is to make just such a knowledge claim. Thus, self-defeat. Though, such a perception may easily be self-reinforcing especially if it fits strongly reinforced cultural agendas. The pivotal centrality of the principle of distinct identity and of its linked import that natural numbers, quantities more broadly and ordering structures (math sense not just spatial . . . I am not committing to worlds being spatially extended) necessarily pervade any possible world. Mathematics is effective in science because it is part of the framework for a possible world thus the actual one. And no it is not just internal manipulations and subjective meanings -- what "semantics" typically means when it is used dismissively. This is objective, locked into the framework for a possible world. As for oh we invented mathematics, we do pursue it in accord with cultural traditions, that's the study part. Those vary but are constrained by the substance part as seen, Math facts on steroids embedded in reality in effect. This interlock is why we may freely make up abstract, axiomatised logic-model worlds then use them to explore consequences; creating possible worlds. Such worlds will have necessary, framework structural components tied to distinct identity. They may also have contingent aspects that are useful in setting up systems close enough to our world to be useful without being necessarily true or even contingently true. It is perfectly possible in logic that a false antecedent implies true consequents, just that we have to be careful over range of valid application. We should not let the contingent part distract us from the necessary part. KFkairosfocus
December 15, 2018
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It is obvious that mathematics was discovered. Just ask the people who did the discovering or read what they say- start with Srinivasa Ramanujan. From there read the book that I linked to in comment 45- "Our Mathematical Universe". And it should be noted that no one has put forth any argument that humans invented mathematics.ET
December 15, 2018
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JaD
Does he have an argument backed with reason and evidence? Or does he believe that his personal opinion settles the issue?
William felt that my argument was sufficient to warrant a dedicated OP. Maybe you should take it up with him. [Posts that are entirely about personalities and no substance will be deleted - WJM] Mathematics is either inherent in the universe and was discovered by man, or it was invented by man to model the universe. Other than as a long standing philosophical question, the answer to the question has no importance to our lives. Based on the diversity of opinions here, I am not the only one who does not find the arguments put forward in support of mathematics being inherent to the universe very compelling. If someone presents a compelling argument, I will gladly change my opinion.Ed George
December 15, 2018
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What is Ed George’s reason for being here? As far as I have seen he has as yet to make an argument. The interaction all started with EG and a couple of other interlocutors on the “Logic & First Principles, 4” thread on 12/11. Here is a brief summary. Pater Kimbridge @ #4:
One must be careful not to slide into a pit of equivocation here. The universe has structure and quantity, but numbers are an invention of Man. In fact, all of mathematics is an invention of Man.
https://uncommondescent.com/mathematics/logic-first-principles-4-the-logic-of-being-causality-and-science/#comment-669555 Belfast @ #6 concurred:
PK is correct. Nature knows nothing of anything bigger than 1. Two atoms are different from each other in location at least. Mathematics invented by man enables man to quantify order and states and understand patterns at various levels.
Ed George the weighed in @ #11: “For what it’s worth, I have to side with PK on this.” @ #13 KF who wrote the OP then challenged him: ”EG, make your case: _______ KF” EG responded @ #17: “It is my opinion that mathematics is a human invention that can be used to model the world that we see around us. For example e = mc^2 means absolutely nothing without first defining energy, mass and the speed of light.” @ #19 I weighed in:
So what is EG’s argument? Either X or Y could be true EG believes Y Therefore, Y is true. In other words, Ed George believes it. That settles it.
EG responded @ #21:
That is all any of us can do. Mathematics either exists independent of humans or it is something invented by humans to model our observations. My opinion is that it is the latter. ET and KF believe it is the former. But, unfortunately, there is no way of determining which is true. And, frankly, does it matter?
