There must be a starting-point physical entity, whether differentiable, or not. So, there too must be a starting-point counting number. — ucarr
"Must be"? Why must there be? If you look closely enough, you will find the imperative securely rooted in your need for one, in the (your, and mine too) logic of the thing. But logic is descriptive and only seems to be prescriptive. That, or show, extra-logic, how and why it must be. — tim wood
This isn’t the logic of the starting; there can be no logic of the starting as there is, as yet, no logic. Starting is pre-analytic, thus pre-logical. Starting with an arbitrary start_starting count is an existential necessity that has no logical support. This is evidenced by the scientific method: science starts with an arbitrary starting point, the axiom. — ucarr
Like the rules and strategies of (e.g.) chess, respectively (i.e. grammars and narratives).My 'anti-platonist pragmatics' (finitism?) comes to this: pure mathematics is mostly 'invented' (re: pattern-making) and applied mathematics is mostly 'discovered' (re: pattern-matching). — 180 Proof
f I have 5 oranges in one basket and I have 5 apples in another basket, the 5 does not seem to participate in Appleness nor the orangeness. So the number is not the same as numbered things. — JuanZu
If it were the same (or if the number is an intrinsic property of numbered things), we would have to say that 5 apples are 5 oranges and vice-versa (or that 5 apples have the property of been 5 oranges and vice-versa) breaking the identity principle. — “JuanZu
If apples and oranges have intrinsic physical properties then the number(if it is different from numbered things to avoid breaking with the principle of identity)does not participate in those physical intrisic properties either. Therefore, the number is not something physical and is extrinsic to intrinsic physical things which are numbered — JuanZu
It is also necessary to define what you mean by a physical thing. — JuanZu
…every physical fact depends on facts about this mathematical structure, but not vice versa. — Hallucinogen
My 'anti-platonist pragmatics' (finitism?) comes to this: pure mathematics is mostly invented (re: pattern-making) and applied mathematics is mostly discovered (re: pattern-matching) — 180 Proof
You say number stands apart from apples and oranges . When we look at number five apart from them, we know nothing about their number. How do you know both have number five? — ucarr
Since number five, in abstraction, tells us nothing about apples, oranges or any other physically real thing, that tells us pure math, in order to be physically real and thus inhere within particular, physical things, and thus be existentially significant, meaningful and useful, must evaluate down to physical particulars. Universals are emergent from particulars, but they are not existentially meaningful in abstraction. — ucarr
Physical: anything subject to the spacetime warpage of gravitational fields — ucarr
We do not know. — JuanZu
If I have 5 oranges in one basket and I have 5 apples in another basket… — JuanZu
If this is something you cannot know — ucarr
then your argument above has no grounding in fact and therefore no logically attainable truth content, only blind guesswork. On that basis, why should I accept it? — ucarr
Do you believe math is metaphysically prior to physics? — ucarr
What do math theoreticians say about the physical mind’s — ucarr
If so, what say you about the fact that math, like physics, possesses pre-analytical axioms? — ucarr
Also, what say you about math axioms being incomplete? — ucarr
It has to be, since mathematical concepts are more general than physical entities, which only exist at a given coordinate in space. Mathematical truths whoever enjoy far greater comprehensivity. — Hallucinogen
Number is an essential, material property. — ucarr
Now let’s blink out the natural world of physics... — ucarr
he surprising effectiveness of mathematics in making accurate, sometimes unexpected predictions about the natural world suggests a deeper connection between mathematical structures and physical reality. This view opposes the idea that mathematics is just a tool invented for practical purposes, instead hinting at some intrinsic relationship between mathematical concepts and the fabric of the universe. — Wayfarer
It has to be, since mathematical concepts are more general than physical entities, which only exist at a given coordinate in space. Mathematical truths whoever enjoy far greater comprehensivity. — Hallucinogen
I don't presuppose the existence of "physical minds" — Hallucinogen
What a priori axioms does physics possess? — Hallucinogen
Any that math possesses supports my position. — Hallucinogen
:up:A particle moves through space; some formulae do a good job of describing that movement and even predicting how it might go. But the particle and its movement are clearly prior. Mathematics, then, would seem to be derive from the world, the world in every sense prior. — tim wood
Now let’s blink out the natural world of physics, thus leaving us with pure math with no physical referents, no matter how far down the line you evaluate. What are we left with? — ucarr
Pure math has connection to the natural world only as indecipherable signification representing thermodynamic equilibrium.
Since mathematicians only use pure math for investigation of the ground rules concerning applied math, pure math is merely higher-order applied math. — ucarr
The surprising effectiveness of mathematics in making accurate, sometimes unexpected predictions about the natural world suggests a deeper connection between mathematical structures and physical reality. This view opposes the idea that mathematics is just a tool invented for practical purposes, instead hinting at some intrinsic relationship between mathematical concepts and the fabric of the universe. — Wayfarer
Not uncoupled from the material world' does not mean 'material in nature' — Wayfarer
And now the hubris of the one who knows will be punished by them what don't. But just a question: some folks think math invented, and others math discovered in the sense of its being "out there" somewhere. My view is that it is discovered, but in the only place it can be found, in a mind and not "out there." And thus discovered/invented, together. What do you say, if you care to say?I hesitate to enter this conversation, — jgill
Percept + concept = complex materialism. — ucarr
Could it be that maths, like space and time are part of our human cognitive apparatus in some way? — Tom Storm
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.