Without 1, 2 could not exist, though the reverse doesn’t hold. Since it is because of the existence of 1, or one thing, that there can be 2, or two things, then the former can be said to be the cause of the latter. — Pretty
Does this hold? Surely this argument has been made plenty times before, no? — Pretty
No, numbers do not have causal efficacy. They are not efficient causes, in any sense of the term. — Arcane Sandwich
No. it doesn't. Number can start from any number you decided to choose to start. Because numbers are the mental concept. There is no physical laws or principles on numbers. — Corvus
can also exist as a mental concept. — Pantagruel
We know, or are aware of the mental objects. They don't exist like the physical objects in the external world. — Corvus
My go-to example is the use of Fibonacci-sequence timed laser pulses to stimulate atoms into a new phase state of matter. Nature is "resonant" to numerical properties.... — Pantagruel
Math formulas, equations and functions are descriptions of the physical world. Description is not physical objects. — Corvus
The sun is yellow. Yellow is not a physical object. But the light being emitted at 510 Terahertz is. — Pantagruel
It's just an empirical observation for me. But I see no reason to discount the reality of numbers. — Pantagruel
You mean like quantum fields, that kind of "substantively real" thing? Or more like statistically defined entities like subatomic particles?But they don't exist like the physical objects do. — Corvus
As the relation between 1 and 1 is contemporaneous with 1 and 1, the concept of cause is not applicable.
If 1 caused 2, then every time 1 appears immediately 2 must appear, if they have cause and effect relationship. But it doesn't. You order 1 coffee in the caffee, and you don't see 2 coffees served to you unless by mistake or confusion of the maid. — Corvus
Because numbers are the mental concept. — Corvus
if a cause necessarily leads to its effect, it makes sense how two and two necessarily lead to four, while two by itself does not necessarily lead to it at all. So the bringing together of 1 and 1 and 1 and 1 is the cause of 4, but 1, 2, 3, or any other smaller number by themselves can’t cause 4 — Pretty
This may just be a spade-turning commitment on my part to viewing cause as separated in time from effect. — J
But that was why I then moved on to thoughts as causes. In a functionalist, psychological way, we can talk about thought A (viewed as a brain-event) causing thought B, even though as yet our science doesn't really know what this means. The question is, is that the same kind of "causing" that we mean when we say that "my thought of A" causes B? We want to say that thought A justifies or explains, rather than causes, thought B -- but that is to bring in the Fregean notion of a thought/proposition that can be abstracted from any given instance of its occurrence in a brain. — J
Aristotle speaks of a certain priority in which two things exist contemporaneous to each other yet still have a causal-effective relationship — such as the existence of a thing and an affirmation of that thing. — Pretty
What about considering binary fission as exemplifying a kind of organic ontology. One parent cell is the efficient cause of two daughter cells. One is the cause, two are the effects. — Pantagruel
↪Arcane Sandwich
I can get why they’re not efficient causes at least, but I’m trying to grasp this in the same lens that the Aristotelian tradition considered the genus of a thing to be the cause of its species. Now, 1 is obviously no genus of 2, but is the genus in any way argued as *efficient* cause by them, or is it formal?
And regardless of that, is it at least then established and agreed upon by most experts that a thing can be necessary for the existence for another thing, and yet not be a cause? If so, my more confused question would be what best defines a cause most generally across all types besides this criteria of necessary priority? — Pretty
↪Arcane Sandwich I can get why they’re not efficient causes at least, but I’m trying to grasp this in the same lens that the Aristotelian tradition considered the genus of a thing to be the cause of its species. Now, 1 is obviously no genus of 2, but is the genus in any way argued as *efficient* cause by them, or is it formal?
And regardless of that, is it at least then established and agreed upon by most experts that a thing can be necessary for the existence for another thing, and yet not be a cause? If so, my more confused question would be what best defines a cause most generally across all types besides this criteria of necessary priority?
Numbers are more like concatenations of units and are not sets. To draw a contrast with modern treatments of numbers, a Greek pair or a two is neither a subset of a triple, nor a member of a triple. It is a part of three. If I say that ten cows are hungry, then I am not saying that a set is hungry. Or to point to another use of ‘set’, my 12 piece teaset is in a cabinet, not in an abstract universe. So too, these ten units are a part of these twenty units:
One (a unit) typically is not a number (but Aristotle is ambivalent on this), since a number is a plurality of units.
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