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2foolish
Aug27-08, 04:02 PM
I keep thinking about this lately, think about how we know this is different from that without having to consciouslly think about it.

For instance this T is different from the background it sits on. The only way we could know that is if we already did the comparisons unconsciously so we know there is inequality (or inequalities) on a surface, that is, a distinction.

Think about how we detect things, in order to think, or do anything, we first must be able to observe/detect something is there and get feedback from it in a feedback ring, binary logic, yes something is there or no, without binary logic we can't even have a single perception.

It seems that the act of detection between real world surfaces (energy/light/etc) in and of itself, is where we get the concept of object, and hence the concept of 1, or "one distinct object", this is not that.

It seems to me numbers are just shapes in the real world, but in our minds we call these distinct shapes "numbers". So there is an equivalence between geometric shapes and numbers in the real world, at least that seems to be the case to me.

CRGreathouse
Aug27-08, 04:06 PM
I would be careful to distinguish numerals from numbers.

granpa
Aug27-08, 04:19 PM
that would be a 'thing'. then 'things' break down into subthings. each subthing is a set of 'things' which resemble each other more closely than can be explained by chance. reptiles resemble other reptiles. mammals resemble other mammals. but theres not much in between reptiles and mammals.

its all about finding patterns that cant be explained by chance.

that 'T' in your example could have been a random stain on the paper. yet you know that it isnt. how?

2foolish
Aug27-08, 06:27 PM
I would be careful to distinguish numerals from numbers.

Numerals are basically symbols of the 'alphabet' of the concept of one object though, when we say one, we say 'one object', that is distinct from all other objects.

When we look at two circles on a piece of paper, we call them 'circles' but they are merely two distinct shapes in the real world.

If it is an object, it has boundaries, and is distinct from other thoughts, so it must be a shape, because it is distinct from other concepts (not equal to).

2foolish
Aug27-08, 06:30 PM
that would be a 'thing'. then 'things' break down into subthings.


Things are objects, i.e. they are distinct from other things, there is distinction between them, this thing is not that thing

that 'T' in your example could have been a random stain on the paper. yet you know that it isnt. how?

I think you misunderstood, what I'm saying is the concept of object in our minds, is an instance of distinction we get from the process of detection in the world, i.e. the t could be a random blob, but that doesn't make it NOT a distinct object.

granpa
Aug27-08, 06:41 PM
I understood you.

how do we distinguish a 'thing' from another 'thing' or for that matter from a nonthing? that is the question.

a stain would certainly be a thing. but it wouldnt be a 'T'. and how would we distinguish a stain from a generally chaotic background?

furthermore each set of subthings has its own actions that they perform or that can be performed on them and has its own rules. in other words, its a field.

2foolish
Aug27-08, 06:46 PM
I understood you. how do we distinguish a 'thing' from another 'thing' or for that matter from a nonthing? that is the question.

Self recursion, self-reflection, reality processing itself. i.e. we make distinctions because reality is constantly bombarding us with information about itself. Photons bounce off objects and hit our eyes, etc. That is the only way we could detect ourselves, not only that, if we don't believe it we undermine knowledge completely and should just give up. i.e. if you don't believe things "out there" exist or you "in there" exist, then why should anyone listen to that kind of person? right? Not only that your conception is based on a flawed understanding of "nothing" in reality, nothing as it was conceived was conceputalized before modern understandings of physics. Space is a surface of a kind, i.e. similar to the ocean. We could also prove it from logic: You can't throw a ball across a non-existent entity, therefore space exists, and nothing is merely 'empty-space-surface'

Consider if you were giving an object to another person at the bottom of the sea, the water between you still exists. There wouldn't technically be 'nothing'

Dodo
Aug27-08, 07:51 PM
This discussion reminds me of G. Spencer-Brown's "Laws of Form"; there he would recreate boolean logic starting from the concept of a boundary, where one of its sides has been deliberately marked to distinguish it from the other. See f.i. here,
http://www.lawsofform.org/ideas.html
or the Wikipedia page which is even more cryptic than the book.

2foolish
Aug28-08, 02:39 AM
Check this out:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AbASOcqc1Ss

atyy
Aug28-08, 03:10 AM
Maths is biology. If our brains were different, we might make different maths, or at least what we'd consider a natural construction might be different.

Dodo
Aug28-08, 04:50 AM
I wonder how the boy from the documentary would perform (or feel) doing arithmetic in a base other than 10.

