It is a metaphor from my point of view. It is obvious, and I have kindly explained it to you above.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
Asking a second time, what quote in the article do you claim supports your claim that Wittgenstein said that mathematics takes 'infinite' to mean 'finite'? — TonesInDeepFreeze
However, it explains the historical background of the concept of infinity how controversial the concept was in detail. — Corvus
Many still believe it is controversial, and I do too. No one is saying it is illegal to use it, but just pointing out the existence of the controversy and also reservation on the theory. No one can deny that.It was controversial when they didn't know better. It's not controversial now because they know better. Those opposed to set theory now are, for the most part, non-mathematicians who don't know better but think they do. — Michael
Many still believe it is controversial, and I do too. — Corvus
Many still believe it is controversial, and I do too. No one is saying it is illegal to use it, but just pointing out the existence of the controversy and also reservation on the theory. No one can deny that. — Corvus
I wonder if mathematical realists and mathematical antirealists have different views about mathematical infinity. I'm a mathematical antirealist. I have no problem with mathematical infinity. The "existence" of infinite sets does not entail the existence of infinities in nature (whether material or Platonic).
Not sure on Mathematicians, but if they are logical, I would presume they would.Many mathematicians? — Michael
Maybe. I don't see much practical point apart from filling in and adding more pages of the textbooks making them heavier.nfinite sets have a use in mathematics. That's all that matters. Reading more into them is a mistake. — Michael
I gave the Mark Twain / Samuel Clemens example as an illustration, not an argument, of the distinction between sense and denotation. — TonesInDeepFreeze
If one rejects the view that abstract objects exist (and obviously, as abstractions, they don't exist physically), then, of course, the left term and the right term in an identity statement cannot refer to abstract objects. But that is a different objection than objecting to taking '=' as standing for the identity relation.
And if one objects to calling whatever mathematics refers to as 'objects', then we note that the word 'object' is a convenience but not necessary, as we could say 'thing' instead, or 'value of the term', or 'denotation of the term', or even none of that, and just say 'members of the domain of discourse' so that 'T = S' is interpreted as, for any model M for the language, M(T) is M(S). — TonesInDeepFreeze
Moreover, there is a difference between what is meant in mathematics by '=' and what one thinks mathematics should mean by '='. Whatever one thinks mathematics should mean by '=' doesn't change the fact that in mathematics '=' stands for identity. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I suggest you to read an elementary school book on set theory. There indeed are infinite sets and there can be a bijection between these sets. It's not just "mistake" like you think. — ssu
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. — Banno
there is no such thing as an extensional reading of "1+1 = 3-1" — Metaphysician Undercover
How do your views square with indispensability? — TonesInDeepFreeze
Since we are discussing values, not physical objects as in the case of your example, there is no such thing as an extensional reading of "1+1 = 3-1" — Metaphysician Undercover
We seem to be in much agreement in this thread, — Metaphysician Undercover
he extensional reading of "1 + 1" is the number 2. — Michael
Also – and correct me if I'm wrong TonesInDeepFreeze – but "1 + 1" doesn't actually mean "add 1 to 1". Rather, it means "the number that comes after the number 1". And "3 - 1" means "the number that comes before the number 3". — Michael
When you say "values" it seems you refer exactly to what is supposed to be the extensional reading of 1+1 or 3-1. So, if we are discussing values, saying that 1+1 is the same as 3-1 is correct, as both represent the same value, even if not the same operation. — Lionino
The problem is that both you and Corvus badly misrepresent Wittgenstein in an attempt to subjugate his name to your psycoceramics. — Banno
But the result is that we are unable to have a significant discussion of constructivist views of maths. — Banno
I like that description "psychoceramics". It makes me feel like I belong to a group, the psychoceramicists, rather than just a lone wolf. — Metaphysician Undercover
You only picked out the usage of the infinity in the book for insisting your point in this thread. — Corvus
I read it from the start to the end. — Corvus
What about our interest in crackpots like Tones? — Metaphysician Undercover
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. — Corvus
On the contrary, when I check Tone's arguments, they are very mainstream. Almost painfully so. I find that admirable; Tones has corrected my excesses.What about our interest in crackpots like Tones? — Metaphysician Undercover
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
You start your post with throwing insults to others before even going into the points under discussion. What courtesy are you talking about? — Corvus
If you are asking in which article he said it, I recall it was from a book I don't own. But I saw it in the internet somewhere. — Corvus
when I check Tone's arguments, they are very mainstream — Banno
Also – and correct me if I'm wrong TonesInDeepFreeze – but "1 + 1" doesn't actually mean "add 1 to 1". Rather, it means "the number that comes after the number 1". And "3 - 1" means "the number that comes before the number 3".
The number that comes after the number 1 is identical to the number that comes before the number 3. — Michael
Axiom
Jane is standing between John and Jack, with John on our left and Jack on our right
Inference
The person to the right of John is identical to the person to the left of Jack
The inference is valid even though Jane, John, and Jack are not physical people and are not abstract entities that exist in some Platonic realm. — Michael
How do your views square with indispensability? — TonesInDeepFreeze
"The number that comes after the number 1" is clearly intensional, — Metaphysician Undercover
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