However, if a "mathematical antirealist" believes that math is invented and these concepts exist only in human minds, then one must accept that the conception of "2" varies depending on the circumstance, or use. This is very evident from the multitude of different number systems. So for example, when a person uses, "2" it might refer to a group two things, or it might refer to the second in a series, or order. These are two very distinct conceptions referred to by "2". So, since "2" has at least two referents, it cannot refer to a single object. We could however propose a third referent, an object named "2", but what would be the point in that? The object would be something completely distinct from normal usage of the symbol. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think it's right. But anyway, even the notion of reals would go against this argument that mathematical objects "cannot be carried out, cannot be completed" and hence are "nonsensical". And when you throw out real numbers as "nonsensical", your mathematics is quite illogical. We do need number like pi!(I think that's right, but perhaps there could be objections?) — TonesInDeepFreeze
The most irritating answer type is that if you ask something about mathematics and mathematical objects, people answer by referring to physics and for instance quantum physics. No, an observation of the physical reality, that we model by a mathematical model, doesn't tell if a mathematical object is true or false.Another common crank fallacy is claiming that mathematics is false by way or arguing that mathematics uses words in ways different from their ordinary meanings or different from their meanings in certain other fields of study. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You may try for, literally, years and he will not understand. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Even I was not expecting such recalcitrance. That was 24 hours and three pages ago. Those three pages are replete with Corvus' squirming and flailing.But you will double down, again. — Banno
Your problem is that you make out as if what you and your cliques say are the only truth, and the rest of the world are false. Many would believe that your posts should be under the moderations for the extremely biased and misunderstood posts and Clequism you have been trying to pursue in this forum.Way back, I wrote of Corvus:
But you will double down, again.
— Banno
Even I was not expecting such recalcitrance. That was 24 hours and three pages ago. Those three pages are replete with Corvus' squirming and flailing.
There are interesting and controversial ideas in Wittgenstein's anti-platonism, which could make an excellent thread. But an attempt at any such conversation in these fora would quickly be derailed by those who cannot grasp equality and those who misattribute and fabricate willy-nilly.
That's a limitation on @Jamal's otherwise excellent forums. A more proactive moderation might improve the philosophy being done hereabouts. But so many of the better posts are, as ↪TonesInDeepFreeze and ↪Michael have shown in this thread, responses to ineptitude.
And so it goes. — Banno
If you trace back Tone's posts, he starts with ad hominem before getting into philosophy. And you blindly take his side condoning his absurd and incorrect points, as if they are the only truths on the earth. How petty and juvenile. That's too visible, even a 10 year old would sense it. That is not Philosophy. That is a blatant clequism.Sad that the "clique" with which you are in disagreement is that of the mathematicians. Hm.
Anyway, time to move on. Long ago. — Banno
If you trace back Tone's posts, he starts with ad hominem before getting into philosophy. — Corvus
his absurd and incorrect points — Corvus
That is a blatant clequism. — Corvus
This article in SEP outlines and supports my point in this thread. — Corvus
my other books on Philosophy of Math, and Set theories — Corvus
But if you used [set theory] for solving real world problems, you would end up in a deep ditch. — Corvus
even the notion of reals would go against this argument that mathematical objects "cannot be carried out, cannot be completed" — ssu
It is his metaphor, meaning that even if you claim it is "infinite", it is actually "finite". It is a type of cynicism. He uses aphorism a lot in his writings. Please don't take it literally. Obviously you have not read Wittgenstein at all.Please quote any passage in that article that you think claims that Wittgenstein said that in mathematics 'infinite' means 'finite'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
throwing unfounded posts and ad hominem posts before me — Corvus
Have you [ssu] not read a single math book? — Corvus
it seems barmy to talk about different size of the infinite sets
— Corvus
No set has different sizes. But there are infinite sets that have sizes different from one another. That follows from the axioms.
One is free to reject those axioms, but then we may ask, "Then what axioms do you propose instead?"
One is free to reject the axiomatic method itself, but then we may ask, "Then by what means do you propose by which anyone can check with utter objectivity whether a purported mathematical proof is correct?"
One is free to respond that we check by comparing to reality or facts or something like that. But then we may point out, "People may reasonably disagree about such things as what is or is not the case in whatever exactly is meant by 'reality' or in what the facts are, so we cannot be assured utter objectivity that way."
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
Of course, my point went right past you no matter that I explained it clearly. — TonesInDeepFreeze
degraded the discussion into a comedy — Corvus
Please quote any passage in that article that you think claims that Wittgenstein said that in mathematics 'infinite' means 'finite'.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
It is his metaphor — Corvus
But the point is not about the word games. — Corvus
When you say "infinite", it actually means "finite" in real life. — Corvus
Even if you keep on counting something infinitely, you must stop counting at some point. You cannot keep going on till the eternity. You stopped counting, and what you have is a finite number. — Corvus
use the concept for nonexistence as real existence — Corvus
A more proactive moderation — Banno
My posts are based on the philosophy of mathematics (Putnam) — Corvus
To some extent the misunderstanding of various authors may be the result of our friends being autodidactic. The supposition that somehow the SEP article on Wittgenstein's philosophy of mathematics supports psycoceramic views might be a result of shallow reading of such tertiary sources. These topics are vast, needing careers, rather than degrees, to understand the topic, let alone make a significant contribution.Hilary Putnam? — TonesInDeepFreeze
My posts are based on the philosophy of mathematics (Putnam) and set theories (C. C. Pinter), and various published academic articles. — Corvus
That paragraph kinda set up for the gross oversimplification that was to come though.A poster who starts out in a thread by declaring "end of story" does not bode well. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Of course it is a book of Set Theory. However, it explains the historical background of the concept of infinity how controversial the concept was in detail. You only picked out the usage of the infinity in the book for insisting your point in this thread. I read it from the start to the end.And the book is, as any ordinary textbook in set theory, chock full of use of infinite sets and infinite sets of different cardinalities from one another. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You obviously have problem understanding metaphors and ordinary use of English language. You seem to bite into a little words in the expressions, and as if one has to stick to the every word and comma in the sentence in the legal contract. I tend to write with metaphorical and simile expressions and idioms a lot just like other ordinary English users. You can't seem to understand that.A poster who starts out in a thread by declaring "end of story" does not bode well.
I am getting a good laugh though at that poster challenging me to show a book that gives the very definition that is in the book he says he "bases" his posting on! — TonesInDeepFreeze
You start your post with throwing insults to others before even going into the points under discussion. What courtesy are you talking about?degraded the discussion into a comedy
— Corvus
The ridiculousness is courtesy of you. Maybe not comedy, but still risible is the claim that set theory takes 'infinite' to mean 'finite'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
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