2foolish
Aug28-08, 05:26 PM
I wonder how the boy from the documentary would perform (or feel) doing arithmetic in a base other than 10.

I wonder that as well. I'd love to look at the research they did. But it goes to show we hardly know anything about the brain, i.e. people can have innate knowledge and abilities and not be able to explain the process of how it occurs.

Which rubs right against the scientific method.

granpa
Sep2-08, 04:34 PM
Things are objects, i.e. they are distinct from other things, there is distinction between them, this thing is not that thing



I think you misunderstood, what I'm saying is the concept of object in our minds, is an instance of distinction we get from the process of detection in the world, i.e. the t could be a random blob, but that doesn't make it NOT a distinct object.


ok I get it. I dont know that I MISunderstood you and I dont think that what I said actually contradicts what you said but I did indeed miss your point.

so 'thing'=distinction? well I'll have to think about. it sounds possible but at the same time distinction to my mind is more about the process of distinguishing rather than that which is distinguished if that makes any sense. A 'thing' certainly gets distinguished, but is that what it 'is'? but you may be right though. I'll have to think about it.

BTW, as far as numbers being shapes, there is an interesting discussion on the successor function being the basis of numbers/math in this thread:
http://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?p=1857233&posted=1#post1857233

heres my take on it:
since the successor function is the basis of math then maybe we shouldnt think in terms of one, two, and three but rather first, second, and third. 2+3 becomes the second after the third. 2*3 becomes the second third. its just semantics but it might make the underlying fundamental idea clearer.

after all, what does three even mean anyway? thirdness?

2foolish
Sep2-08, 05:38 PM
ok I get it. I dont know that I MISunderstood you and I dont think that what I said actually contradicts what you said but I did indeed miss your point.

so 'thing'=distinction? well I'll have to think about. it sounds possible but at the same time distinction to my mind is more about the process of distinguishing rather than that which is distinguished if that makes any sense. A 'thing' certainly gets distinguished, but is that what it 'is'? but you may be right though. I'll have to think about it.

Well here's how I think about it.. imagine you had a piece of paper over two lumps (bubbles) out of the same surface, the surface would be a single surface, and yet you'd have two bubbles (two humps), so we get the concept of object from inequalities, i.e. in this example it is the flat vs raise/height.

BTW, as far as numbers being shapes, there is an interesting discussion on the successor function being the basis of numbers/math in this thread:
http://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?p=1857233&posted=1#post1857233

http://www.boundarymath.org/

I know I'm doing research into computational logic. You may find this interesting:

http://www.lawsofform.org/aum/prolog.html

heres my take on it:
since the successor function is the basis of math then maybe we shouldnt think in terms of one, two, and three but rather first, second, and third. 2+3 becomes the second after the third. 2*3 becomes the second third. its just semantics but it might make the underlying fundamental idea clearer.

after all, what does three even mean anyway? thirdness?


Thirdness? - three distinct objects. But consider the "hidden" subtext - all 3 numbers are actually subdivisions of a dinstinct thought, not '3 seperate thoughts', i.e. consider a fractal pattern, shapes within shapes, numbers within numbers. See this cool program, to sit and think on it for a bit. This is how I came around to these ideas, when I was thinking about the patterns in fractals.

http://www.ultrafractal.com/

I think we've got it backwards, for instance we observe the universe from 'outside' (pretend it's in a bubble), we are fractions of the universe, but when we look at 'objects', 'outside' of our minds, they are actually fractions of a single entity, i.e. part of a big fractal surface, but our senses give us the optical illusion that they are 'separate', but in the ultimate sense they are not, they are all part of one surface of reality.

granpa
Sep2-08, 06:00 PM
or better still a surface with a great many bubbles of all sizes and shapes and 2 bubbles much larger than the rest. clearly the 2 stand out represent something distinct from the rest. they arent just random.

distinguishing things is exactly what I was talking about in post 6.

granpa
Sep2-08, 06:08 PM
you are thinking in terms of real bumps while I am thinking in terms of bumps in a distribution. plot each of the random bubbles by its characteristics (shape, size) and most would fall into a Gaussian distribution but the other 2 (I should have made it many more than that) clearly fall outside that. thats a distinction. thats what I was talking about when I mentioned the random stains.

I know what 'three' means. I am suggesting that it is an 'empty' word, as the chinese say, derived in some bizarre and meaningless way from the root idea of being 'third'.

I tend to believe that only nouns, verbs, and possibly conjunctions are 'real' words. all others are derived from those or they are 'empty' words.

