Oh for Gödel's sake. — J
go with Gauss — Srap Tasmaner
Gauss, who termed mathematics as that — jgill
war — Bob Ross
The in-group is more important than the out-group. Each group has to protect its own viability first and foremost. — Bob Ross
philosophers have no business offering opinions within a scientific discourse — J
Their super-power, if any, lies in their ability to defend themselves from challenges that would redirect their discourse into other disciplines. — J
Why is it the case that philosophical discourse can question, and reflect upon, the discourse of physics, but the reverse is not the case? — J
Are you claiming that knowledge does not exist outside mathematics? I don't see why "the elements being less well-defined" results in any serious problem here. — Leontiskos
Given the explanation, can we deduce that Billy is not at work? — Leontiskos
let the negation of C(P) be N(P) — TonesInDeepFreeze
Much of classical math existed before the introduction of set theory. — jgill
We have that. — TonesInDeepFreeze
We already have: — TonesInDeepFreeze
We define consistency from provability. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Why is that lacking? — TonesInDeepFreeze
How do you know there is only one thing? — TonesInDeepFreeze
I don't know what you mean by "minimal inconsistency guard". — TonesInDeepFreeze
A man posts a vague and somewhat mysterious advertisement for a job opening. Three applicants show up for interviews: a mathematician, an engineer, and a lawyer.
The mathematician is called in first. "I can't tell you much about the position before hiring you, I'm afraid. But I'll know if you're the right man for the job by your answer to one question: what is 2 + 2?" The mathematician nods his head vigorously, muttering "2 + 2, yes, hmm." He leans back and stares at the ceiling for a while, then abruptly stands and paces around a while staring at the floor. Eventually he stops, feels around in his pockets, finds a pencil and an envelope, and begins scribbling fiercely. He sits, unfolds the envelope so he can write on the other side and scribbles some more. Eventually he stops and stares at the paper for a while, then at last, he says, "I can't tell you its value, but I can show that it exists, and it's unique."
"Alright, that's fine. Thank you for your time. Would you please send in the next applicant on your way out." The engineer comes in, gets the same speech and the same question, what is 2 + 2? He nods vigorously, looking the man right in the eye, saying, "Yeah, tough one, good, okay." He pulls a laptop out of his bag. "This'll take a few minutes," he says, and begins typing. And indeed after just a few minutes, he says, "Okay, with only the information you've given me, I'll admit I'm hesitant to say. But the different ways I've tried to approximate this, including some really nifty Monte Carlo methods, are giving me results like 3.99982, 3.99991, 4.00038, and so on, everything clustered right around 4. It's gotta be 4."
"Interesting, well, good. Thank you for your time. I believe there's one last applicant, if you would kindly send him in." The lawyer gets the same speech, and the question, what is 2 + 2? He looks at the man for a moment before smiling broadly, leans over to take a cigar from the box on the man's desk. He lights it, and after a few puffs gestures his approval. He leans back in his chair, putting in his feet up on the man's desk as he blows smoke rings, then at last he looks at the man and says, "What do you want it to be?" — Srap Tasmaner
I guess that' similar to the prisoner's dilemma. — TonesInDeepFreeze
consistency is defined in terms of consequence — TonesInDeepFreeze
What makes me hesitate to reduce logic to math has more to do with thinking about informal logic as still a part of logic, even though it doesn't behave in the same manner as formal logic — Moliere
I don't know of anyone who thinks natural language conveyance of mathematics is unimportant. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Another way is to point to the coherency: There is credibility as both logic-to-math and math-to-logic are both intuitive and work in reverse nicely. — TonesInDeepFreeze
natural language statements — fdrake
Absolutely sure. — TonesInDeepFreeze
What pretending? — TonesInDeepFreeze
Someplace to start writing without having to explain yourself. — fdrake
I think of mathematical logic sub-subject of formal logic. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Set theory axiomatizes classical mathematics. And the language of set theory is used for much of non-classical mathematics That's one so what. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Writers often used the word 'contained'; it is not wrong. But sometimes I see people being not clear whether it means 'member' or 'subset' — TonesInDeepFreeze
0 subset of 0 holds by P -> P. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Peter Smith offers some nice content. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Oh, yes, the duals run all through mathematics. — TonesInDeepFreeze
subset v member — TonesInDeepFreeze
Your probability exploration is interesting. I think there's probably (pun intended) been a lot of work on it that you could find. — TonesInDeepFreeze
So, as far as I can tell, category theory does not eschew set theory but rather, and least to the extent of interpretability (different sense of 'interpretation' in this thread) it presupposes it and goes even further. — TonesInDeepFreeze
P can be empty set, which is a member of every set. — Moliere
"is contained within", i.e. determined by — Moliere
The (probability) space of A is entirely contained within the (probability) space of not-A.
Well, of course it is. That's almost a restatement of the probability of P v ~P equals 1. — Moliere
your reduction of material implication to set theory. I'm not sure how to understand that, really — Moliere

if the moon is made of green cheese then 2 + 2 = 4. That's the paradox, and we have to accept that the implication is true. How is it that the empirical falsehood, which seems to rely upon probablity rather than deductive inference, is contained in "2 + 2 = 4"? — Moliere
validity is about deducibility — Leontiskos
I don't even need to advert to real-world cases — Leontiskos
an argument is supposed to answer the "why" of a conclusion — Leontiskos
I encourage respectful discussion of these topics by all parties. — NotAristotle
I have learned — NotAristotle
a notion of "follows from," — Leontiskos
