Snails do not have access to a platonic reality. It's not some mystical or divine intervention, but a simple result of a snail adding calcium to the edge of it's shell. — Banno
It’s not that the world isn’t involved, it’s just that the world only reaches us through our constructive interactions with it. We are an intrinsic part of the world, and the Real is the effect of a two-way interaction. — Joshs
We bring one and two into existence, by an intentional act - it's something we do. Some important aspects of this. First, its we who bring this about, collectively; this is not a private act nor something that is just going on in the mind of one individual. Hence there are right and wrong ways to count. — Banno
Next, the existence had here is that of being the subject of a quantification, as in "Two is an even number". — Banno
the account I gave above indicates how stuff like numbers and property and so on are constructed, by modelling that construction in a higher order logic. — Banno
History of philosophy isn't my forte, and I defer to Nagel on this, though it does seem a little oversimplified? — J
The only form that genuine reasoning can take consists in seeing the validity of the arguments, in virtue of what they say. As soon as one tries to step outside of such thoughts, one loses contact with their true content. And one cannot be outside and inside them at the same time: If one thinks in logic, one cannot simultaneously regard those thoughts as mere psychological dispositions, however caused or however biologically grounded. If one decides that some of one's psychological dispositions are, as a contingent matter of fact, reliable methods of reaching the truth (as one may with perception, for example), then in doing so one must rely on other thoughts that one actually thinks, without regarding them as mere dispositions. One cannot embed all one's reasoning in a psychological theory, including the reasonings that have led to that psychological theory. The epistemological buck must stop somewhere. By this I mean not that there must be some premises that are forever unrevisable but, rather, that in any process of reasoning or argument there must be some thoughts that one simply thinks from the inside--rather than thinking of them as biologically programmed dispositions. — Thomas Nagel op cit
The sequence of natural numbers is a human construction. But although we create this sequence, it creates its own autonomous problems in its turn. The distinction between odd and even numbers is not created by us; it is an unintended and unavoidable consequence of our creation. — Objective Knowledge, 118
I see the issue in terms of the cultural dialectics sorrounding philosophy, religion and science — Wayfarer
It's not as if we must choose and stick to only the quantificational interpretation, or alternately we must only ever use the substitutional interpretation. Which we use depends on what we are doing, on the task in hand.I lean toward the quantificational interpretation that allows P to be a "new thing" — J
A misleading phrase, since it implies a background of subjectivity prior to, say, counting; the incoherence of the solipsistic homunculus talking to other homunculi. What is salient is that arithmetic is an interaction between people, and this is so even if one occasionally counts to oneself....intersubjective agreement... — J
A pity then that did not address the argument of my post directly, but instead could only see it as reactionary 'fear of religion'. But yes, it is circular to reason that evolution is needed in order to explain reason. The relevance of that remains obtuse.The only form that genuine reasoning can take consists in seeing the validity of the arguments, in virtue of what they say. — Thomas Nagel op cit
Neoplatonic mathematics is governed by a fundamental distinction which is indeed inherent in Greek science in general, but is here most strongly formulated. According to this distinction, one branch of mathematics participates in the contemplation of that which is in no way subject to change, or to becoming and passing away. This branch contemplates that which is always such as it is and which alone is capable of being known: for that which is known in the act of knowing, being a communicable and teachable possession, must be something that is once and for all fixed — Jacob Klein, Greek Mathematical Thought and the Origin of Algebra
Well, Frege is a modern representative of it, but it really does go back to the ancients — Wayfarer
So - they're the themes I'm exploring. But I agree that it is a different to the subject matter to philosophy per se. — Wayfarer
