I say the US education system does a massive disservice to the field of mathematics due to the fact that it divorces the philosophy of mathematics away from the applied version. — Vaskane
the philosophy of mathematics in the 20th century was characterized by a predominant interest in formal logic, set theory (both naive set theory and axiomatic set theory), and foundational issues.
What is required is trust in the teacher's ability to recognise and adapt their teaching to the student. But that's contrary to the very notion of a curriculum. — Banno
What is one sentence where "infinity" is used as an adjective? — Lionino
My cousin has an infinity pool because he thinks that if he swims in it he will live forever. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Of course, but I'm saying that in context of sets in mathematics, 'infinity' as a noun invites misunderstanding, especially as it suggests there is an object named 'infinity' that has different sizes. — TonesInDeepFreeze
My statements were from my reasoning. But what you claim to be objectivity is from the textbooks. Please bear in mind, the textbooks are also written by someone who have been reasoning on the subject. It is not the bible, to which you have to take every words and sentences as the objectivity that everyone on the earth must follow. That sounds religious.One is free to say that we don't need utter objectivity, but then we may say, "Fair enough. So your desideratum is different from those using the axiomatic method." — TonesInDeepFreeze
The whole confusion resulted from the wrong premise that infinite numbers do exist. No they don't exist at all. So it is an illusion. From the illusive premises you can draw any conclusions which are also illusive.As a "set" is an object it can have a size, and therefore there can be different sizes of sets.
However, as the qualifier "that can be added to" is not an aspect of the size of the set, whilst the expression "different sizes of sets" is grammatical, the expression "different sizes of infinite sets" is ungrammatical. — RussellA
I have seen some ultrafinitists go so far as to challenge the existence of as a natural number, in the sense of there being a series of “points” of that length. There is the obvious “draw the line” objection, asking where in do we stop having “Platonistic reality”? Here this … is totally innocent, in that it can be easily be replaced by 100 items (names) separated by commas. I raised just this objection with the (extreme) ultrafinitist Yessenin-Volpin during a lecture of his. He asked me to be more specific. I then proceeded to start with and asked him whether this is “real” or something to that effect. He virtually immediately said yes. Then I asked about , and he again said yes, but with a perceptible delay. Then , and yes, but with more delay. This continued for a couple of more times, till it was obvious how he was handling this objection. Sure, he was prepared to always answer yes, but he was going to take times as long to answer yes to then he would to answering . There is no way that I could get very far with this. — Harvey Friedman, Philosophical Problems in Logic
I have seen some ultrafinitists go so far as to challenge the existence of 2 100 2 100 as a natural number, in the sense of there being a series of “points” of that length — Harvey Friedman, Philosophical Problems in Logic
Is Metaphysician Undercover a product of the New Maths? :wink: — Banno
Infinity pools can indeed be awesome — ssu
This reminds me of the axiomatic systems that perhaps some animals (or people) have: nothing, 1, 2,3,4, many. When you think of it, it's quite useful for up to a point.I have seen some ultrafinitists go so far as to challenge the existence of 2 100 2 100 as a natural number, in the sense of there being a series of “points” of that length
— Harvey Friedman, Philosophical Problems in Logic
That reminds me of intuitionists or at the very least of psychologists in the ontology of mathematics, where the number 2^100 does not exist until it is thought up. — Lionino
Yes, I've always pondered how few people go to a port or to the seashore and simply look at how large ships simply "sink" into the horizon far earlier than they become tiny specs. But I guess flat Earthers just have this habit of going with the crazy and being against the tyrannical science & math we "sheeple" so blindly accept and follow. It makes them special.You get the same effect when you take a boat on a reservoir, up toward the dam, the higher the dam the better. It's like empirical proof that the earth is flat, and you're at the edge of the world. — Metaphysician Undercover
But as you say, this is problematic as it suggests that infinity is an object, such as a mountain or a table, which can be thought about. — RussellA
within mathematics is the infinity symbol ∞ — RussellA
So what does the word "infinity" refer to, if not a noun inferring an object? — RussellA
As the Wikipedia article on Infinity writes: Infinity is a mathematical concept, and infinite mathematical objects can be studied, manipulated, and used just like any other mathematical object. — RussellA
Infinity in math has been improvised to explain and describe continuous motion — Corvus
Sets can have different sizes etc. It is OK to keep on saying that in math forums, and it sounds correct because that is what the textbook says. — Corvus
the whole picture was based on the fabricated concepts, which are not very useful or practical in the real world. — Corvus
I do not think I was ever subjected to new math. — Metaphysician Undercover
But what you claim to be objectivity is from the textbooks. — Corvus
It is not the bible, to which you have to take every words and sentences as the objectivity that everyone on the earth must follow. — Corvus
we find lots of confusions in math and also the math students — Corvus
the expression "different sizes of infinite sets" is ungrammatical. — RussellA
The whole confusion resulted from the wrong premise that infinite numbers do exist. — Corvus
I do not think I was ever subjected to new math. — Metaphysician Undercover
my education in mathematics — Metaphysician Undercover
you hold a boat load of mathematical knowledge — Vaskane
the US education system does a massive disservice to the field of mathematics due to the fact that it divorces the philosophy of mathematics away from the applied version. — Vaskane
Ok. So we still have no explanation of how you came to misapprehend "=". — Banno
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