x=x ... reflexivity
with
(x=y & Px) -> Py ... indiscernibility of identicals (aka substitutivity)
is a complete axiomatization of identity theory — TonesInDeepFreeze
Identity theory is first order logic plus:
Axiom: Ax x=x
Axiom schema:
For all formulas P,
Axy((x=y & P(x)) -> P(y))
Semantics:
For every model M, for all terms T and S,
T = S
is true if and only if M assigns T and S to the same member of the universe. — TonesInDeepFreeze
With identity theory, '=' is primitive and not defined, and the axiom of extensionality merely provides a sufficient basis for equality that is not in identity theory. Without identity theory, for a definition of '=' we need not just the axiom of extensionality but also the 'xez <-> yez' clause. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Eventually, mathematical logic provided a formal first order identity theory:
Axiom. The law of identity.
Axiom schema. The indiscernibility of identicals. — TonesInDeepFreeze
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
As I said much earlier in this thread, it is the first order theory axiomatized by:
Axiom:
Ax x = x (law of identity)
Axiom schema (I'm leaving out some technical details):
For all formulas P(x):
Axy((P(x) & x = y) -> P(y)) (indiscernibility of identicals) — 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 — fishfry
Start with these identity axioms:
Ax x=x (a thing is identical with itself)
and (roughly stated) for all formulas P(x):
Axy((P(x) & x=y) -> P(y) (if x is y, then whatever holds of x then holds of y, i.e. "the indiscernibility of identicals") — TonesInDeepFreeze
So identity theory has axioms so that we can make inferences with '='.
The axioms are:
Ax x=x ... the law of identity
And the axiom schema (I'm leaving out technical details):
For all formulas P:
Axy((P(x) & x= y) -> P(y)) ... the indiscernibly of identicals — TonesInDeepFreeze
And '=' has a fixed interpretation (which is semantical, not part of the axioms) that '=' stands for identity.
So identity theory has axioms so that we can make inferences with '='.
The axioms are:
Ax x=x ... the law of identity
And the axiom schema (I'm leaving out technical details):
For all formulas P:
Axy((P(x) & x= y) -> P(y)) ... the indiscernibly of identicals
— TonesInDeepFreeze — fishfry
I stated explicitly several times that that is what I mean by 'identity theory'.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
You never said that LOL! — fishfry
Symbols need explanatory words to go with them. — fishfry
Now explain this to me ONCE AND FOR ALL. Are we talking about pure math and set theory? Or are we talking about the physical world of time, space, energy, quantum fields, and bowling balls falling towards earth? — fishfry
You can not have it both ways. — fishfry
No. You don't understand how math works, and you continually demostrate that. — fishfry
You finally said something interesting. Is the 5 in your mind the same as the 5 in my mind? I think so, but I might be hard pressed to rigorously argue the point. — fishfry
Is an apple an instance of fruit? Apples don't have a peelable yellow skin. 'Splain me this point. By this logic, nothing could ever be a specific instance of anything, since specific things always differ in some particulars from other things in the same class. — fishfry
When I arrive home in the evening, it makes quite a big difference to me if I return to the same residence or just one that's "equal" to it in value. — fishfry
Mathematics adheres to the law of identity, since in mathematics, for any x, x=x, which is to say, for any x, x is x. — TonesInDeepFreeze
it is explicitly stated that '=' is interpreted as 'is' in mathematics. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I'm jumping in here not because anyone needs my help, but instead because I have questions pending before you that you have not even attempted to answer, and because of your claims and lack of substantive response I hold you obliged to answer them. You will find them above on page 20 where you left them.Explicitly stated.... — Metaphysician Undercover
Mathematics adheres to the law of identity, since in mathematics, for any x, x=x, which is to say, for any x, x is x. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And, in mathematics it is very clear that "=" is not defined as "is". — Metaphysician Undercover
(1) The symbols I used are common. The formulas I gave are not complicated. If one knows merely basic symbolic logical notation, then one can read right from my formulas into English. For example:
AxEy yex
reads as
For all x, there exists a y such that y is a member of x. — TonesInDeepFreeze
(2) I did give lots of explanations in certain contexts. — TonesInDeepFreeze
(3) You complain about the length of my posts, but also say I should give more explanation. You can't have it both ways. And you're hypocritical since your own posts are often long, and often enough have not merely a few symbols. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I don't understand you. I gave you an example of how equivocation of "same" has a considerable effect. Of course it has no effect in "pure mathematics", because by definition "pure" mathematics maintains its purity, and the purity of its definitions. — Metaphysician Undercover
Pure mathematics is not applied, and therefore has no effect in relation to the physical world where "same" means something else.. We live in the physical world, our cares and concerns involve the world we live in, it is impossible that anything in the fantasy world of "pure mathematics" could actually concern us. This is known as the interaction problem of idealism. However, in reality we apply mathematics and this is where the concerns are. — Metaphysician Undercover
You seem to misunderstand the issue completely. — Metaphysician Undercover
