I'm always intrigued why a conversation about math morphs to conversation about physics. — ssu
If there are any practicing or retired mathematicians reading these threads I wish you would speak up. I would ask my old colleagues what they think of these philosophical discussions, but they are pretty much all gone to greener pastures.
Aren't these symbolic systems of mathematics extremely useful in the US elections too? Isn't counting the votes quite essential in free and fair elections?The "why" here leads right to physics, and the natural sciences more broadly, because a big part of the "why" seems to involve how our symbolic systems have an extremely useful correspondence to how the "physical world" is. — Count Timothy von Icarus
And that's why reporters ask metaphysical questions from cosmologists or quantum-physicists and not from philosophers, who actually could be far more knowledgeable about metaphysical questions.But the question "why do we do this?" leads right to questions about "how the world is" which tend to include physics and metaphysics. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The notion of group may indeed be an abstraction, a way of perceiving things, but there are still five people, which are physically there. — Tarskian
Fewer differences. — Tarskian
A perfect map of an abstract world is the abstract world itself. Perfect means "isomorphic" in this case. — Tarskian
Hence, an isomorphic mapping of a structure is equivalent to the structure itself: — Tarskian
Two abstraction are not truly identical. They are identical up to isomorphism. — Tarskian
For example, the symbols "5" and "five" are identical up to simple translation (which is in this case an isomorphism). Two maps can also be isomorphic. In that case, they are "essentially" identical. — Tarskian
Abstraction are never truly unique. — Tarskian
I have a friend who is a math PhD. I have never really had a chance to discuss this sort of thing in depth, but I have asked him before if he though mathematics was something created or discovered. He said "created" but not with any great deal of confidence and waffled on that a bit — Count Timothy von Icarus
You don't believe in the word truth, or that anything in the world is true, even outside of math? — fishfry
True or False?: The Earth is a planet. Answer: True (by virtue of classification)
True or False?: The square of the hypotenuse in a right triangle equals the sum of the squares of the two sides. Answer: True (by virtue of proof)
True or False?: The Continuum Hypothesis is true. Answer: Well, let's see . . . . — jgill
Interesting to hear you arguing against the concept of truth — fishfry
The miracle of the appropriateness of the language of mathematics for the formulation of the laws of physics is a wonderful gift which we neither understand nor deserve. We should be grateful for it and hope that it will remain valid in future research and that it will extend, for better or for worse, to our pleasure, even though perhaps also to our bafflement, to wide branches of learning. — The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics in the Natural Sciences, Eugene Wigner
Ordinarily I would not give it much thought, but this thread seems to focus on math truth beyond virtue of proof. You seem to know what that is all about. Can you provide a very simple definition of this sort of truth in math? — jgill
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/True_arithmetic
In mathematical logic, true arithmetic is the set of all true first-order statements about the arithmetic of natural numbers.This is the theory associated with the standard model of the Peano axioms in the language of the first-order Peano axioms.
The signature of Peano arithmetic includes the addition, multiplication, and successor function symbols, the equality and less-than relation symbols, and a constant symbol for 0. The (well-formed) formulas of the language of first-order arithmetic are built up from these symbols together with the logical symbols in the usual manner of first-order logic.
The structure is defined to be a model of Peano arithmetic as follows.
- The domain of discourse is the set ℕ of natural numbers,
- The symbol 0 is interpreted as the number 0,
- The function symbols are interpreted as the usual arithmetical operations on ℕ,
- The equality and less-than relation symbols are interpreted as the usual equality and order relation on ℕ.
This structure is known as the standard model or intended interpretation of first-order arithmetic.
A sentence in the language of first-order arithmetic is said to be true in if it is true in the structure just defined. The notation ⊨ φ is used to indicate that the sentence φ is true in .
True arithmetic is defined to be the set of all sentences in the language of first-order arithmetic that are true in , written Th(). This set is, equivalently, the (complete) theory of the structure .
Furthermore, this certainty can be leveraged to great effect in the building of structures, the estimation of value, and so on and so forth. — Wayfarer
So maybe, in some sense, the demand that mathematics itself be explained is a bit like the child’s question. Mathematics, after all, is the source of a considerable number of explanations, not something that itself needs explaining. — Wayfarer
Notice in my exchange with Tarskian above, I was quickly led to ask what makes one theory "better" than another. Tarskian claimed the "perfect" model of an abstraction is one which is identical with the abstraction which it models. However, this is clearly incorrect if we consider what actually works in practise. In practise, what makes one specific model of an abstraction better than another is some principle of usefulness, and this is not at all a principle of similarity. — Metaphysician Undercover
A sentence in the language of first-order arithmetic is said to be true in N if it is true in the structure just defined.
A sentence in the language of first-order arithmetic is said to be true in N {\displaystyle {\mathcal {N}}} if it is true in the structure just defined
Goldbach's conjecture is one of the oldest and best-known unsolved problems in number theory and all of mathematics. It states that every even natural number greater than 2 is the sum of two prime numbers.
Yanofsky points out that only a very small part of Th(N), i.e. arithmetical truth, is provable. The remainder of Th(N) is unpredictable and chaotic. Most of Th(N) is even ineffable. — Tarskian
Ok, so what's the interesting thing with having both addition and multiplication? — ssu
Presburger arithmetic is designed to be complete and decidable. Therefore, it cannot formalize concepts such as divisibility or primality, or, more generally, any number concept leading to multiplication of variables.
Ordinarily I would not give it much thought, but this thread seems to focus on math truth beyond virtue of proof. You seem to know what that is all about. Can you provide a very simple definition of this sort of truth in math? I suppose the definition of a triangle is truth without proof. Truth by definition. But what makes a string of symbols true? Model theory? I thought I understood a parallel idea when I quoted the group theory example from StackExchange, but I guess not. Are axioms true by virtue of definitions? — jgill
So truth and falsity, semantic concepts, are always relative to a particular model. The integers and the integers mod 5 both satisfy the same ring axioms, but 1 +1 + 1 + 1 + 1 = 0 is false in the integers; and true in the integers mod 5.
That's what we mean by truth. Mathematical truth is always:
Axioms plus an interpretation. — fishfry
Mathematicians are starting to use https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proof_assistant , proof assistants and proof formalizer software. It's a big field, going on ten or twenty years now — fishfry
Thank you. This is similar to the group theory example. It makes more sense now. — jgill
My favorite game on the internet is guessing the number of page views per day for math and other topics. I guessed 126 here, whereas it is 111. Close, but no cigar. — jgill
"In particular, a nonstandard model of arithmetic can have indiscernible numbers that share all the same properties."
Even though the law of identity is certainly applicable in the standard model of the natural numbers, it may fall apart in nonstandard models of arithmetic.
So, ω+7 ¬= ω+7 may be true in a nonstandard context, with ω the infinite ordinal representing the order type of the standard natural numbers. — Tarskian
set theory [has] large fragments that are bi-interpretable with arithmetic — Tarskian
Can you provide a very simple definition of this sort of truth in math? [...] Model theory? — jgill
Skolem Arithmetic only has multiplication (no addition) and is also complete. — Tarskian
so what's the interesting thing with having both addition and multiplication? — ssu
Mathematical truth is always:
Axioms plus an interpretation. — fishfry
Ok, so what's the interesting thing with having both addition and multiplication?
— ssu
[...] Any simplification to Robinson's arithmetic will make it complete — Tarskian
Presburger arithmetic is designed to be complete and decidable. Therefore, it cannot formalize concepts such as divisibility or primality, or, more generally, any number concept leading to multiplication of variables.
If anyone has something more to say about this and why this is so — ssu
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