‘Esse is percipi,’ wrote the empiricist metaphysician George Berkeley around 1710: ‘To be is to be perceived.’ For something to exist or be real, for Berkeley and for many others (Immanuel Kant, for example), was for it to play certain roles in human perception or to correspond to our mental imagery. In a tribute to that style of metaphysics and a parody of it, in 1939 Quine said that ‘to be is to be the value of a variable.’ Now, Quine took himself to be ridiculing the grand pronouncements of metaphysics. But it was hard not to hear that ‘bound variable’ stuff as itself an ontological theory according to which existence is dependent on language: to be was to be picked out by the ‘something’ in sentences like ‘there is something that’s tall and green’ (or, in the language of logic, (∃x)(Fx&Gx), in which the existential quantifier binds the variable ‘x’). — Sartwell, The post-linguistic turn
articulates a position that I think is broadly correct, but you can hold it and still be an atheist to the core. — J
Mathematical platonism, otherwise known as realism, is just the view that mathematical objects are neither mental nor physical. We call them abstract objects. That's it. There's no accompanying doctrine. — frank
Mathematical platonism has considerable philosophical significance. If the view is true, it will put great pressure on the physicalist idea that reality is exhausted by the physical. For platonism entails that reality extends far beyond the physical world and includes objects that aren’t part of the causal and spatiotemporal order studied by the physical sciences.[1] Mathematical platonism, if true, will also put great pressure on many naturalistic theories of knowledge. For there is little doubt that we possess mathematical knowledge. The truth of mathematical platonism would therefore establish that we have knowledge of abstract (and thus causally inefficacious) objects. This would be an important discovery, which many naturalistic theories of knowledge would struggle to accommodate.
Although these philosophical consequences are not unique to mathematical platonism, this particular form of platonism is unusually well suited to support such consequences. For mathematics is a remarkably successful discipline, both in its own right and as a tool for other sciences.[2] Few contemporary analytic philosophers are willing to contradict any of the core claims of a discipline whose scientific credentials are as strong as those of mathematics (Lewis 1991, pp. 57–9). So if philosophical analysis revealed mathematics to have some strange and surprising consequences, it would be unattractive simply to reject mathematics.[3] A form of Platonism based on a discipline whose scientific credentials are less impressive than those of mathematics would not be in this fortunate situation. For instance, when theology turns out to have some strange and surprising philosophical consequences, many philosophers do not hesitate to reject the relevant parts of theology.
Now, Quine took himself to be ridiculing the grand pronouncements of metaphysics. But it was hard not to hear that ‘bound variable’ stuff as itself an ontological theory according to which existence is dependent on language: — Sartwell, The post-linguistic turn
Here we are talking about Mathematics, and he must introduce god, but not in so many words. Moreover, he sees any objection to this unneeded insertion as further evidence of a supposed scientistic fear of religion. — Banno
… the apparent rejection or disappearance of religion and theology in fact conceals the continuing relevance of theological issues and commitments for the modern age. Viewed from this perspective, the process of secularization or disenchantment that has come to be seen as identical with modernity was in fact something different than it seemed, not the crushing victory of reason over infamy, to use Voltaire’s famous term, not the long drawn out death of God that Nietzsche proclaimed, and not the evermore distant withdrawal of the deus absconditus Heidegger points to, but the gradual transference of divine attributes to human beings (an infinite human will), the natural world (universal mechanical causality), social forces (the general will, the hidden hand), and history (the idea of progress, dialectical development, the cunning of reason). … — Reader Review
You'd probably like Between Naturalism and Religion (2008) — J
Lots to be said about Nagel and religion. Is he really open to religious belief? — J
He wasn't there again today. Oh, how I wish he'd go away. — Banno
there is an hierarchical ontology, meaning different levels of being or existence. — Wayfarer
Yep. And to this I would add that the relation between what exists and what we do is worth considering. Language is one of the things we do. Didn't Habermas reflect on this in his use of unavoidability and irreducibility? That it is action that has import?And I don't think the resulting ontological "theory" says that existence is dependent on language — J
The theme, one that may be becoming prevalent, is that post modernism has noticed that not just any narrative will do. Global warming does not care what narrative you adopt, and relativism works for oligarchs as well as anarchists. The truth doesn't care what you believe. That's for Joshs. — Banno
I'm asking if infinitesimals exist in the sense that would satisfy mathematical platonism. — Michael
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