You appear to understand that there is a difference between the use of "same" by mathematicians (synonymous with equal), and the use of "same" in the law of identity (not synonymous with equal). — Metaphysician Undercover
You said that this difference has no bearing on anything you know or care about. The things included in the category of what you know and care about, are not limited to principles of pure mathematics, because you live and act in the physical world. The law of identity applies to things in the physical world which we live and act in. — Metaphysician Undercover
So, to make myself clear — Metaphysician Undercover
I do not claim that there is a problem with using "same" as synonymous with equal, within the conceptual structures of mathematics. — Metaphysician Undercover
The problem is in the application of mathematics, as inevitably it is applied, and this use of "same" is brought into the world of physical activity, and taken to be consistent with the use of "same" when referring to physical objects. — Metaphysician Undercover
That is where the problem occurs. Sophjists such as Tones enhance and deepen the problem by arguing that the use of "same" in mathematics(synonymous with equal) is consistent with the use of "same" in the law of identity (not synonymous with equal). — Metaphysician Undercover
This is exactly the issue, the reality of the situation is that we do have it both ways. There are two very distinct ways for understanding "same". You can dictate "you cannot have it both ways" all you want, but that's not consistent with reality, where we have both ways of using the term. If you think that we ought to reduce this to one, (insisting "we cannot have it both ways"), the two cannot be combined, or reduced to one, because they are fundamentally incompatible (despite what the head sophist claims). This means that we have to choose one or the other. If we choose the one from pure mathematics, then we have nothing left to understand the identity of a physical object in its temporal extension. If we choose the one from the law of identity, then we simply understand "equal" as distinct from "same", and the problem is solved. Obviously the latter makes the most sense, and doing this would support your imperative dictate: "You can not have it both ways." — Metaphysician Undercover
It is very clearly you are the one who does not understand how math "works". — Metaphysician Undercover
Math only works when it is applied. — Metaphysician Undercover
"Pure mathematics" does nothing, it does not "work", as math only works in application. — Metaphysician Undercover
You are only fooling yourself, with this idea that pure mathematics is completely removed from the physical world, the world of content, and it "works" within its own formal structures. — Metaphysician Undercover
That is the folly of formalism which I explained earlier. — Metaphysician Undercover
To avoid the interaction problem of Platonist idealism, the formalist claims that mathematics "works" in its own realm of existence. But the claim of "works" is sophistic deception, and the formalist really digs deeper into Platonism, hiding behind the smoke and mirrors of the sophistry hidden behind this word "works". That is when the term "mathemagician" is called for. — Metaphysician Undercover
I believe, the concept of "five" in my mind is completely different from, though similar to, the concept of "five" in your mind. There is a number of ways to demonstrate the truth of this. The first is to get two different people to define the term, and see if they use the exact same expression. — Metaphysician Undercover
Another way is to look at what "five" means in different numbering systems, natural, rational, real, etc.. Another is from the discussions of mathematical principles in general. There is always difference in interpretation of such principles. You and I have significant differences, You and Tones have less significant differences.[/quotet]
You raise an interesting point. The integer 5 and the real number 5 are completely different sets. They are NOT the same set at all. They are not equal as sets. But they are the "same" number, for the reason that we can embed the integers inside the reals in a structure-preserving manner. This raises issues of structuralism in mathematics. Lot of interesting issues. Point being is that sameness as sets is NOT actually the basis of sameness in mathematics, entirely contrary to what I've been claiming. There are structural or categorical ways of looking at sameness. I concede your point.
I'll give an example. The set of numbers {0, 1, 2, 3}, along with addition mod 4, is a cyclic group with four elements. Addition mod 4 just means that we only consider remainders after division by 4, so that 2 + 3 = 1. Hope that's clear.
Now you may know the imaginary unit , characterized by the property that , and . So the set of complex numbers , with the operation of complex number multiplication, is also a cyclic group of order 4. But as any group theorist will tell you, there is only one cyclic group of order 4. Or to put it another way, any two cyclic groups of order 4 are isomorphic to each other.
So these two groups, the integers mod 4 and the integer powers of , are the exact same group, even though they are ridiculously different as sets.
This is a pretty good introduction to structuralism in math. What mathematicians are studying is not the particular sets; but rather, the abstract structure of which these two sets are each representatives. What group theorists care about is the idea of a cycle of four things. How we represent the cycle doesn't matter. Now that's Platonism too, because the cyclic group of order 4 is "out there" in the abstract world of patterns. It's real. It's not a set, it's merely represented in various ways by sets.
