Yes. I predict, like I say, that you will either end up questioning the probative value of any argument for anything, or you will dismiss the argument on the grounds that it has premises that entail its conclusion (which, I suppose, amounts to the same thing). — Bartricks
The specific proof that I was talking about, however, is not currently widely known. So we cannot really look to the expert community's judgement about it, for it has not yet been formed. — Bartricks
Do you see how that just takes us back to the beginning.” I don’t know what art is, but I know what I like.” — Brett
But why? — Brett
I don’t think the Nefertiti bust is a work of art in the sense we see it — Brett
Is that a statement or question? — Brett
So, if I had thought,"I'm going to do art" the first time and did exactly the same procedure, that first image would have been art? This is a tad more complicated than putting a brush to canvas. In my case the "brush" has a "mind" of its own. — jgill
Right. It's like the difference between accidentally pressing the button on your camera (complicated machine!) and choosing to do so. The camera may be doing much of the "work" (i.e., showing a "mind" of its own), but you're the primary mover.
We have to make that distinction or else you have no way to distinguish art from bird's nests and sunflowers and sunsets. — Artemis
Is that a statement or question?
There is no concept of accidental art. Accidental art is a moment that happens unexpectedly and the artist is able to use all their skills to take advantage of it. — Brett
But patterns are nothing more than what humans perceive is beautiful, — Gregory
But how do we know the pattern is not controlling us? — Gregory
Define an artist. — Brett
Plus without a background in metaphysics you'd be unlikely to recognise it for the proof that it is. — Bartricks
A god's existence can be proved, and God's existence can be shown to be more reasonably believed than not — Bartricks
But patterns are nothing more than what humans perceive is beautiful, regardless if infinite chaos can be contained in a mathematical system — Gregory
Experts on whether a god exists or not are metaphysicians, for it is a topic in metaphysics — Bartricks
Who else is an expert on it, then? — Bartricks
However, there is a way to "represent" all the the logical operations of set theory ONLY in terms of the objects and arrows of a category — Mephist
For example, many mathematical ideas are expressed as music, rhythm, harmony, etc.. This is a completely different way of expressing mathematical ideas, distinct from putting symbols and geometrical figures on paper — Metaphysician Undercover
↪Pfhorrest
You should defer to experts as a general rule, so long as they are talking within their area of expertise.
But when they're not, then you shouldn't. — Bartricks
I have not looked yet, but from your description of it being a computer program with the unintended byproduct being aesthetically pleasing, I would say it was originally not art, just aesthetically pleasing math, but that anything you create now with the program with the intent that it should be aesthetically pleasing would qualify as art. — Artemis
The scientists, engineers, and others who use the mathematics force the existence of conventions which form the artist's medium. Then the mathematicians work with the existing conventions, and those conventions are a pollution to the notion of "pure mind art". — Metaphysician Undercover
Intention to create something that is aesthetically engaging in some way. — Artemis
↪jgill
I do not follow your meaning. I think we do indeed know art when we see it. Or rather, we know it when archaeologists see it.
So, some seem to think you only know something when you can define it, as if somehow reality were made of definitions.
I think we already have - via our reason - the understanding that the definitions are seeking to capture — Bartricks
jgill You are an artist. I bet by varying the formula you could learn to control the patterns / colours produced. — Pop
Tulsi. You see what a dreamer I am — fishfry
Mathematicians just dream up their axioms and principles for no apparent reasons, just because they are beautiful or something, so that the mathematical principles are somewhat arbitrary in this way, pure mind art. — Metaphysician Undercover
all attacks on religion would also apply to any subdiscipline in mathematics — alcontali
In conclusion, is chaos theory all bunk? — Gregory
I understand art as an expression of human consciousness, and art work as information about the artists consciousness — Pop
.. . . believe that mathematical principles are always developed for purposes, goals, ends, and therefore . . . — Metaphysician Undercover
But now I am too curious: which theorems did you prove? — Mephist