Since then several of us have given reasons for our position. Again, as far as I have seen EG has not. Does he have an argument backed with reason and evidence? Or does he believe that his personal opinion settles the issue? I don’t see why he continues to hang around. He has, however, however succeeded in being disruptive. Maybe that’s his reason.john_a_designer
December 15, 2018
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I have started what will be a long post summarizing the issues here as I see them. I have written the following as an introduction which I might as well post now, with the understanding that the rest is forthcoming: mathguy has joined the conversation, so I'm going to try again. 1. I am definitely not Ed George, and don't know the degree which we might agree on things, as I hadn't read the posts of his in the previous threads that prompted the OP by wjm. He responded positively to one thing I wrote, and don't think I've responded to any of his posts. So let's keep me separate from him, please. 2. I looked back over my posts in this thread: 11, 17, 19, 29, 33, 34, 39, 42, and 50, which is the one where I pointed out that what I felt was unwarranted hostility didn't make carrying on the conversation much fun. I don't think characterizing this as "slinking away" is very useful. Perhaps the tone of the conversation can improve. 3. Also, I don't think "defeated in debate" is an accurate characterization. I am not debating, I am trying to discuss. This is a perennial philosophical issue, and as I said in an earlier post, I find that I can slide back and forth between different views, much like the famous Gestalt picture of the old/young lady. So, if you look at my previous posts here, you'll see that I've asked questions, tried to explain the points I'm not clear in my mind about, pointed out points I agree on, and asked if I was correctly understanding other's points. This is what people do when they discuss, not when they debate. This is also why I didn't understand the hostility I felt in some responses back to me. 4. Just a bit of background. I have been a math teacher for many years. I have read fairly widely about the philosophy of math, and am familiar with issues like infinite series, the Mandelbrot set, Euler's identity e^(i•pi) = -1, etc. I'm not claiming expertise here, but rather pointing out that I, too, have a long interest in this subject and enough background to discuss it knowledgeably. With all those disclaimers, I'm going to try to summarize the issue as I see it, identifying specific points so that maybe we can be clear on what aspects of the situation we are in agreement on, and which we might not be. I welcome people pointing out areas of agreement, disagreement, shared questions, etc. ... I hope to finish the rest of the post later today, but I'm interested in taking the time to be fairly thorough.hazel
December 15, 2018
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Math Guy
I think hazel and Ed George are the same person with two accounts. This person, defeated in debate, has slunk away.
Sorry, but Hazel and myself are different people. And I can assure you that I have not skunk away. I have read all of the comments. I just haven’t seen anything that is compelling enough to respond to.Ed George
December 15, 2018
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LC, the interesting thing is why people resist that. KFkairosfocus
December 15, 2018
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I don't think its that difficult to see the mathematical nature of the World. Just the opposite; you have to work very hard to ignore it. Fractals are one example. Someone please explain why the shape of a river, a tree and an ice crystal would be similar. To me it seems the designer put these things here for us to notice, to investigate, to learn. Of course, some won't. https://www.mnn.com/earth-matters/wilderness-resources/blogs/14-amazing-fractals-found-in-nature A-mats will claim these aren't "real" fractals, because they don't occupy infinite levels as pure matehmatical fractals do.LoneCycler
December 15, 2018
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Exploring a million digits of pi: https://uncommondescent.com/intelligent-design/exploring-a-million-digits-of-pi-a-vid/kairosfocus
December 15, 2018
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PS: Just went looking for a million decimal digits of pi. https://www.piday.org/million/ four-strings of 0's and 7's are present on using the find in page tool. That supports the conjectures on longer strings of same. Again, an inductive argument in a Mathematical context. Trillion digit out of 22.4 download here: https://pi2e.ch/blog/2017/03/10/pi-digits-download/kairosfocus
December 14, 2018
