It's not required that each concept, each abstraction itself corresponds to a particular concrete. — TonesInDeepFreeze
One may reject ideation and communication premised in abstract objects. But the notion of identity is not even limited to abstract objects. Whatever things one does countenance as existing, named by, say, T and S, we have T = S if and only if T is S. That is what '=' means when it is used in contexts of ordinary identity theory, logic, mathematics and other contexts to. If one wishes to use it with another meaning in another context, then, of course, fine. But that doesn't justify saying that in logic and mathematics it is not used just as logic and mathematics says it is used. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Again, more exactly:
If 'T' and 'S' are terms, then
'T = S' is true if and only if T is S. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And whether 'T' and 'S' stand for abstract things, abstract objects, values that are abstract things, values that are abstract objects, concrete things, physical things, or whatever things you are looking at right now on your desk. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Then, '1+1' refers the SUM of the number one with the number one. — TonesInDeepFreeze
'1+1' does not stand for an operation. It stands for the result of an operation applied to an argument. — TonesInDeepFreeze
It is difficult to reason with someone about mathematics who doesn't understand that 1+1 is 2. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The crank will mangle what I wrote, misrepresent it, presume to knock down strawmen of it. Likely, I won't have to time to compose a response, especially to the sheer volume of his confusions. — TonesInDeepFreeze
some will say that truth and falsity are not applicable judgements for mathematical axioms — Metaphysician Undercover
What this so-called axiom attempts to do is to introduce truth and falsity into mathematics in the form of correspondence. — Metaphysician Undercover
Under your thinking, anyone not thinking the same as you is misattributing everything. That is just nonsense. Under your eyes, people shouldn't be thinking differently from you.The problem is that both you and Corvus badly misrepresent Wittgenstein in an attempt to subjugate his name to your psycoceramics.
So far neither of you have been able to cite anything like an endorsement of either your eccentric and unsound view of equity nor Corvus' confusing finite and infinite. Nor will you. — Banno
Putnam edited a book called Philosophy of Mathematics Selected readings. He put in there various articles by different people. It is not a book solely written by Putnam. You obviously have no idea about the book, or what the Edited book means.My posts are based on the philosophy of mathematics (Putnam)
— Corvus
Hilary Putnam?
How do your views square with indispensability? — TonesInDeepFreeze
If I really lied, then I would have told you that I lied, which is true. But you claim that I lied, which is false, and a lie.You lied about me when you said I started with insults. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I was just telling you about Pinter's book to say that even classic Set theory books admit the historical controversies with the concept of infinity. I wasn't meaning to say the book is denying, accepting or defining on the infinity as per my view.So, I am still baffled why you challenged me to cite a textbook when your own favorite book on set theory, which you claim to have read, is one of many many textbooks that give the definition you challenged me to show that it is in a textbook. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The issue we've encountered is that the axiom of extensionality is simply false. — Metaphysician Undercover
It tells us how to use the "=" sign. It is an instruction, and so is not the sort of thing that can be false. You either follow the instruction or you do not. If you do not follow the instruction you are not participating in the logic of sets.If A and B are sets, then A = B iff every element of A is also an element of B, and vice versa. — Open Logic
This is a consequence of extensionality, not an axiom.A=B iff both A⊆B and B⊆A. — Open Logic
Under your eyes, people shouldn't be thinking differently from you. — Corvus
... the movable bodies that we see, grasp, and act on. Before infants can reach for and manipulate objects, they organize perceptual arrays into bodies that are cohesive, bounded, solid, persisting, and movable on contact. Young infants use these abstract, interconnected properties to detect the boundaries of each object in a scene, to track objects over occlusion, and to infer their interactions with other objects.
The core place system underlies our sense of where we are, where other things are, and what paths will take us from one place to another. Studies of animals and young children reveal that navigation depends, first and foremost, on representations of abstract geometric properties of the ground surface over which we travel: the distances and directions of its boundaries, ridges, cliffs, and crevices.
Research on human infants, children, adults in diverse cultures, and nonhuman animals all converges on evidence for an early-emerging ability to represent and combine numerical magnitudes with approximate, ratio- limited precision. This ability depends on a core system with most of the properties of the core object and place systems: it is present in newborn infants and functions throughout life, and it is ancient, unitary, and limited in the types of information it provides.
I have not made many claims quoting hundreds of philosophers. That is just another distortion of the truth with exaggeration. My point was simple, and I quoted one philosopher, from which was the Wittgenstein's writing, and mentioned 2-3 others. If you still cannot understand the point, you can look them up yourself, and find out. No one has to spoon feed you.You have made claims about the ideas espoused by various philosophers, but when challenged you have not produced citations or produced citations that do not support your claims.
You are not playing the game right. — Banno
I said this before, but will say again. Your problem is that you blindly say that others' points are wrong before presenting your arguments with evidence supporting your claims. That appears to be your trademark modus operandi of philosophy.You are not playing the game right.
And that is worth pointing out. — Banno
You have made claims about the ideas espoused by various philosophers, — Banno
:rofl:I have not made many claims quoting hundreds of philosophers. That is just another distortion... — Corvus
I don't now actually recall what your point was. It wasn't very clear to start with, and is now buried in the clamour of your protest.If you still cannot understand the point, you can look them up yourself, and find out. No one has to spoon feed you. — Corvus
See? That was what I meant. You don't even understand the point, but rubbish it as wrong. How absurd is that. By the way, you are still in deep illusion. I was not protesting on anything. I was just pointing out problems in your inaccurate posts.I don't now actually recall what your point was. It wasn't very clear to start with, and is now buried in the clamour of your protest. — Banno
My point is that I agree that it is not the case that an abstract concept corresponds to one particular concrete instantiation, but rather we can only understand an abstract concept by thinking of some concrete instantiation of it — RussellA
Putnam edited a book called Philosophy of Mathematics Selected readings. He put in there various articles by different people. — Corvus
You obviously have no idea about the book, or what the Edited book means. — Corvus
If I really lied, then I would have told you that I lied, which is true. — Corvus
I wasn't meaning to say the book is denying, accepting or defining on the infinity as per my view. — Corvus
one that you must read about is "Quine". — Corvus
Anyone thinking differently from you (Banno) are downright wrong, and misattributing. — Corvus
Many would believe that your (Banno's) posts should be under proactive moderation — Corvus
The agent can start to predict what would happen if marks were modified this way or that. I would say that once an agent starts this sort of imagining, it has started thinking mathematically. — GrahamJ
I have not made many claims quoting hundreds of philosophers. That is just another distortion of the truth with exaggeration. — Corvus
My point was simple, and I quoted one philosopher, from which was the Wittgenstein's — Corvus
Your problem is that you (Banno) blindly say that others' points are wrong before presenting your arguments with evidence supporting your claims — Corvus
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.