And now he's denying he said that sets do have a certain ordering that is the ordering of the set. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Over and over, the poster argued against the axiom of extensionality on the grounds that there is THE ordering of a set. Yes, I do remember.
And now he's denying he said that sets do have a certain ordering that is the ordering of the set. — TonesInDeepFreeze
But in the past the poster argued that therefore the axiom of extensionality is wrong, because there IS the ordering of a set. — TonesInDeepFreeze
What specific philosophers is the poster referring to? — TonesInDeepFreeze
Moreover, the context is the law of identity vis-a-vis mathematics. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The law of identity in its historical form is ontological, not mathematical. Mathematics might have its own "law of identity", based in what you call "identity theory", but it's clearly inconsistent with the historical law of identity derived from Aristotle. He proposed this principle as a means of refuting the arguments of sophists such as those from of Elea, (of which Zeno was one), who could use logic to produce absurd conclusions. — Metaphysician Undercover
Discussion with you about this is pointless because you make statements like the one above, where you acknowledge the difference between the mathematical concept of "identity" and the ontological concept of "identity", but you claim that the only relevant concept of "identity" is the mathematical one. — Metaphysician Undercover
Of course, relevance depends on one's goals, and truth is clearly not one of yours. — Metaphysician Undercover
In practise the math always refers to something. — Metaphysician Undercover
Clearly "identity" by the law of identity includes the order of a thing's elements, as it includes all aspect of the thing, even the unknown aspects. So the ordering of the thing's elements is therefore included in the thing's identity, unlike the supposed (fake) "identity" stated by the axiom of extensionality. — Metaphysician Undercover
I see you've hijacked it to your hobby horse. — fishfry
nobody claims mathematical equality is identity — fishfry
When pressed, a mathematician would readily admit that mathematical equality is nothing more than a formal symbol defined within ZF set theory in the logical system of first order predicate logic — fishfry
That was said to Metaphysician Undercover. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Actually, I am the one who took up his misconception that sets have an inherent order. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I don't consider that "hijacking", since his posts in this thread about tasks need to be taken in context of his basic confusions about mathematics, as mathematics has been discussed here. — TonesInDeepFreeze
What? In ordinary mathematics, '=' does stand for identity. It stands for the identity relation on the universe. — TonesInDeepFreeze
After all if = is the identity relation on the universe, why does ZF need to redefine it then? — fishfry
Suppose X and Y are objects in the universe, but they are not sets? — fishfry
I've moved your discussion on set ordering and the meaning of equality to this discussion — Michael
There are three ways we could approach for set theory: — TonesInDeepFreeze
(1) Take '=' from identity theory — TonesInDeepFreeze
, with the axioms of identity theory, and add the axiom of extensionality. In that case, '=' is still undefined but we happen to have an additional axiom about it. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The axiom of extensionality is not a definition there. And, with the usual semantics, '=' stands for the identity relation. It seems to me that this is the most common approach. — TonesInDeepFreeze
(2) Don't take '=' from identity theory.
Definition: x = y <-> Az(z e x <-> z e y)
Axiom: x = y -> Az(x e z -> y e z) — TonesInDeepFreeze
(3) Don't take '=' from identity theory.
Definition: x = y <-> Az(z e x <-> y e z)
Axiom: Az(z e x <-> z e y) -> Az(x e z -> y e z)
With (2) and (3), yes, '=' could stand for an equivalence relation on the universe that is not the identity relation. But it seems to me that even in this case, we'd stipulate a semantics that requires that '=' stands for the identity relation. And I think it's safe to say that usually mathematicians still regard '1+1 = 2' to mean that '1+1' stands for the same number that '2' stands for, and not merely that they stand for members in some equivalence relation, and especially not that it's just all uninterpreted symbols. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Suppose X and Y are objects in the universe, but they are not sets?