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MG, thanks for the interest and for un-lurking. You have raised a significant point, that the bulk of Mathematicians believe that mathematical entities and linked states of affairs are realities such that their actuality and truthful (or false) description is a meaningful discussion. The specific cases are significant and remind me of the debate over the proof of the four colour map theorem about forty years back. On pi, I have taken large expansions as random number tables and accept on experience that for a large enough expansion essentially any string of digits will be there. I have found phone numbers for example. But while I ponder whether a string of 0's or of 7's is there, I believe that the reality exists independent of my knowledge or our knowledge, which then allows us to describe and recognise truth as accurate representation of actuality. From my perspective, we can see many key things for a simple but significant case: WLOG, for a distinct world Wk to exist, the dichotomy tied to its identity must obtain so we see Wk = {A|~A}, which brings with it the chain 0, 1, 2. Succession of order types then indicates the naturals and transfinites. These are necessary entities, part of the framework for any given possible world to exist. This opens up the logic of being question, of what nature is a natural number or a transfinite then onward the panoply of rationals, integers, irrationals that give us the reals and the continuum. Which cannot be severed from the experience of extended space. One thing I see there is how the interval [0,1] has in it the images for 1/x, x GRT 1, so we see how transfinite cardinality is not like that of finite sets. Now, numbers and other abstracta are informational and it seems, mental. So, part of the intractability of the debates will be the unwelcome shadow of God on the doorstep of the temples of the radically secularist academy. Where of course, here, God is a serious candidate necessary being. One who would contemplate eternally the panoply of number, quantity, structure etc that is the essence of Mathematics. But, such would be an onward question. What is of interest here is that Mathematics interacts with possible worlds discourse in highly interesting ways. So, when we use [culturally influenced!] axiomatisations to develop abstract logic-model worlds, we are exploring possibilities, or at least provisional ones [nod to Godel]. If in so doing we stumble upon necessary beings, these would be part of the framework for any possible world, thus our actual one. And this answers Wheeler's itch. Mathematics is powerful in the physical sciences as it contains necessary being entities that are integral to the framework for any world that is possible of existence. Whether physical or as a computer simulation or as a mental contemplation makes but little difference. In turn, this encourages exploration and identifies strategic targets. Going further, the concept of classes or achetypes that are possible beings in possible worlds with clusters of core characteristics extensible to objects instantiating the classes then becomes significant. As I argued in the first few OP's in my current series, this grounds reasoning by analogy and by induction more generally. As, if characteristics c1 . . . cm are shared by all members or at least this is credible then to see sufficient family resemblance supports conclusions that turn on such inheritance. All of this invites exploration. KFkairosfocus
December 14, 2018
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EG, I have not personally insulted you; that is neither my general habit nor do I hold animosity to you. I suggest that you turn down the rhetorical voltage and deal with substantial issues. KFkairosfocus
December 14, 2018
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A more mature but common example is seen all the time in my profession. We pose open problems referred to as "conjectures". Two famous conjectures were solved relatively recently: Fermat's Last Theorem and the Poincare Conjecture. Were they "meaningless" prior to their solution? Of course not! Almost everyone believed they were true and worked hard for many years (300+ years for FLT) to find a proof. That's platonism in action. (Fame and fortune for correct solutions also helped.) There is another million dollar problem (Clay Institute will pay for a valid solution) called the Navier-Stokes Equation. This is a mathematical model for turbulence that has important applications in the physical world. Is there or is there not a tractable solution for NS? That depends on whether you are a platonist!math guy
December 14, 2018
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I've been lurking for a number of years, but this OP is a particular interest of mine and I could not resist responding! Disclosure, I am a mathematical platonist who gets frustrated at the obstinacy of those who deny what is patently obvious (to me and most mathematicians). In the style of Granville Sewell, let's think about what a non-platonist accepts: Does the decimal expansion of pi contain 100 consecutive occurrences of the digit "7"? Any high school student would respond to the effect, it does or it doesn't, we just don't know yet. That's platonism. The non-platonist will have to quote AJ Ayers and claim the question is meaningless. But what does Ayers say after the latest supercomputer churns out another trillion digits for pi that contains the requisite sequence of "7"s? That we just created that sequence from nothing? Our original question now has meaning?math guy
December 14, 2018
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[Posts that are entirely about personalities and no substance will be deleted - WJM]math guy
December 14, 2018
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[Posts that are entirely about personalities and no substance will be deleted - WJM]Ed George
December 14, 2018
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EG, the issues remain on the table. For days, they have stood essentially unanswered from your side. Do you think that that will not be noticed leading to the conclusion that the objections lack substance? KFkairosfocus
December 14, 2018
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Hazel
Hmmm . You guys are awfully hostilely argumentative, and I don’t know where the hostility comes from.