So you are right that sameness is a tricky business, even in math. Perhaps I will need to retreat to saying that sameness and set equality are synonymous for sets. For groups, that's not true. Different sets can represent the same group.
Maybe I just talked myself into your point.
— Metaphysician Undercover
Nevertheless, the differences exist and are very real. There is a principle which I've seen argued, and this is to say that this type of difference is a difference which does not make a difference. — Metaphysician Undercover
Aristotle called these differences accidentals, what is nonessential. The problem with that expression though, "difference which does not make a difference", is that to notice something as a difference, it is implied that it has already made a difference. So this argument is really nothing other than veiled contradiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
Anyway, this is the issue with identity, in a nutshell. When we ignore differences which we designate as not making a difference, and say that two instances are "the same" on that basis, we really violate the meaning of "same". The meaning of "same" is violated because we know that we are noticing differences, yet dismissing them as not making a difference, in order to incorrectly say "same". Therefore we know ourselves to be dishonest with ourselves when we say that the two instances are the same, by ignoring differences which are judged as not making a difference. — Metaphysician Undercover
So when you say that you think the 5 in my mind is the same as the 5 in your mind, I think that this is an instance of dishonesty, you really know that there are differences, and if pressed to argue such a claim, you'd end up in contradiction, dismissing the obvious differences as not making a difference. — Metaphysician Undercover
Right, particulars are instances, specifics are not. — Metaphysician Undercover
The concept "red" is not an instance of colour, it is a specific type of colour. — Metaphysician Undercover
\A particular red thing is an instance of red, and an instance of colour, exemplifying both. — Metaphysician Undercover
The concept "apple" is not an instance of fruit, it is a specific type of fruit.[/quote[
Ok
— Metaphysician Undercover
A particular apple is an instance of both. — Metaphysician Undercover
The concept "5" is not an instance of number, it is a specific type of number. — Metaphysician Undercover
A group of five particular things is an instance of both. — Metaphysician Undercover
Hey fishfry, do you not remember what you said to me? You said " I don't make a distinction between "same as" and "is equal to." In math they're the same. If you have different meanings for them, it does not bear on anything I know or care about." Now you've totally changed your position to say "it makes quite a big difference to me", if the taxi driver took you to a house which had an equal fare as yours, but was not the same house. — Metaphysician Undercover
Maybe it's the symbols. Maybe it's the words. — fishfry
Are you referring to 'is' in terms of identity or value? — javi2541997
Although every bill or note is represented by the payment of x5, it will depend on the value. So, x = x, doesn't equal to "is." — javi2541997
Explicity stated in any textbook in mathematical logic. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You agree with me about pure math. — fishfry
You have conceded my point regarding math. I have no other point. — fishfry
Tens of thousands of professional pure mathematicians would disagree. — fishfry
Any two set theorists will give {0, 1, 2, 3, 4} as the definition of 5. That's due to John von Neumann, who invented game theory, worked on quantum physics, worked on the theory of the hydrogen bomb, and did fundamental work in set theory. Now there was a guy who blended the applied with the pure. — fishfry
Can you give an example? I might have not followed you. — fishfry
A type of number. No, don't agree. Real numbers and complex numbers and quaternions are types of numbers. The real number 5 is an instance of a real number hence an instance of a number. It must be so, mustn't it? — fishfry
'=' is interpreted:
For any terms 'T' and 'S'
T = S
is true
if and only if
the denotation of 'T' is the denotation of 'S'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
So maybe it's something else. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Most glaringly of all, what accounts for you recently claiming that I hadn't specified 'identity theory' when I had specified it multiple times in this thread, including multiple times addressed to you, and even twice quoted by you? Your claim is bizarre. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I agreed with you about "pure math", for the sake of discussion, so that we could obtain some understanding of each other. But I will tell you now, as came up one other time when we had this discussion, I do not agree that there is such a thing as "pure math" by your understanding of this term. So I agree that if there was such a thing as pure math, that's what it would be like. However, I think your idea of "pure math" is just a Platonist/formalist fantasy, which is a misrepresentation of what mathematics is. In reality, all math is corrupted by pragmatics to some degree, and none reaches the goal of "pure math". You criticize me to say, it's not a goal, it's what pure math is, but I say that's false, it is a goal, an ideal, which cannot be obtained. Therefore "pure math" as you understand it, is not real, it's an ideal. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think the issue being exposed here is a difference of opinion as to what mathematics is. — Metaphysician Undercover
Since this is a question of "what something is", the type of existence it has, I think it is an ontological issue. Would you agree with this assessment? — Metaphysician Undercover