— fishfry
In set theory, contrary to a popular notion, we can define 'set':
x is a class <-> (x =0 or Ez z e x)
x is a set <-> (x is a class & Ez x e z)
x is a proper class <-> (x is a class & x is not a set)
x is an urelement <-> x is not a class — TonesInDeepFreeze
Then in ordinary set theory we have these theorems:
Ax x is a class
Ax x is set
Ax x is not a proper class
Ax x is not an urelement
If our meta-theory for doing models has only sets, then all members of universes are sets.
If our meta-theory for doing models has proper classes, still a universe is a set (proof is easy by the definition of 'model'). And no proper class is a member of a set.
If our meta-theory for doing models has urelements, and '=' stands for the identity relation, then the axiom of extensionality is false in any model that has two or more urelements in the universe or has the empty set and one or more urelements in the universe. — TonesInDeepFreeze
when we write:
x = y
we mean:
x is identical with y
x is equal to y
x equals y
x is y
x is the same as y
However, the poster, in all his crank glory, continues to not understand:
x = y
does NOT mean:
'x' is identical with 'y'
'x' is equal to 'y'
'x' equals 'y'
'x' is 'y'
'x' is the same as 'y'
but it DOES mean:
what 'x' stands for is identical with what 'y' stands for
what 'x' stands for is equal to what 'y' stands for
what 'x' stands for equals what 'y' stands for
what 'x' stands for is what 'y' stands for
what 'x' stands for is the same as what 'y' stands for — TonesInDeepFreeze
Meta, once I understood that Tones was arguing that set equality is the law of identity, I realized why you're arguing this point. I entirely agree with you. I apologize to you for jumping to multiple wrong conclusions. — fishfry
I haven't yet worked through Tones's reply to me outlining his argument, so I should reserve judgment. But at this moment it seems to me that set equality is a defined symbol in a particular axiomatic system. As such has no referent at all, any more than the chess bishop refers to Bishop Berkeley. It doesn't refer to anything concrete, nor anything abstract. It simply stands for a certain predicate in ZF. It can't possibly "know" about logic or metaphysics. It can't refer to "sets" since nobody knows what a set is. A set is whatever satisfies the axioms. And set equality is a relation between sets, which have no existence outside the axioms; and have no meaning even within the axioms. — fishfry
But nobody claims mathematical equality is identity. — fishfry
You would be fun in set theory class. You're entirely hung up on the very first axiom. "Class, Axiom 1 is the axiom of extensionality. It tells us when two sets are equal." You, three years later: "But that's not metaphysical identity! You mathematicians are bad people. And you don't understand anything!" And your professor goes, Meta, We still have a countable infinitely of axioms to get through! Can we please move on? — fishfry
But axioms don'g mean anything. They're just rules in a formal game, like chess. As I say, if you asked a mathematician if mathematical equality is metaphysical identity, a few of them would have an educated opinion about the matter and they'd immediately agree with you. The rest, the vast majority, wouldn't understand the question and would be annoyed that you interrupted them. — fishfry
You're fighting a straw man of your own creation. — fishfry
I remember fondly when I spent weeks trying to explain order theory to you, back when I thought you were trying to understand anything. You are still at this. If two sets have the same elements and the same order, they are equal as ordered sets. It's just about layers of abstraction, separating out concepts. First you have things, then you place them in order.
Somehow this offends you. Why? — fishfry
Yes I did actually understand that! I was just startled that Meta was still going on about order being an inseparable and inherent aspect of a set, when I had already had such a detailed conversation with him on this subject several years ago. I did actually realize you were quoting him -- I was just surprised to see him still hung up on that topic. — fishfry
Apology accepted. — Metaphysician Undercover
As I indicate in my latest post in the supertask thread, Tones has a knack for taking highly specialized definitions designed for a particular axiomatic system, and applying them completely out of context. Be aware of that. — Metaphysician Undercover
But nobody claims mathematical equality is identity.
