From that wiki page:
"or in words:
Given any set A and any set B, if for every set X, X is a member of A if and only if X is a member of B, then A is equal to B."
I see the phrase "A is equal to B", but where does it indicate that A is the same as B? — Metaphysician Undercover
But for what it's worth, the symbol string "same" has no meaning in ZF. — fishfry
You're adding things that aren't in the game. — fishfry
You are adding "identity" — Metaphysician Undercover
when the law of extensionality is really a definition of "equal". — Metaphysician Undercover
What do you think identity in mathematics / set theory is? — ssu
So I think then the question for you, Metaphysician Undercover, is how is the identity different between two sets that have the same elements? — ssu
Because you say "to read the axiom of extensionality as indicating identity rather than as indicating equality is a misinterpretation", it seems that you think this is different. A lay person would think that a set defined by it's elements. — ssu
And please just look how identity is defined in mathematics, and you'll notice what fishfry is talking about. — ssu
I'm pretty sure I never said that, but if I did, please supply a reference to my quote. — fishfry
My apologies, for misrepresenting what we argued about. I thought you argued that the axiom of extensionality indicated identity. — Metaphysician Undercover
You are trying to overload the word with metaphysical baggage that it simply does not have in math. — fishfry
They are NOT implying any kind of metaphysical baggage for the word "same." If pressed, they'd retreat to the formal syntax. — fishfry
Make sense? You are using "same" with metaphysical meaning. Set theorists use "same" as a casual shorthand for the condition expressed by the axiom of extensionality. It's a synonym by definition. The set theorist's "same" is a casual synonym; your "same" is some kind of ontological commitment. So all this is just confusion about two different meanings of the same word. — fishfry
Also, meta: This thread, "Infinity," is active, and I keep getting mentions for it and replying. But this thread does not show up in my front-page feed! Anyone seeing this or know what's going on? — fishfry
I don't think mathematics/set theory deals with identity at all. — Metaphysician Undercover
Ok,If you can find that definition for me, I'll take a look. Then we can discuss whether "identity" in mathematics is consistent with the law of identity. — Metaphysician Undercover
In mathematics, an identity is an equality relating one mathematical expression A to another mathematical expression B, such that A and B (which might contain some variables) produce the same value for all values of the variables within a certain range of validity.[1] In other words, A = B is an identity if A and B define the same functions, and an identity is an equality between functions that are differently defined.
An identity is an equation that is true for all values of the variables. For example:
(x+y)2 = (x2+2xy+y2)
The above equation is true for all possible values of x and y, so it is called an identity.
An identity is true for any value of the variable, but an equation is not. For example the equation
3x = 12
is true only when x=4, so it is an equation, but not an identity.
It's in the Lounge.Also, meta: This thread, "Infinity," is active, and I keep getting mentions for it and replying. But this thread does not show up in my front-page feed! Anyone seeing this or know what's going on? — fishfry
Even if the discussion has moved on, I'll just point out this, what identity in math is and why math does deal with identity:
In mathematics, an identity is an equality relating one mathematical expression A to another mathematical expression B, such that A and B (which might contain some variables) produce the same value for all values of the variables within a certain range of validity.[1] In other words, A = B is an identity if A and B define the same functions, and an identity is an equality between functions that are differently defined. — ssu
A certain kind of equality, identity is an equation that us true for all values of its variables."Identity" in mathematics is equality. — Metaphysician Undercover
That completely makes sense. However, not every mathematician is as reasonable as you are. If you look at what TonesoffTheDeepEnd is writing here, you'll see great effort to support some kind of formal identity theory. That is not a "casual shorthand for the condition expressed by the axiom of extensionality". — Metaphysician Undercover
Regarding placement of threads: Some of the moderation of this forum is quite irrational. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Law of identity, that each thing is identical with itself, isn't actually math, but general philosophy. So I guess the law of identity is simply a=a or 1=1. Yet math it's actually crucial to compare mathematical objects to other (or all other) mathematical objects. Hence defining a set "ssu" by saying "ssu" = "ssu" doesn't say much if anything. Hence the usual equations c=a+b. — ssu
It's like comparing what in Physics is work and what in economics / sociology is work. The definitions are totally different. — ssu
Suppose I owe a creditor a certain amount of money, and ask them, "I have record of my balance as being 582 dollars plus 37 dollars. Do you have the same number?" They say, "Yes, your balance is 619 dollars and 0 cents." It would be ridiculous for me to say, "No! 582 plus 37 is not the same number as 619.00!" — TonesInDeepFreeze
The law of identity is a philosophical principle.
It is adopted in mathematics. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Still interested in what is supposed to be the inherent ordering of a set such as the set of bandmates in the Beatles. — TonesInDeepFreeze
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