Hurkyl
Sep2-08, 06:17 PM
If you want to discuss epistemology, then please do so in the philosophy forum (which is where I have moved this post). If you want to discuss a more scientific topic, such as the psychology of observation or the mathematics of detecting patterns in raw data, then please start a new thread on that topic, and try not to diverge into overly speculative posts.

(Of course, one must refrain from overly speculative posts in the philosophy forums as well)

2foolish
Sep2-08, 06:17 PM
you are thinking in terms of real bumps while I am thinking in terms of bumps in a distribution.

The problem is you have it backwards, the bumps are what is real. Your distribution is a reflection (an image, a photograph) of what is i.e. think of the order of operations, photon bounces/is ejected from object (carrying information) hits your eye, eye translates the signal. The signal reaches your mind, mind derives a thought from the information your eye has received, therefore when you 'self generate' ideas, you got those ideas from the outside world first. Therefore in our minds we're really just manipulating 'holographic' reflections of what is on the outside. If you actually had to make your bumps in a distribution out of real stuff in the real world, you would find out things. This is why I always transport mathematical reasoning back into the 'real world' I think terms of "What would it be made of?".. if this is 'infinite' in terms of our thoughts (i.e. if we had infinite strings of data), but if we actually had to make say pi out of stuff in the real world. We would run out of stuff to make distinct numbers from, therefore. Pi is "infinite" only in imaginary space, in the real world, pi ends (i.e. when you make pi with stuff).

In a computer pi would have to be stored somewhere, pi would fill up any amount of memory, hard disk space, and processing power you could throw at it, therefore, pi in the real world is truncated, it eventually ends somewhere when you consider the real world is made of stuff.

2foolish
Sep2-08, 06:24 PM
If you want to discuss epistemology, then please do so in the philosophy forum (which is where I have moved this post). If you want to discuss a more scientific topic, such as the psychology of observation or the mathematics of detecting patterns in raw data, then please start a new thread on that topic, and try not to diverge into overly speculative posts.

(Of course, one must refrain from overly speculative posts in the philosophy forums as well)

All science begins with thought, I fail to see how our discussion of detection is unscientific. i.e. if you don't think you can see stuff you can't move around objects, if you believe what you are seeing is subjective, you're getting an objective outcome (movement around an object) from a 'subjective' experience, seems a little off to me. Would you sit there thinking you were experiencing 'subjective hotness' and let your hand burn off? I wouldn't personally, the whole point in asking these questions is to discover errors in the philosophy of science and the method of science itself. Men conceived what we call 'science' if there are errors in conceptualizations, then there are errors in everyone who claims to know what 'science' is. Men derive their concepts from the world, if they conceptualized their concepts incorrectly we should demand these errors be exposed, that is the scientific way.

It is the duty of philosophy to destroy the illusions which had their origin in misconceptions, whatever darling hopes and valued expectations may be ruined by its explanations. My chief aim in this work has been completeness; and I make bold to say, that there is not a single metaphysical problem that does not find its solution, or at least the key to its solution, here. Pure reason is a perfect unity. (Immanuel Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 1781)

granpa
Sep2-08, 06:51 PM
anyway, my point was that the successor function, which is the basis of all mathematics, doesnt give us one, two, and three. it gives us first, second, and third. so the whole question of what is a 'number' may be meaningless.

for the record, I consider that very relevant to 'math'.


you have to distinguish between 'types' and 'instances'. instances are real world objects. types are not. distinguishing an instance is in theory no different from distinguishing a type.

2foolish
Sep2-08, 06:57 PM
anyway, my point was that the successor function, which is the basis of all mathematics, doesnt give us one, two, and three. it gives us first, second, and third. so the whole question of 'what is a number' may be meaningless.

for the record, I consider that very relevant to 'math'.


you have to distinguish between 'types' and 'instances'. instances are real world objects. types are not.

The successor function is in fact what boolean logic is, I've been working on this, boolean logic is in fact the 'true math', our higher abstractions (arabic numerals, etc), if you go back to geometry, and represent numbers as a series of lines on a piece of paper (remmeber the 4 sticks then the cross on to represent 5?).

There is only one function there is not "0 and 1" it's -1 and +1, then the 0 "empty*, it's an existence/detection function --> yes it exists? --> yes it exists! Try expressing pi with simple shapes (i.e. 3 in 3.14) would be 3 boxes, then .1 would be 1/10 of a box, etc, and then represent each 1 within the number in binary notation, notice how the data is expanding and growing (i.e. self recursive).