I have to agree. All we are debating is whether mathematics is something that humans invented to model (overlay) reality, or whether it existed, somehow (but never explained) before humans arrived. Personally, I am fine with either, but I just don’t find the arguments for mathematics being fundamental to existance being very compelling.Ed George
December 14, 2018
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H'mm: H, 44: >>A circle is an abstract concept. No circle, in the mathematical sense, exists in the physical world. Do you agree, ET?>> ET or other personalities not being primary, I responded, inviting an examination on the merits: KF, 46: >>Hazel, We can worry about the precise ontology and metaphysics of numbers, the continuum, motion involving rates of change tied to displacement, etc later. Right now, start from, is motion a real phenomenon? If not, explain how you typed your comments through the delusion of motion. If so, rates of change and connected locations in space across time are sufficient to underscore the point.>> EG, 47: >>Hazel @ 44, the same applies to right angles, straight lines and cubes. We can describe them mathematically, but they don’t really exist in nature. We can use math to model acceleration due to gravity, but at best we are talking about an average. Acceleration due to gravity on the bar stool I am currently sitting is different than it is on the stool at the other end of the bar.>> KF, 48: >>Ed George kindly describe nature in such a way that it does not include space. For, if nature manifests space, right angles — a spatial phenomenon — most certainly exist. Namely any two vectors such that they start at the same point and are orthogonal so the cos of their included angle is zero. Of course, you will be tempted to deny points, which simply denotes location. If what you mean is that we cannot make an absolutely perfectly right angled body, that is both irrelevant and points to the real problem being the assumption that “real” means physical-material. That would show the pernicious influence of evolutionary materialistic scientism, which is self-refuting and necessarily false. But then, my saying that brings up propositions (the truth claims asserted or denied in statements) which strict materialists deny as being real. The problem then being that meaning, logical implication, logical antithesis and distinct identity also have not mass nor location nor size nor energy content and would become unreal, again illustrating the absurdities of such materialism and of fellow traveller movements>> WJM, 49: >>hazel, I have certainly not made the argument that abstractions or “Platonic forms” exist in what we call the real world or as an overlay. I demonstrated that the abstractions are symbols of language used to describe real things we find in the world, and showed how the word “tree” is an abstraction that points to a real thing, and how mathematics are abstractions that point to real thing (behaviors), and so saying “we invented mathematics” instead of “we discovered mathematics” is exactly the same as saying “we invented trees” or “we invented gravity” or “we invented inertia”. This is obvious, basic logic. So you moved the goal posts. Instead of actual things denoted by symbolic words, you moved to a set of characteristic like “tree-ness” or “sphere-ness”. I also addressed that directly. If “sphere-ness” is comparable to “mathematics-ness” and used to represent qualities found in physical phenomena, then once again it is appropriate to consider mathematics a discoverable, not invented, phenomena. Humans did not invent spherical objects, nor did humans invent the mathematical behaviors of phenomena. Now you’ve moved the goal post yet again, to claim the debate is about whether not “platonic forms” are part of the real world. And, you and Ed, apparently in lieu of any actual rebuttal of these points, invoke a quote from Einstein as if that is a meaningful addition to the debate here. How about answering a simple question: did humans discover that 2+3=5? Or did they invent it? I’m not talking about the symbols; I’m talking about what the symbols refer to. For example, did we just invent the fact that 2 of anything plus 3 of the same thing equals five of that thing? >> H, 50: >>Hmmm . You guys are awfully hostilely argumentative, and I don’t know where the hostility comes from. But it’s not much fun, so I’ll bow out.>> It seems, there are some serious points on the table that need an answer from those who wish to argue that the substance of Mathematics is not embedded in the world. KFkairosfocus
December 14, 2018
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[Posts that are entirely about personalities and no substance will be deleted - WJM]hazel
December 14, 2018