— fishfry
Tones does, obviously. — Metaphysician Undercover
I dropped out of abstract mathematics somewhere around trigonometry, for that very reason. I got hung up in my need to understand everything clearly, and could not get past what was supposed to be simple axioms. I had a similar but slightly different problem in physics. We learned how a wave was a disturbance in a substance, and got to play in wave tanks, using all different sorts of vibrations, to make various waves and interference patterns. Then we moved along to learn about light as a wave without a substance. Wait, what was the point about teaching us how waves are a feature of a substance? — Metaphysician Undercover
But Tones is a bit different. Tones forges ahead with misunderstanding of fundamental axioms. Tones insists that the axiom of extensionality tells us when two sets are identical. He refers to something he calls "identity theory", which I haven't yet been able to decipher. — Metaphysician Undercover
If axioms are rules, then they mean something. They dictate how the "formal game" is to be played. If the rules are misunderstood, as is the case with Tones, then the rules will not be properly applied. — Metaphysician Undercover
Tones is a monster, not of my own creation. — Metaphysician Undercover
It is self-contradicting, what you say. " First you have things, then you place them in order." — Metaphysician Undercover
If you have things, there is necessarily an order to those things which you have. To say "I have some things and there is no order to these things which I have, is contradictory, because to exist as "some things" is to have an order. Here we get to the bottom of things, the difference between having things, and imaginary things. — Metaphysician Undercover
You are taking Tones' misrepresentation. I fully respect, and have repeatedly told Tones, that sets have no inherent order, exactly as you explained to me, years ago. — Metaphysician Undercover
What I argue is that things, have an order to their constituent elements, and this is an essential aspect of a thing's identity. — Metaphysician Undercover
So I've been trying to explain to Tones, that the "identity" of a set (as derived from the axiom of extensionality) is not consistent with the identity of a thing (as stated in the law of identity). — Metaphysician Undercover
But Tones is in denial, and incessantly insists that set theory is based in the law of identity. — Metaphysician Undercover
No it's perfectly sensible. You have a class of screaming school kids, eight year olds say, on the playground. They're totally disordered. The only organizing principle is that you have a set of kids. — fishfry
Then you tell them to line up by height. Now you have an ordered set of kids. Or you tell them to line up in alphabetical order of their last name. Now you have the same set with a different order. — fishfry
Now maybe you are making the point that everything is in SOME order. The kids in the playground could still be ordered by their geographical locations or whatever.
But sets don't have inherent order. — fishfry
Another way to look at it is that, as you say, perhaps every set has some inherent order, but we are just ignoring the order properties to call it a set. Then we bring in the order properties. It's just a way of abstracting things into layers.
But mathematical sets by themselves have no inherent order till we give them one. It's just part of the abstraction process. — fishfry
Yes, I am starting to come around to your point of view. But tell me this. Since, given a set, there are many different ways to order it, how do you know which one is inherently part of it? — fishfry
But if you ask me whether I think that two sets that are equal are identical, I'd have to say yes. Because if they're equal, they're the same set. Not because of metaphysics, but because of set theory. Set theory only talks about sets, and doesn't even say what they are. Nobody knows what sets are. They're fictional entities. They obey the axioms and that's all we can know about them. — fishfry
I can see that you've developed a bit of a, what is the word, obsession? attitude? annoyance? with him. — fishfry
They're not totally disordered though. At any time you can state the position of each one relative to the others, and that's an order. When you say "they're totally disordered", that's just metaphoric, meaning that you haven't taken the time, or haven't the capacity, to determine the order which they are in. — Metaphysician Undercover
Those are just 'identified orders'. When the kids are running free, in what we might call a 'random order', what you called "totally disordered", there is still an order to them, it has just not been identified. — Metaphysician Undercover
So, for the principle "height", we could make a map and show at any specific time, the relations of the tallest, second tallest, etc., and that would be their order by height. And we could do the same for alphabetic order. So we number them in the same way that you would number them in a line, first second third etc., then show with the map, the positions of first second third etc., and that is their order. The supposed "random order", or "totally disordered" condition, is simply an order which has not been identified. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, that's very apprehensive of you fishfry, and I commend you on this. Most TPF posters would persist in their opinion (in this case your claim of "totally disordered", which implies absolute lack of order), not willing to accept the possibility that perhaps they misspoke. — Metaphysician Undercover
So that is the point, everything is in "SOME" order. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now, consider what it means to say "sets don't have inherent order". — Metaphysician Undercover
Would you agree that this sets them apart from real collections of things? — Metaphysician Undercover
A real collection of things, like the children, must have SOME order. And, this order which they do have, is very significant because it places limitations on their capacity to be ordered. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes. I agree. But why does it matter? It doesn't apply to sets. You know why? Because that's what the axioms say. That's the ultimate source of truth. It's just axiomatics. I'm not sure why all this is important to you.