The mayan's used shapes as their numerals, they didn't use our rather convoluted notation which compresses and masks mathematical truths (distinct shapes), when we write "3" we actually mean 1 and 1 and 1 (3 ones) or 3 sticks, or 3 distinctions.

granpa
Sep2-08, 07:07 PM
I agree that math is an outgrowth of an even more basic field but geometry is an outgrowth of math. its 2 dimensional mathemetics (or rather, multidimensional mathematics). geometry therefore cant be as fundamental as your are thinking.

2foolish
Sep2-08, 07:55 PM
I agree that math is an outgrowth of an even more basic field but geometry is an outgrowth of math. its 2 dimensional mathemetics (or rather, multidimensional mathematics). geometry therefore cant be as fundamental as your are thinking.


Incorrect, surfaces exist "out there", what we were taught as geometry is merely an instance of (reflection of) real world geometric surfaces, etc. Not only that the 'geometry' we were handed was conceived and handed down to us, i.e. we didn't come up with it ourselves, the whole point was to show that real-world geometry is in fact the source of math. you can't have a perception if you can't detect using binary, if something is there or not, yes it is there, no it is not, you can't have a single mathematical thought or perception without it. Colliding and interacting surfaces/energies comes before you can even think of a notion, conceive a mathematical system, etc. Perception is apriori to our conceived mathematics. Everything goes through a process of conceptualization, therefore, we examine the nature of how thoughts are derived from the world in the first place, to get the answers we are looking for. The time ordering of real world operations, remember.

Hurkyl
Sep2-08, 08:00 PM
All science begins with thought, I fail to see how our discussion of detection is unscientific.
You are not applying the scientific method. You do not propose testable predictions, nor experiments to conform those predictions. Nor do you appear to be striving to achieve that standard. Thus, you are not being scientific.

granpa
Sep2-08, 08:04 PM
Incorrect, surfaces exist "out there", what we were taught as geometry is merely an instance of (reflection of) real world geometric surfaces, etc. Not only that the 'geometry' we were handed was conceived and handed down to us, i.e. we didn't come up with it ourselves, the whole point was to show that real-world geometry is in fact the source of math. you can't have a perception if you can't detect using binary, if something is there or not, yes it is there, no it is not, you can't have a single mathematical thought or perception without it. Colliding and interacting surfaces/energies comes before you can even think of a notion, conceive a mathematical system, etc. Perception is apriori to our conceived mathematics. Everything goes through a process of conceptualization, therefore, we examine the nature of how thoughts are derived from the world in the first place, to get the answers we are looking for. The time ordering of real world operations, remember.

space is not geometry anymore than sheep are numbers even though they may often be counted.

it isnt clear to me what it is that you are arguing against.

2foolish
Sep2-08, 08:06 PM
You are not applying the scientific method. You do not propose testable predictions, nor experiments to conform those predictions. Nor do you appear to be striving to achieve that standard. Thus, you are not being scientific.

logic (countable and uncountable; plural logics)

1. (uncountable) A method of human thought that involves thinking in a linear, step-by-step manner about how a problem can be solved. Logic is the basis of many principles including the scientific method.

Therefore, the scientific method reduces to and is rooted in logic, in fact hypotheses are logical statements in and of themselves, they are made and constructed using logic.

You're under the false notion that science is separate from thought, that is the whole point. Every act of detection you make to move around, is an act of science in and of itself. Is something there? yes/no, then move left/right. It is a logical operation that is tested - hypothesis is: Is something there -- yes? then... move left/right.

I am being quite scientific, since the act of detection is an act of observation and you cant' detect anything is there and do comparisons without logic.

Hurkyl
Sep2-08, 08:13 PM
In a computer pi would have to be stored somewhere, pi would fill up any amount of memory, hard disk space, and processing power you could throw at it, therefore, pi in the real world is truncated, it eventually ends somewhere when you consider the real world is made of stuff.
This is patently false. pi can be represented, for example, as a symbolic constant, and thus requiring only a few bits of storage. And even if you insist on being able to retrieve individual digits of pi, you can do so with finite storage if you do something more clever than a lookup table algorithm.

As CRGreathouse advised in the first reply to your opening post:
I would be careful to distinguish numerals from numbers.

