I think the "No" is the most errant nonsense. Weigh in. Someone's an idiot (imho). If it's me I might as well find out now - sometimes the price of an education. — tim wood
Is this going to be another endless thread where loose terms like "absolute" are introduced but never explained, and then people proceed to talk past each other ad nauseum? — SophistiCat
↪tim wood Is this going to be another endless thread where loose terms like "absolute" are introduced but never explained, and then people proceed to talk past each other ad nauseum? — SophistiCat
there's no reason to say that any mathematical statement is universal. — xxxx
Try reading the OP, S. Someone not you denies that 2+2=4 is demonstrably true. Nothing to do with morality. That's why this is the math forum. — tim wood
He also says - it's just above:
"
there's no reason to say that any mathematical statement is universal.
— xxxx
Do you endorse that? — tim wood
Make of this what you will — tim wood
He followed that up by saying that no mathematical statement is universally constructed by humans. Is that what he meant? And what does that mean? That every single human must make the statement that 2 + 2 = 4? That doesn't make much sense to me. Why would we even be talking about that? Why would every single human do that, or need to do that? Why would someone claim that? I don't really get the denial, because I don't get why anyone would make that affirmation to begin with. — S
Do you hold that 2+2=4 is absolutely true as a matter of reason? — Tim Wood
except that the OP doesn't seem to be interested in such a discussion. — SophistiCat
You may think that you are supporting the OP by claiming that 2+2 equals 4 by definition, but you are actually doing the opposite. If it is nothing more than a definition, then it is just an arbitrary convention, like naming. 2+2 could just as soon equal 5, if we agreed to define it that way. — SophistiCat
Not sure exactly what you're asking. In math, we always called 2+2=4 a given number fact. It's not something that has to be proved or verified. — T Clark
And all of this 'stuff' is human-created. That it proves useful in describing some parts of the real world is not magic. We created maths to help us think about the real world. Why would we be surprised when it proves useful for that task? — Pattern-chaser
That's because it's presented axiomatically. It is defined to be true. There's nothing wrong with this, but we should be aware that it's being done. The truth of "2+2=4" depends on number theory and arithmetic, for a start. Maybe other stuff too. And all of this 'stuff' is human-created. That it proves useful in describing some parts of the real world is not magic. We created maths to help us think about the real world. Why would we be surprised when it proves useful for that task? — Pattern-chaser
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.