So when you said "first you have things, then you place them in order", we need to allow that the "things" being talked about, come to us in the first place, with an inherent order, — Metaphysician Undercover
and this inherent order restricts their capacity to be ordered. — Metaphysician Undercover
For example, let's say that the things being talked about are numbers. We might say that 1 is first, 2 is second, 3 is third, etc., and this is their "inherent order". — Metaphysician Undercover
This is the way we find these "things", how they come to us, 1 is synonymous with first, 2 is synonymous with second, etc., and that is their inherent order. — Metaphysician Undercover
The proposition of set theory, that there is no inherent order to a set, removes this inherent order, so we can no longer say that one means first, etc.. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now there cannot be any first, second, or anything like that, inherent within the meaning of the numbers themselves. This effectively removes meaning from the symbols, as you've been saying. — Metaphysician Undercover
Another way to look at it is that, as you say, perhaps every set has some inherent order, but we are just ignoring the order properties to call it a set. Then we bring in the order properties. It's just a way of abstracting things into layers. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, I think I see this. I would say it's a type of formalism, the attempt to totally remove meaning from the symbols. — Metaphysician Undercover
The problem though, is that such attempts are impossible, and some meaning still remains, as hidden, and the fact that it is hidden allows it to be deceptive and misleading. — Metaphysician Undercover
So, by the abstraction process you refer to, we remove all meaning from the symbols, to have "no inherent order". Now, what differentiates "2" from "3"? — Metaphysician Undercover
They are different symbols, with different applicable rules. If what is symbolized by these two, can have "no inherent order", then the rules for what we can do with them cannot have anything to do with order. This allows absolute freedom as to how they may be ordered. — Metaphysician Undercover
However, we can ask, can the two numbers,2 and 3, be equal?
— Metaphysician Undercover
I don't think so. — Metaphysician Undercover
Therefore we can conclude that there actually is a rule concerning their order, and there actually is not absolute freedom as to how they can be ordered. — Metaphysician Undercover
The two symbols cannot have the same place in an order. — Metaphysician Undercover
Therefore, there actually is "SOME" inherent order to the set, a rule concerning an order which is impossible. — Metaphysician Undercover
And this is why I say that these attempts at formalism, to completely remove meaning which inheres within what is symbolized by the symbol itself, are misleading and deceptive. — Metaphysician Undercover
We simply assume that the formalism has been successful, and inherent meaning has been removed (we take what is claimed for granted without justification), and we continue under this assumption, with complete disregard for the possibility of problems which might pop up later, due to the incompleteness of the abstraction process which is assumed to be complete. — Metaphysician Undercover
Then when a problem does pop up, we are inclined to analyze the application as what is causing the problem, and the last thing we would do is look back for faults in the fundamental assumptions, as cause of the problem. — Metaphysician Undercover
As described above, you need to look for what is inherent within the meaning of the symbol. Formalism attempts the perfect, "ideal" abstraction, as you say, which is to give the imagination complete freedom to make the symbol mean absolutely anything. However, there is always vestiges of meaning which remain, such as the one I showed, it is impossible that 2=3. The vestiges of meaning usually manifest as impossibilities. Any impossibility limits possibility, which denies the "ideal abstraction", by limiting freedom. — Metaphysician Undercover
So to answer your question, the order which is inherent is not one of the orders you can give the set, it is a preexisting limitation to the orders which you can give. When we receive the items, what you express as "first we have the items", there is always something within the nature of the items themselves (what you call "SOME order"), as received, which restricts your freedom to order them in anyway whatsoever. — Metaphysician Undercover