Hurkyl
Sep2-08, 08:19 PM
logic (countable and uncountable; plural logics)

1. (uncountable) A method of human thought that involves thinking in a linear, step-by-step manner about how a problem can be solved. Logic is the basis of many principles including the scientific method.
Yes, science makes use of logic. That does not imply that logic is synonymous with science.

granpa
Sep2-08, 08:24 PM
The problem is you have it backwards, the bumps are what is real. Your distribution is a reflection (an image, a photograph) of what is i.e. think of the order of operations, photon bounces/is ejected from object (carrying information) hits your eye, eye translates the signal. The signal reaches your mind, mind derives a thought from the information your eye has received, therefore when you 'self generate' ideas, you got those ideas from the outside world first. Therefore in our minds we're really just manipulating 'holographic' reflections of what is on the outside. If you actually had to make your bumps in a distribution out of real stuff in the real world, you would find out things. This is why I always transport mathematical reasoning back into the 'real world' I think terms of "What would it be made of?".. if this is 'infinite' in terms of our thoughts (i.e. if we had infinite strings of data), but if we actually had to make say pi out of stuff in the real world. We would run out of stuff to make distinct numbers from, therefore. Pi is "infinite" only in imaginary space, in the real world, pi ends (i.e. when you make pi with stuff).
In a computer pi would have to be stored somewhere, pi would fill up any amount of memory, hard disk space, and processing power you could throw at it, therefore, pi in the real world is truncated, it eventually ends somewhere when you consider the real world is made of stuff.

you completely lose me at this point. how do you construe anything I said to imply that 'real' bumps arent real? and what does that have to do with anything?

Hurkyl
Sep2-08, 08:24 PM
The successor function is in fact what boolean logic is,
I can't figure out what figurative meaning you could possibly intend by this comment. But I will point out that, taken literally, it is obviously false.

granpa
Sep2-08, 09:05 PM
you seem to want to take abstract ideas like space and numbers and turn them into something concrete. either that or do away with them entirely. I'm not sure which.

theres something called 'mistaking the map for the territory'. I wonder if thats what is going on here?

2foolish
Sep2-08, 09:06 PM
Yes, science makes use of logic. That does not imply that logic is synonymous with science.

Actually it is, an act of observation is an act of detection, is an act of interaction - contact. So it is logic, you can't detect something is there without logic. You can't escape the functional nature of detection and recursive feedback of the logic of detection.

There are different logics for different systems, you're confusing the misuse of logic with the proper use of logic.

Consider the question: Does the truth contain logic? Is existence truth? If the answers to those aren't yes. Then the whole of science collapses. The whole of science begins with things that exist, that you can sense. It begins with sensory experience, an act of sensation is an act of detection, the act of feedback, in that - this is not that. That's all I need to demonstrate you're not grasping what I said.

2foolish
Sep2-08, 09:09 PM
I can't figure out what figurative meaning you could possibly intend by this comment. But I will point out that, taken literally, it is obviously false.

No it isn't, you just don't have the research background. You're thinking about one interpretation of boolean logic (the one you were taught), incorrect concepts (the interpretation of logic you were taught) must necessarily lead to incorrect judgments if what was taught was only half the story (partial understanding of boolean algebra). There are other expressions and understandings which are being worked on right at this very moment. Consider: http://www.lawsofform.org/aum/prolog.html

2foolish
Sep2-08, 09:13 PM
This is patently false. pi can be represented, for example, as a symbolic constant, and thus requiring only a few bits of storage.

You're missing the point, if you were to calculate it out it would continue on forever, i.e. expanded the expression. for instance I can store 0.333 repeated in a computer as
1/3, but that does not make it's decimal expansion any less real.

As CRGreathouse advised in the first reply to your opening post:

I would be careful to distinguish numerals from numbers.

Numerals are a form of object (one-ness) in and of themselves, you could simply use the representations to count i.e. the recursive nature of images (pictures within pictures), if what you were doing was stated.

2foolish
Sep2-08, 09:16 PM
space is not geometry anymore than sheep are numbers even though they may often be counted.

"Time and space and gravitation have no separate existence from matter. ...
Physical objects are not in space, but these objects are spatially extended. In this way the concept 'empty space' loses its meaning."--Einstein

Relativity -- gravitational lensing, yes space is geometry, that is a surface of a kind, it's just a surface of a different nature (i.e. counter intuitive)

granpa
Sep2-08, 09:23 PM
you are thinking in terms of real bumps while I am thinking in terms of bumps in a distribution. plot each of the random bubbles by its characteristics (shape, size) and most would fall into a Gaussian distribution but the other 2 (I should have made it many more than that) clearly fall outside that. thats a distinction. thats what I was talking about when I mentioned the random stains.

