it's philosophy in the sense of perspective rather than the topic of this site. You're looking for this kind of thing. — fdrake
Maybe therein a set of clues that a philosophy-of might organize somehow. — tim wood
I accidentally ended up drilling down into expensive consultancy practices — alcontali
it seems to be quite divorced from the philosophy of mathematics, even though that is where it all originated. Alan Turing, Alonzo Church, Bertrand Russell, Stephen Kleene, and John Von Neumann, just to name a few, dreamed up abstract machines that were later painstakingly implemented. — alcontali
As to your question, it seems to me that you're perched between thinkers(-doers) and practitioners. Folks can be in either or both camps, but they're two different camps. — tim wood
Some years ago, there was an "Iron Man" version of a definition of software engineering — Pattern-chaser
In order to propose Knowledge Areas and Related Disciplines for “generally accepted” knowledge and to do so based on recognized, public and verifiable sources of information, it was decided that the tables of contents of general software engineering textbooks, the curricula of undergraduate and graduate programs in software engineering, and the admission criteria for graduate programs would constitute the input to our analysis. A total of 24 textbooks and 29 programs were examined.For the purposes of this Straw Man version, a potential knowledge area had to be mentioned in the table of contents of at least one quarter of the textbooks sampled to qualify as a proposed Knowledge Area.The ISO/IEC 12207 standard on Software Life Cycle Processes is used as the basis and vocabulary for the classification of the different topics related to the life cycle. A number of other topics not related to the life-cycle were also considered.
The list of proposed Knowledge Areas based on ISO/IEC 12207 is: — SWEBOK
Agile is one of the recent fads, and it has been changed from its original (worthwhile) intent to something that can be taught in a classroom, and produce Agile Managers. — Pattern-chaser
In my opinion, "agile" is epistemically worthless. — alcontali
But whatever you call it, software engineering needs to take into account changing requirements when you can't nail them down before starting the project. — Marchesk
So computer programming have more in common with house construction work or something like that than with maths. — Ansiktsburk
One problem here is that I dont really know much about the philosophy of maths. What is that all about? — Ansiktsburk
unlike a significant proportion of set-theorists, who as a result of refusing to get their hands dirty in practical application, end up associating mathematical infinity with the religious idea of eternity. — sime
According to Cantor's theory, the infinities (Beth numbers) (or Aleph numbers) are a series of successive numbers, with the smallest one being countable infinite, the next one uncountable infinite, and each successive infinity, inf[n] = 2^inf[n-1], the cardinality of the power set of the previous one. Such sequence of infinities is not particularly compatible with the idea of one God, which would correspond to one infinity. — alcontali
The Beth numbers are the Alephs in the presence of the continuum hypothesis; they're distinct in its absence. — fishfry
What is interesting is how closely tied mainstream software development practices are to capitalism. — darthbarracuda
But there are other ways of developing software that are less tied to economics - open source software is a great example. — darthbarracuda
The reason agile became a thing is because often it's the case that during a software project the requirements change as the customer comes to realize what they really want which they were unable to specify at the outset. — Marchesk
It is the very notion of "project" with "start" date, "delivery" date, and definitive "budget" that is the problem. The larger the distance between what you want to achieve versus what you can download verbatim from github, the more costly the failure will be. — alcontali
[C]omputer programs have a different kind of complexity, in that the problem really isnt the complexity of the problem to be solved, but in the communications. What is it we want done, how shall the different persons realizing the programming project work together, how shall the programming parts communicate with each other, how can we use already delivered program code. — Ansiktsburk
the philosophically enlightening thing about the craft of software engineering is its cut-throat pragmatism... — sime
I think perhaps in the next few decades, programmers will put themselves out of a job by developing an artificial intelligence that can do their jobs. — darthbarracuda
Finite fields (in which arithmetic is permitted) must have a prime-power size. Therefore, there tend to be gaps between permissible calculation field sizes. E.g. a size of 13 is allowed, but 14,15 are not; 16=2⁴ is a prime power and is again allowed, and so on. So, in a way, we could wonder why it would be any different -- the fact that there are gaps -- in between infinite field sizes in which arithmetic is permitted? Of course, this kind of pattern is not a proof, but it seems to point in a particular direction. — alcontali
But then again, since CH is provably not provable/disprovable from ZFC, proving CH from any alternative set of axioms, that is not just itself, may not be particularly "simple". It would require a meaningful distance, i.e. a meaningful number of non-trivial derivation steps from these axioms to CH, while these axioms would also have to be provably independent of ZFC. I do not see how else anybody could make progress in CH? — alcontali
The Alephs aren't fields. Finite fields have absolutely nothing at all to do with this. They're apples and rutabagas. — fishfry
One can Google around. A lot of work has been done by Woodin, Hamkins, and other contemporary set theorists. Work on CH has been ongoing for decades. It just doesn't make the mainstream news. — fishfry
One big new idea is Woodin's Ultimate-L. It's so new and so technical it doesn't have a Wikipedia entry. This MathOverflow thread has some references. Nothing in this topic is comprehensible to laymen, just mentioning it since it's the state of the CH art. — fishfry
Another idea is Hamkins's set-theoretic multiverse.
http://jdh.hamkins.org/themultiverse/ — fishfry
Here's an accessible article that surveys the modern developments.
https://www.ias.edu/ideas/2011/kennedy-continuum-hypothesis — fishfry
[2] Continuum hypothesis. There is an insurmountable gap between aleph-0 and aleph-1. There are no infinite cardinalities in between. — alcontali
[1] A Reinhardt cardinal, [2] An n-huge cardinal, [3] A huge cardinal, [4] An extendible cardinal, [5] A supercompact cardinal, [6] A superstrong cardinal, [7] A Woodin cardinal, [8] A measurable cardinal, [9] A (strongly) inaccessible cardinal.
The complexity proposed is substantially beyond what is done in existing, established theories. Therefore, what he is doing, looks quite ... ambitious. — alcontali
hose technical terms are the meat and potatoes of 20th century set theory, especially of the last thirty or forty years. They're not "beyond existing theories." — fishfry
I just somehow hope that the nitty-gritty distinctions between "extremely large", "super huge", and "incredibly out-sized" cardinals won't be needed. — alcontali
I
Furthermore, I was more interested in the remark by/on Woodin, "why the Axiom of Projective Determinacy, PD, should be accepted". I do not think it matters "why". What matters is that If PD is provably independent from ZFC, and that Woodin also manages to prove CH from PD. Then, Woodin will have finished the job. The real problem is what he writes at "the argument is still incomplete ...". That is why I said that I am waiting for him to complete the argument. Unfortunately, we cannot do particularly much with just half the argument ... — alcontali
I
That is why I said that I am waiting for him to complete the argument. Unfortunately, we cannot do particularly much with just half the argument ... — alcontali
About CH, I just said in my own words what you can find in Wikipedia too. Maybe it is a mis-statement. I don't particularly care, actually. CH is not "critically" important to me. I do not research it. It is not my job. I do other stuff. So, yes, just like Wikipedia (as an earlier remark), I am not much interested in going particularly much beyond what is provable already, and therefore, what are merely "the basics".You mis-stated CH in such a way as to give me the impression you haven't studied much set theory beyond the basics. — fishfry
My point is that neither of us is remotely qualified to discuss Woodin's work at all, unless you have set-theoretic knowledge far in excess of what you have demonstrated so far. Nor is his argument incomplete. — fishfry
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