There are many different ways that "same" is used. You and I might both have "the same book". The word "set" used here is "the same word" as someone using "set" somewhere else. So it's like any other word of convenience, it derives a different meaning in a different sort of context. In common parlance, mathematicians might say "they are the same set", but I think that what it really means is that they have the same members. So that's really a qualified "same". — Metaphysician Undercover
Actually I got annoyed with Tones rapidly, when we first met, but now he just amuses me. — Metaphysician Undercover
I understood that Tones was arguing that set equality is the law of identity — fishfry
t seems to me that set equality is a defined symbol in a particular axiomatic system. — fishfry
I believe you are trying to convince me that logical identity is the same thing as set equality as given by extensionality. — fishfry
if you could just define "identity theory" for me, and tell me what "=" means in that theory — fishfry
Still undefined but additional axiom. Sorry I don't follow. — fishfry
In ZF, I define R={x∉x} — fishfry
If extensionality is not an axiom, what is it? — fishfry
Axioms and definitions are the same thing. You can take them as "assumed true," or you can take them as definitional classifiers, separating the universe into things that satisfy the definition and things that don't. — fishfry
(2) Don't take '=' from identity theory.
Definition: x = y <-> Az(z e x <-> z e y)
Axiom: x = y -> Az(x e z -> y e z)
— TonesInDeepFreeze
If two sets satisfy extensionality (the definition) then any set one of them is an element of, the other is also an element of? — fishfry
I think that already follows from the definition. In fact I convinced myself I could prove it, but did not work out the details. So I could be wrong about this. — fishfry
But what is the intent? — fishfry
I didn't get all this, what's the intent of the axiom, what does it all mean? — fishfry
I did note one thing I disagreed with. You wrote:
"If our meta-theory for doing models has proper classes, still a universe is a set (proof is easy by the definition of 'model')"
Perhaps we're using different terminology. When they do independence proofs, models are sets. So for example to prove that ZF is consistent, we are required to produce a set that satisfies the axioms. It's no good to just provide a proper class — fishfry
I know universes that are not sets. For example:
The von Neumann universe and Gödel's constructible universe, both of which are proper classes (however you regard them) and are commonly called universes. — fishfry
your definition of a universe. — fishfry
Even informally, in ZF the universe is "all the sets there are." The axioms quantify over all the sets. And the universe of sets is not a set. — fishfry
why you think that the logical identity (whatever that is, I'm still a little unclear) is the same thing as set equality under extensionality. — fishfry
I said that classical mathematics has the law of identity as an axiom and that classical mathematics abides by the law of identity. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I addressed that. Written up in another way:
Ordinarily, set theory is formulated with first order logic with identity (aka 'identity theory') in which '=' is primitive not defined, and the only other primitive is 'e' ("is a member of"). — TonesInDeepFreeze
But we can take a different approach in which we don't assume identity theory but instead define '='. I don't see that approach taken often. — TonesInDeepFreeze
But both approaches are equivalent in the sense that they result in the exact same set of theorems written with '=' and'e'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
No, I am not saying any such thing. — TonesInDeepFreeze
(1) I don't think I used the locution 'logical identity'.
But maybe 'logical identity' means the law of identity and Leibniz's two principles.
Classical mathematics adheres to the law of identity and Leibniz's two principles. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The identity relation on a universe U is {<x x> | x e U}. Put informally, it's {<x y> | x is y}, which is {<x y> | x is identical with y}.