I know what 'three' means. I am suggesting that it is an 'empty' word, as the chinese say, derived in some bizarre and meaningless way from the root idea of being 'third'.

I tend to believe that only nouns, verbs, and possibly conjunctions are 'real' words. all others are derived from those or they are 'empty' words.
The problem is you have it backwards, the bumps are what is real. Your distribution is a reflection (an image, a photograph) of what is i.e. think of the order of operations, photon bounces/is ejected from object (carrying information) hits your eye, eye translates the signal. The signal reaches your mind, mind derives a thought from the information your eye has received, therefore when you 'self generate' ideas, you got those ideas from the outside world first. Therefore in our minds we're really just manipulating 'holographic' reflections of what is on the outside. If you actually had to make your bumps in a distribution out of real stuff in the real world, you would find out things. This is why I always transport mathematical reasoning back into the 'real world' I think terms of "What would it be made of?".. if this is 'infinite' in terms of our thoughts (i.e. if we had infinite strings of data), but if we actually had to make say pi out of stuff in the real world. We would run out of stuff to make distinct numbers from, therefore. Pi is "infinite" only in imaginary space, in the real world, pi ends (i.e. when you make pi with stuff).

In a computer pi would have to be stored somewhere, pi would fill up any amount of memory, hard disk space, and processing power you could throw at it, therefore, pi in the real world is truncated, it eventually ends somewhere when you consider the real world is made of stuff.

what does pi have to do with anything. I'm baffled.

granpa
Sep2-08, 09:25 PM
"Time and space and gravitation have no separate existence from matter. ...
Physical objects are not in space, but these objects are spatially extended. In this way the concept 'empty space' loses its meaning."--Einstein

Relativity -- gravitational lensing, yes space is geometry, that is a surface of a kind, it's just a surface of a different nature (i.e. counter intuitive)

as far as I'm concerned, space is just an aether which itself does not exist 'in space' and therefore the abstract idea of space has no physical reality outside of that (and that is how I interpret his statement). but I'm not supposed to talk about that so lets not get into it.

2foolish
Sep2-08, 09:36 PM
what does pi have to do with anything. I'm baffled.

My first point was things are made of stuff in the real world, they don't go 'on forever' if you transport infinite numbers to the outside world and unpack them (calculate them fully, instead of just expressing them as stored function). That was my point with pi and making it with real stuff, i.e. doing the calculations with physical objects. One could express pi as a stored function (i.e. like how 1/3, when calculated becomes 0.33333 repeated indefinitely), but if you unpacked it you could never have enough stuff to store all the digits. My second point was that acts of Detection/observation necessitates calculation with real stuff.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_PI

granpa
Sep2-08, 09:40 PM
My first point was things are made of stuff in the real world, they don't go 'on forever' if you transport infinite numbers to the outside world and unpack them (calculate them fully, instead of just expressing them as stored function). That was my point with pi and making it with real stuff, i.e. doing the calculations with physical objects. One could express pi as a stored function (i.e. like how 1/3, when calculated becomes 0.33333 repeated indefinitely), but if you unpacked it you could never have enough stuff to store all the digits. My second point was that acts of Detection/observation necessitates calculation with real stuff.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_PI

so? what does that have to do with anything. what are you arguing against? if thats the answer then whats the question?

2foolish
Sep2-08, 09:46 PM
so? what does that have to do with anything. what are you arguing against? if thats the answer then whats the question?

You said:

but geometry is an outgrowth of math. its 2 dimensional mathemetics (or rather, multidimensional mathematics). geometry therefore cant be as fundamental as your are thinking.

I'm claiming the opposite, math is an outgrowth of world geometry, when you consider that for you to even have a thought, or a perception, you use binary logic (is a surface there yes or no? did it make contact, yes or no?, etc ,etc) else you could not see, think and move in the real world.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empirical

A central concept in science and the scientific method is that all evidence must be empirical, or empirically based, that is, dependent on evidence or consequences that are observable by the senses.

