Kripke allows that mathematicians can adequately specify the rules of addition. That's not being called into question. — frank
Kripke allows that mathematicians can adequately specify the rules of addition. That's not being called into question. — frank
If you mean a fact that justifies the rule and/or justifies how the rule is applied. I sometimes think that the quickest way to state the problem is to point out that the rule cannot be a fact, because the rule has imperative force and no fact can do that - a version of the fact/value distinction. For the same reason, no fact can, of itself, justify the rule. — Ludwig V
The question is, how can an intensional definition of addition such as an inductive definition, that is finitely specified and only provides an inductive rule for performing a single step of computation, imply an unambiguous and extensionally infinite table of values? — sime
If you mean the mathematical justifications of the rule, that's true - within the rules (practices, language games) of mathematics. But what justifies those? "This is how we do it. You need to learn that. — Ludwig V
I am probably not understanding this at all correctly because its too technical for me but it sounds like its bolstering the Kripke's skepticism rather than really solving anything. — Apustimelogist
If you mean a fact that justifies the rule and/or justifies how the rule is applied. I sometimes think that the quickest way to state the problem is to point out that the rule cannot be a fact, because the rule has imperative force and no fact can do that - a version of the fact/value distinction. For the same reason, no fact can, of itself, justify the rule. — Ludwig V
The question of how mathematical rules are justified is also interesting, but Kripke's challenge is about the use of the English word plus. What fact is there about how you were using it? — frank
It only dispells it if you think dogmatism is a valid way to objective truth. — Apustimelogist
In addition, your point of view comes to the bizarre conclusion that under the conditions of underdetermination of the thought experiment where there is no fact of the matter that distinguishes someone's past usage of quus vs. plus, someone has to be using plus and not quus. Its impossible for someone to be using the rule quus because it would be too arbitrary. — Apustimelogist
Dogmatism has nothing to do with it; there is simply no reason that addition should terminate anywhere. — Janus
This is nonsense: I haven't claimed that one could not use quaddition or any other arbitrary rule. — Janus
But then it is simply addition up that point, and so what? — Janus
It has everything to do with it because you're adamant that even when the situation is underdetermined, you dogmatically lean on plus even though you have no further means that can disambiguate the actual rule was plus. — Apustimelogist
But the question is whether it is also quaddition? — Apustimelogist
I don't disagree with the private language argument, at least as I interpret it, which is to say that if you tried to construct a private language, you would always be relying on the public language you know in order to tell yourself what your novel language means. So. I'm not seeing the relevance in this context. — Janus
If quaddition is the same as addition then it's not a different procedure but just a different name. — Janus
So what? If it differs, then how could it do so without arbitrarily stipulating that iteration must cease at some point? — Janus
I can just keep adding forever in principle. — Janus
Its about the fact that everything you have done so far is consistent with multiple different rules. The rules can then be different but your behavior so far has been indistinguishable. — Apustimelogist
You can keep adding forever but you then need to give me a definition of that which then naturally entails the results of addition and not quaddition, otherwise how would I know that you go on using your rule and then you just end up quadditing or any other rule? — Apustimelogist
I don't see human behavior as being relevant to the logic of counting or addition except insofar as it follows it. It's true that for finite addition (which all addition actually is) the logical possibility of endless iteration does not have to be kept in mind. — Janus
The rules are obviously different; you just need to give me something that distinguishes whether you are using one rule or the other. — Apustimelogist
If you cannot give me an intelligible explanation then how are you going to differentiate whether you are using plus and quus? — Apustimelogist
So, if I add two numbers and the sum is more than 57, I am not doing quaddition, but ordinary addition. — Janus
And as I said before if I am working out how many guests will be at my daughter's wedding and there are 35 from one side and 75 from the other, quaddition will be of no use, because it will tell me that I only need five places at the dinner table and five meals. — Janus
and wherever they are the same then there is no point using another name for what amounts to being just ordinary addition. — Janus
The point is that wherever quaddition or any other arbitrary set of rules differs from addition then it is obvious which one I'm doing — Janus
This whole subject is a non-subject as far as I can tell, and no one has been able to come up with anything to convince me otherwise, so I think the time has come to drop it unless you have something new and substantive to say about it. — Janus
Not necessarily because there are other rules other than plus which are consistent with that sum also. There are no specific instances which where alternative rules cannot be applied. — Apustimelogist
Well thats dogmatism like I said because wherever they are the same you can easily use quus. — Apustimelogist
Demonstrate it, give a definition that tells me you will always give the correct answers for plus and not quus. — Apustimelogist
I think my view about dogmatism is valid. — Apustimelogist
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