Identity theory (first order) is axiomatized:
Axiom:
Ax x = x (law of identity)
Axiom schema (I'm leaving out some technical details):
For any formula P(x):
Axy((P(x) & x = y) -> P(y)) (Leibniz's indiscernibility of identicals) — TonesInDeepFreeze
But identity theory, merely syntactically, can't require that '=' be interpreted as standing for the identity relation on the universe as opposed to standing for some other equivalence relation on the universe. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And Leibniz's identity of indiscernibles cannot be captured in first order unless there are only finitely many predicate symbols. — TonesInDeepFreeze
So we make the standard semantics for idenity theory require that '=' does stand for the identity relation. And then (I think this is correct:) the identity of indiscernibles holds as follows: Suppose members of the universe x and y agree on all predicates. Then they agree on the predicate '=', but then they are identical. — TonesInDeepFreeze
(2) The axiom of extensionality is a non-logical axiom, as it is true in some models for the language and false in other models for the language. — TonesInDeepFreeze
As mentioned, suppose we have identity theory. Then we add the axiom of extensionality. Then we still have all the theorems of identity theory and the standard semantics that interprets '=' as standing for the identity relation, but with axiom of extensionality, we have more theorems. The axiom of extensionality does not contradict identity theory and identity theory is still adhered to. All the axiom of extensionality does is add that a sufficient condition for x being identical with y is that x and y have the same members. That is not a logical statement, since it is not true for all interepretations of the language. Most saliently, the axiom of extensionality is false when there are at least two urelements in the domain. — TonesInDeepFreeze
In sum: Set theory adopts identity theory and the standard semantics for identity theory, and also the axiom of extensionality. With that, we get the theorem:
Axy(x = y <-> Az((z e x <-> z e y) & (x e z <-> y e z)))
And semantically we get that '=' stands for the identity relation. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And if we didn't base on identity theory, then we would have the above not as a non-definitional theorem but as a definition (definitional axiom) for '='; and we would still stipulate that we have use the standard semantics for '='. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Think of it this way: No matter what theory we have, if it is is built on identity theory, then the law of identity holds for that theory, and that applies to set theory in particular. But set theory, with its axiom of extensionality, has an additional requirement so that set theory is true only in models where having the same members is a sufficient condition for identity. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Rather than sorting out your questions in this disparate manner, it would be better - a lot easier - to share a common reference such as one of the widely used textbooks in mathematical logic. I think Enderton's 'A Mathematical Introduction To Logic' is as good as can be found. And for set theory, his 'Elements Of Set Theory'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And for set theory, his 'Elements Of Set Theory'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You haven't convinced me that set equality has anything to do with the law of identity. — fishfry
you claimed that set equality is "identity," — fishfry
You seem to be saying that. — fishfry
But identity theory, merely syntactically, can't require that '=' be interpreted as standing for the identity relation on the universe as opposed to standing for some other equivalence relation on the universe.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
We're not having the same conversation now. I couldn't even parse that. — fishfry
There is no model of set theory in which extensionality is false. — fishfry
In sum: Set theory adopts identity theory and the standard semantics for identity theory, and also the axiom of extensionality. With that, we get the theorem:
Axy(x = y <-> Az((z e x <-> z e y) & (x e z <-> y e z)))
And semantically we get that '=' stands for the identity relation.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Can't possibly be. — fishfry
Models of what? — fishfry
How do you know whether having the same members is sufficient for identity unless you already have the axiom of extensionality? In which case you're doing set theory, not identity theory. — fishfry
The Wikipedia article you mentioned is not well written. (1) It doesn't give an axiomatization and (2) It doesn't mention that we can have other symbols in the signature and that by a schema we can generalize beyond a signature with only '='. — TonesInDeepFreeze
So Ax x=x is also an axiom incorporated into set theory. — TonesInDeepFreeze
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