Therefore, an act of observation is an act of detection, i.e. back to boolean logic (feedback loop), yes it is there, no it is not.

granpa
Sep2-08, 10:10 PM
math is an outgrowth of world geometry, when you consider that for you to even have a thought, or a perception, you use binary logic (is a surface there yes or no? did it make contact, yes or no?, etc ,etc) else you could not see, think and move in the real world.

well we are talking about 2 different things here. when I say 'outgrowth' I mean that the axioms that form the basis of that particular field are based upon the underlying (and simpler) field.

when you say 'outgrowth' you are referring to the process in which it is discovered by the mind. yes we are born with certain instinctual skills like vision and the ability to process spatial data. that primes the pump so to speak and curiosity drives us to discover more and more things. but that is very different from what I meant.

granpa
Sep2-08, 10:13 PM
what have I stated that wasnt empirical (except for aether theory. lets not get into that)?

ronjanec
Sep2-08, 10:30 PM
I am trying to figure out what in the world you guys are talking about! I personally believe math and most geometric figures were invented by man (no triangles exist outside of earth etc.) Infinity is only conceptual... ???????

granpa
Sep2-08, 10:33 PM
I am trying to figure out what in the world you guys are talking about!

so am I.

granpa
Sep2-08, 10:42 PM
perhaps it would help if I explained why I say geometry is an outgrowth of math. think first of a number line. from that we get numbers that add subtract multiply and divide.

distances in euclidean geometry add and subtract just like regular numbers and multiply when finding areas. the only difference is that there is an extra axiom defining the length of the hypotenuse. (different ways of defining the length of the hypotenuse give rise to different geometries). without that axiom 2 dimensional math would be impossible.

so you can see that multidimensional math is based on regular math but has an extra axiom.

ronjanec
Sep2-08, 10:43 PM
Thanks granpa I thought I was starting to lose it! And I think I might even agree with some of what 2foolish was trying to say if I could better understand the point he was trying to make here.

ronjanec
Sep2-08, 10:53 PM
Let me put it this way and I spent a lot of time on this before: I believe circles only exist on earth. I personally believe prehistoric man took one of the first wheels and learned to divide this into the geometric figures we use today. The point being the subdivided geometric symbols can then only exist on earth because of the original source.

granpa
Sep2-08, 11:01 PM
Let me put it this way and I spent a lot of time on this before: I believe circles only exist on earth. I personally believe prehistoric man took one of the first wheels and learned to divide this into the geometric figures we use today. The point being the subdivided geometric symbols can then only exist on earth because of the original source.

something cant exist unless it has a source? what is your point? like I asked earlier, if thats the answer then whats the question?

ronjanec
Sep2-08, 11:06 PM
I am saying a triangle can't exist anywhere else in the physical universe because it was originally derived from something that only exists on earth. Many spheres yes but no squares rectangles etc.

ronjanec
Sep2-08, 11:24 PM
The point also being that math may have started from geometry or prehistoric man dividing up one of the wheels and may have also been derived from prehistoric man dividing up the "journey" of the sun "across" the eastern southern and western horizons for timekeeping purposes with noon being the first fraction or half...

granpa
Sep2-08, 11:48 PM
I'm not sure how serious you are (if you are serious at all) but if I understand you right then basically you would classify 'things' by how they are discovered rather than by their characteristics.

a triangle isnt a three sided polygon its a figure invented by some prehistoric man and passed down through the ages.

2foolish
Sep3-08, 01:27 AM
I am trying to figure out what in the world you guys are talking about! I personally believe math and most geometric figures were invented by man (no triangles exist outside of earth etc.) Infinity is only conceptual... ???????

You're missing the point "geometry" is a concept that is made of actual stuff and it was derived from somewhere. i.e. geometric figures exist outside of your mind. The information about the subject of geometry/math as we are taught it was conceived by someone else. In other words you didn't come up with it yourself and for someone to have come up with it, there was a process by which the person or people came up with it recorded. The whole point was to understand the process by which knowledge (bits of information) comes into being in the first place, where it comes from, what it's made of, etc, and the process that enables it (transmission/reception/detection).

This is about the information the senses receive from the world through light and energy. i.e. you can only detect something is in front of you because you've received information that it exists. The missing concept is - collision detection, or refraction/reflection, and transmission of information via photons to receptors in the eye, etc.

2foolish
Sep3-08, 01:36 AM
well we are talking about 2 different things here. when I say 'outgrowth' I mean that the axioms that form the basis of that particular field are based upon the underlying (and simpler) field.

Yes but all mathematical fields rely on concepts of this is not that, i.e. distinctions on a surface or in an image, they rely on our pre-computed, pre-converted sensory data, which we received from the outside world via the senses. This is my point, what we call math is a re-arrangement of pre-existing stuff into distinct patterns. Next is the problem that axiom's themselves are made of logic, i.e. pre-axiomatic logic. The structure of an axiom has to be formed made of something somehow.

when you say 'outgrowth' you are referring to the process in which it is discovered by the mind.