For example, the head sophist refers to "mathematical logic", and I find this defined in Wikipedia as the study of the formal logic within mathematics. So we have a distinction here between the use of mathematics (applied mathematics), and the study of the logic used by mathematicians (mathematical logic). "Mathematical logic" would be a sort of representation, or description, of the logic used in mathematics. What you call "pure mathematics", I believe would be something distinct from both, applied math and mathematical logic, as the creative process whereby mathematical principles are developed. But I think that this process is not really "pure", it's always tainted by pragmatics and therefore empirical principles. — Metaphysician Undercover
The issue I have with the head sophist — Metaphysician Undercover
is with the way that mathematical logic represents the use of the = symbol as an identity symbol. In applied mathematics, it is impossible that "=" is an identity symbol because if both sides of an equation represented the exact same thing, the equation would be absolutely useless. — Metaphysician Undercover
This I've explained in a number of different threads. — Metaphysician Undercover
In reality, as any mathematics textbook will show, "=" means "has the same value as". — Metaphysician Undercover
Therefore we can conclude that any mathematical logic which represents "=" as an identity symbol is simply using a false proposition. When a "textbook in mathematical logic" states that "=" is an identity symbol, this can be taken as the false premise of mathematical logic. — Metaphysician Undercover
I have conceded the point regarding what you call "pure math". However, I am now qualifying this concession to say that "pure math" is just an unreal ideal. — Metaphysician Undercover
There is no such thing as pure math. It's a term which people like to use in an attempt to validate their ideals. In reality though, such ideals are fiction, so all that I have really conceded, is that within the fictitious conception which you call "pure math", this is the way things are. Of course, I'm not going to argue about the way things are in your work of fiction, but I will argue about the way that your fiction bears on the real world. — Metaphysician Undercover
Sure, there are thousands of people who might call themselves "pure mathematicians". In reality though, these people are not engaged in "pure mathematics", as I believe you understand this to mean. As I said above, all mathematics is tainted by pragmatics (applications), and there is no such thing as "pure" mathematics. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is very evident in our discussion of the meaning of "=". In what you call "pure mathematics", we might say that "=" signifies "is the same as". This would remove the basic fact that what mathematicians work with are values. To make the mathematics "pure" we must remove this content, what the mathematicians work with, values. We remove the inherent nature of the thing represented by the symbols (i.e. that the symbols represent values) to allow simply that the symbols represent things without any inherent nature, no inherent content. Then we might claim the left side of the equation represents the exact same thing as the right. However, this type of equation would be totally useless. We could do nothing with an equation, solve no problems. — Metaphysician Undercover
Furthermore, there would be a disconnect, an inconsistency between the mathematicians practising "applied" math, who use "=" to represent "is the same value as", and those "pure" mathematicians creating mathematical principles which were inconsistent with the applied mathematics. Since the supposed "pure mathematicians" actually produce principles which are compatible with, and are actually used in applied mathematics, we can conclude that the supposed "pure" mathematics is not really pure, and the principles they are using and developing do not really treat "=" as meaning "is the same as". That's just a misrepresentation, supported by the misrepresentation that these people are doing "pure" mathematics. — Metaphysician Undercover
I can't say I understand everything you wrote following this, but it mostly makes sense to me. I'll have to work on these ideas of "mod 4", and "cyclical group". — Metaphysician Undercover
What I mean, is that if you recognize that two things are different from each other, then that difference has already made a difference to you (in the subconscious for example) by the very fact that you are recognizing them as different. So for example, if you see two chairs across the room, and they appear to be identical, yet you see them as distinct, then the difference between them must have already made a difference to you, by the fact that you see them as distinct. So to say that the difference between them is a difference which doesn't make a difference must be a falsity from the outset. We might even say that they are identical in every way except that they are in different locations, but this very difference is the difference which makes them two distinct chairs instead of one and the same chair. — Metaphysician Undercover
I knew you wouldn't agree, but i wouldn't agree that the real number 5 is an instance of a real number. — Metaphysician Undercover
The problem I think has to do with the statement "a real number". "The real numbers" is a conceptual construct in itself. — Metaphysician Undercover
This conception dictates the the meaning of "a real number". So in reality any supposed instance of "a real number" is just a logical conclusion drawn from the dictates of "the real numbers". — Metaphysician Undercover
In other words its not a distinct or individuated thing, which would be required for "an instance", it's just a specific part of "the real numbers". Can we agree that the real number 5 is a specific real number? — Metaphysician Undercover
'1+1 = 2' means that the value of the expression '1+1' is the same as the value of the expression '2'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Is 1 + 1 = 2 a logical truth? — javi2541997
1 + 1 = 2 is a 'definition'.
2 — javi2541997
I'll retract it then, as an alternative to arguing the point. Or if you consider the second clause as adding fuel to the fire, I'll retract it. — fishfry
Isn't that a bit too much to put on the Basic Law V?Frege proposed a way that it would be a logical truth. But his way was inconsistent. — TonesInDeepFreeze
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.