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hazel, I have certainly not made the argument that abstractions or "Platonic forms" exist in what we call the real world or as an overlay. I demonstrated that the abstractions are symbols of language used to describe real things we find in the world, and showed how the word "tree" is an abstraction that points to a real thing, and how mathematics are abstractions that point to real thing (behaviors), and so saying "we invented mathematics" instead of "we discovered mathematics" is exactly the same as saying "we invented trees" or "we invented gravity" or "we invented inertia". This is obvious, basic logic. So you moved the goal posts. Instead of actual things denoted by symbolic words, you moved to a set of characteristic like "tree-ness" or "sphere-ness". I also addressed that directly. If "sphere-ness" is comparable to "mathematics-ness" and used to represent qualities found in physical phenomena, then once again it is appropriate to consider mathematics a discoverable, not invented, phenomena. Humans did not invent spherical objects, nor did humans invent the mathematical behaviors of phenomena. Now you've moved the goal post yet again, to claim the debate is about whether not "platonic forms" are part of the real world. And, you and Ed, apparently in lieu of any actual rebuttal of these points, invoke a quote from Einstein as if that is a meaningful addition to the debate here. How about answering a simple question: did humans discover that 2+3=5? Or did they invent it? I'm not talking about the symbols; I'm talking about what the symbols refer to. For example, did we just invent the fact that 2 of anything plus 3 of the same thing equals five of that thing?William J Murray
December 14, 2018
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Ed George kindly describe nature in such a way that it does not include space. For, if nature manifests space, right angles -- a spatial phenomenon -- most certainly exist. Namely any two vectors such that they start at the same point and are orthogonal so the cos of their included angle is zero. Of course, you will be tempted to deny points, which simply denotes location. If what you mean is that we cannot make an absolutely perfectly right angled body, that is both irrelevant and points to the real problem being the assumption that "real" means physical-material. That would show the pernicious influence of evolutionary materialistic scientism, which is self-refuting and necessarily false. But then, my saying that brings up propositions (the truth claims asserted or denied in statements) which strict materialists deny as being real. The problem then being that meaning, logical implication, logical antithesis and distinct identity also have not mass nor location nor size nor energy content and would become unreal, again illustrating the absurdities of such materialism and of fellow traveller movements. KFkairosfocus
December 14, 2018
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Hazel@44, the same applies to right angles, straight lines and cubes. We can describe them mathematically, but they don’t really exist in nature. We can use math to model acceleration due to gravity, but at best we are talking about an average. Acceleration due to gravity on the bar stool I am currently sitting is different than it is on the stool at the other end of the bar.Ed George
December 14, 2018
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Hazel, We can worry about the precise ontology and metaphysics of numbers, the continuum, motion involving rates of change tied to displacement, etc later. Right now, start from, is motion a real phenomenon? If not, explain how you typed your comments through the delusion of motion. If so, rates of change and connected locations in space across time are sufficient to underscore the point. KFkairosfocus
December 14, 2018
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hazel, if you have a point, make it. I will not play your "no black swans" game. Is the Universe Made of Math?:
In this excerpt from his new book, Our Mathematical Universe, M.I.T. professor Max Tegmark explores the possibility that math does not just describe the universe, but makes the universe
ET
December 14, 2018
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A circle is an abstract concept. No circle, in the mathematical sense, exists in the physical world. Do you agree, ET?hazel
December 14, 2018
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hazel:
the thing I am unclear on is whether the abstract mathematics is “embedded” in the universe,
You are stuck in a box. Why do you think mathematics is only an abstraction?ET
December 14, 2018
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Yes there is an "astonishing good fit" between mathematical descriptions and the physical world, and yes our world has structure, and yes distinct identity is the key foundation of mathematics. I don't think I disagree with any of that. If anything, and this may be a matter of semantics, or it may be, as I said earlier, a matter of philosophical point-of-view, the thing I am unclear on is whether the abstract mathematics is "embedded" in the universe, or whether those abstractions correctly model (with Einstein's caveat) a universe which has regularities in all of its multitudinous particular instances, but doesn't actually contain any abstract, Platonic overlay.hazel
December 14, 2018
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