When I say outgrowth, I mean derived, received, communicated. Our math is a reflective/instanced expression of world geometry, i.e. the concept of distinctions re-arranged into different patterns.

yes we are born with certain instinctual skills like vision and the ability to process spatial data. that primes the pump so to speak

But that's the whole point, there is pre-computed math, i.e. subsurface data that the whole of what our conceptions of math sits upon, i.e. pre-logic-data that forms thoughts and structures within our minds.

The fact that you can shape, detect and modify your own thoughts proves they are made of actually existing stuff. To deny it leads to contradiction.

granpa
Sep3-08, 01:57 AM
but the brain can reprogram itself through introspection. a sort of internal error correcting system.

ronjanec
Sep3-08, 08:17 AM
I did not mean that I classify things by how they are discovered: A thing is a independent physical existence existing somewhere that is made of some form of physical material and has its' own individual phyical characteristics.

I was trying to say there are no pyramid type structures existing anywhere else in the physical universe besides earth. The point was also invented by man and does not exist anywhere else in the physical universe and this means the physical universe could not begin in a the structure of a point like many have said.

Yes geometric figures are made of actual stuff and exist outside the mind if man produces them like the pyramids and the point. (The geometric figure of the sphere exists independent of man)

I apologize for not making myself clearer.

granpa
Sep3-08, 11:41 AM
once again. if thats the answer then whats the question?

ronjanec
Sep3-08, 12:26 PM
An interesting question would be how could the physical universe have begun in the geometric form of a point when man invented the point like most other geometric forms and the point could not exist in the physical universe before this in any form...

granpa
Sep3-08, 12:38 PM
I did not mean that I classify things by how they are discovered: A thing is a independent physical existence existing somewhere that is made of some form of physical material and has its' own individual phyical characteristics.


and 'things' that dont exist? unicorn?

Hurkyl
Sep3-08, 04:22 PM
Actually it is, an act of observation is an act of detection, is an act of interaction - contact. ...
Blah, blah, blah. You've said a lot and none of it relevant to the charge levied against you -- your approach is not that of formulating theories and testing them empirically, and thus it fails to be scientific.

There is nothing wrong with using unscientific means to study a subject for which the scientific method is inappropriate or otherwise impractical -- but pretending it's science just makes you look foolish. That said, I'm not convinced the scientific method is neither inappropriate nor impractical....

No it isn't, you just don't have the research background. You're thinking about one interpretation of boolean logic (the one you were taught), incorrect concepts (the interpretation of logic you were taught) ...
Or maybe... just maybe... it could be that I have some expertise in this area and really do have some clue what I'm talking about? But white honestly, no expertise is needed to see that my statement was correct: the successor function is a one-to-one binary relation on natural numbers, whereas boolean logic is not. Thus, your claim that "The successor function is in fact what boolean logic is," when taken literally, is obviously false.

One of the primary indicators of a crackpot is when they respond to criticism by accusing everyone else of incompetence.


You're missing the point, if you were to calculate it out it would continue on forever, i.e. expanded the expression. for instance I can store 0.333 repeated in a computer as
1/3, but that does not make it's decimal expansion any less real.
I'm confused -- you appear to be acknowledging the fact that it is possible to store, in finite space, a number whose decimal representation is nonterminating... but you also appear to be sticking to your claim that one needs infinite space to store pi....


My first point was things are made of stuff in the real world, they don't go 'on forever' if you transport infinite numbers to the outside world and unpack them (calculate them fully, instead of just expressing them as stored function). That was my point with pi and making it with real stuff, i.e. doing the calculations with physical objects.
Except you've at least two problems:
1. You've confused the number pi with an abstraction -- that numbers can be represented by infinite strings of decimal digits.
2. You are insisting upon a particular means of representing infinite strings of decimal digits, despite the fact better representations are available.




Shifting gears a bit....

when you consider that for you to even have a thought, or a perception, you use binary logic (is a surface there yes or no? did it make contact, yes or no?, etc ,etc)
At the psychological level, there is plenty of reason to believe humans do not use binary logic exclusively, or even predominantly. To invoke a saying: "The world is not black and white, but instead made of shades of gray". At the biological level, the brain appears to be operating mainly through electromagnetic fields.

You repeatedly make assertions like this: I'm going to insist that you attempt to argue your case.

ronjanec
Sep3-08, 04:39 PM
A Unicorn does in fact exist at least in this conversation and I would classify this as a imaginary thing.