Yet the Dedekind-Cantor continuum is taught in school along with the fact that a point has zero width. So my objections are bang upto date, as far as I can see. — Devans99
No-one has yet pointed out any logic/math error in my OP. — Devans99
If I have something wrong, then someone should set me straight, rather than vague hand waving — Devans99
At least a link to your preferred definition of the continuum would be nice — Devans99
The only reason, I think, that metaphysical questions concerning modality seem largely irrelevant to you (in this context) is that you (seem to) think that "determining the set of acceptable answers" has nothing to do with reasoning metaphysically about modality. Note that you expressed this using the word "acceptable"; itself a modality. Reasoning about the sense of "acceptable" there; what is appropriate for the situation is in part extra-logical; you have to think about the logic from the outside while negotiating its axiomatisation to ensure it works well for the sense of modality in question. — fdrake
I guess this turns on the question of what sort of an answer we are looking for: descriptive, explanatory or prescriptive. If descriptive, then reducing the subject to a formal modal logic provides a rough sketch of an answer, but it loses much of the meat in the process of reduction, and the result is only approximate at best, because in reality our modal talk/thinking does not perfectly conform to this system. — SophistiCat
But this is very backwards, at least in part, if you're using a modal logic to represent metaphysical intuitions, the metaphysical intuitions, the axioms and the theorems all interact; a feeding forward of "acceptable answers" into "metaphysical accounts" makes the appropriate metaphysics for a domain rather arbitrary; or if not arbitrary, we consider the acceptable answers through metaphysical arguments, and at that point we're not just talking about the formal structure of a modal logic either. The extra logical considerations in part determine what logical structure seems appropriate to represent them, so do in part the theorems and axioms of the logic. — fdrake
I think this is a mistake. In order to make sense of a phenomenon - modal talk - you pick a simple formal model that captures some of its structure, and then you try to make sense of your model by studying more of its structure and trying to relate it back to phenomenology. This is what's backwards. You shouldn't lose sight of the phenomenology, and don't expect to find in your model any insight that you didn't front-load there. — SophistiCat
Political correctness and the use of euphemism in science has nothing to do with politics. Political correctness is reviled by both left and right. — NOS4A2
Is there any problem if I formalize "any proposition must be true or false" as ∀p(p∨¬p)?
I know that this can be formalized metalinguistically as something like φ∨¬φ, where φ is any fbf of the object language, an I know that this is not syntatically correct in first order logic, but I want to know if I can set my domain of quantification as the set of all fbfs of the language in question, and, if so, if is there any problem with using logical operators over the variables being quantified.
For example, the existence of the set of all the contradictions (C) would imply that ∀p((p∧¬p)∈C), with p varying over the set of all the well formed formulas. In this case, I use the conjunction and the negation operator in p, which is a wff and also the variable of quantification. — Nicholas Ferreira
Critical thinking without context is dangerous. — Banno
Thanks. I'll just stick to the simple. — TheMadFool
Can you have a look at what I said below. — TheMadFool
As with the teaching of infinity, something which is just an assumption is taught to us as absolute knowledge. I feel our maths teachers are letting us down — Devans99
You've described a potential infinity, but not an actual infinity. To understand an actual infinity we need to understand the actual existence of the elements represented by mathematical language. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think fishfry said something to the effect that bijection has precedence of injection. Why? — TheMadFool
I think step [6] above is no doubt questionable, but it brings out the point: how exactly does a finite number ever become infinite? - We have no basic arithmetical operators to convert finite numbers into infinite numbers. To focus on this aspect, here is a similar argument that more graphically brings out the discontinuity between natural numbers and infinity: — Devans99
Now the issue, which we discussed already in the thread, is whether or not a written numeral necessarily represents an object. In actual usage, the numeral might be used to represent an object, or it might not. If it doesn't represent an object, then any supposed count is not a valid count.
Your example seems to create ambiguity between the symbol, and the thing represented by the symbol. So you would have to clarify whether there is actually existing numbers, existing as objects to be counted, otherwise the claim of "an infinite set of objects" is false. As proof, it doesn't suffice to say that it is possible that a numeral represents an object And actual usage of symbols demonstrates that it is possible that the symbol represents an object, but also possible that it does not. To present the symbol as if you are using it to represent an object, when you really are not, is deception. — Metaphysician Undercover
2. A set G has a cardinality greater than a set H if and only if the there's a bijection between set H and a proper subset of G — TheMadFool
I like this, but skills is perhaps better than beliefs, in that 'beliefs' casts the whole thing as more explicit than I think it is. Have you looked into Dreyfus's Being-in-the-world? The 'form of life' is something like a set of norms that aren't explicit and can't plausibly be enumerated. — softwhere
Later on he says: "...belief is in its nature veridical." — ZzzoneiroCosm
I'm confused by the distinction actual vs potential infinity?
From wikipedia I get:
Potential infinity is a never ending process - adding 1 to successive numbers. Each addition yields a finite quantity but the process never ends.
Actual infinity, if I got it right, consists of considering the set of natural numbers as an entity in itself. In other words 1, 2, 3,.. is a potential infinity but {1,2, 3,...} is an actual infinity.
In symbolic terms it seems the difference between them is just the presence/absence of the curly braces, } and {.
Can someone explain this to me? Thanks. — TheMadFool
However, let's do something different. We take the same sets N and E. We know that N has the even numbers. So we pair the members of E with the even numbers in N. We can do that perfectly and with each member of E in bijection with the even number members of N. What now of the odd numbers in N? They have no matching counterpart in E. — TheMadFool
This is a mostly geometric argument and it goes like this. — Umonsarmon