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Red_CCF
Sep12-09, 08:17 PM
Hi

I've just been reading some material and where it is mentioned that numbers are a figment of our imagination. They are not real and do not exist. But is there a time when numbers do?

Preno
Sep12-09, 08:33 PM
what

Red_CCF
Sep12-09, 08:37 PM
what

Numbers are not real. They're symbols, but according to the material I'm assigned to read, it talks about how the numbers we use in calculus doesn't actually exist. But I'm wondering if there is a time when numbers do exist.

m00npirate
Sep12-09, 08:53 PM
a time like in the future? i don't understand the question.

Math Is Hard
Sep12-09, 09:05 PM
I think what the OP is trying to express is that he/she doesn't buy into the statements
"Numbers are a figment of our imagination. They are not real and do not exist."
and is looking for any counter examples that prove these statements wrong.

Moving to Philosophy section. Good luck. :)

Red_CCF
Sep12-09, 09:24 PM
Can I understand it this way:

Numbers don't actually exist; hence it is not an object that exist in the physical world but it is a symbol that can represent something in the real world.

kote
Sep12-09, 09:31 PM
Can I understand it this way:

Numbers don't actually exist; hence it is not an object that exist in the physical world but it is a symbol that can represent something in the real world.

Sure, you can think of it that way. We've been having a few discussions on the philosophy forum about math lately. You might want to check those out.

See also:
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/fictionalism-mathematics/
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/philosophy-mathematics/

Kurdt
Sep12-09, 09:34 PM
It is usually useful to think of abstract objects as those that do not have a physical existence. Here is more on the subject:

http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/abstract-objects/

kote
Sep12-09, 11:12 PM
It is usually useful to think of abstract objects as those that do not have a physical existence. Here is more on the subject:

http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/abstract-objects/

Of course, this assumes that numbers have a real abstract objective existence, which does not appear to be the claim being made by his book. It's another option to think about though :smile:.

Evo
Sep12-09, 11:43 PM
Of course, this assumes that numbers have a real abstract objective existence, which does not appear to be the claim being made by his book. It's another option to think about though :smile:.I think Kurdt was just trying to find a simplistic way to explain "concrete vs abstract" to the poster. It's a very difficult concept to explain to a non-mathematician. I don't believe Kurdt actually did more than a quick perusal of that link after a google search. He asked me if I thought it was considered a credible source and I gave him the ok to post the link. He's a physicist, not a philospher. hurkyl is your expert on math.

If the OP wants to understand the math aspect, he should post his question in the math forum, not philosophy (I realize this was moved from somewhere else). Perhaps this needs to be moved to the math forum.

kote
Sep13-09, 04:27 AM
I think Kurdt was just trying to find a simplistic way to explain "concrete vs abstract" to the poster. It's a very difficult concept to explain to a non-mathematician. I don't believe Kurdt actually did more than a quick perusal of that link after a google search. He asked me if I thought it was considered a credible source and I gave him the ok to post the link. He's a physicist, not a philospher. hurkyl is your expert on math.

If the OP wants to understand the math aspect, he should post his question in the math forum, not philosophy (I realize this was moved from somewhere else). Perhaps this needs to be moved to the math forum.

I agree it's a good source, and I linked from the same site. I was just trying to point out that there is no one agreed upon answer. Polls of mathematicians show platonism is generally the preferred interpretation - meaning most think that there are mathematical objects with a certain level of abstraction that are discovered through math.

Philosophy of mathematics is the actual field that studies questions about the type of existence mathematical concepts may or may not have.

As for the OP's original question, it is generally agreed that numbers don't have an existence in space or time like the usual things we say have existence. I think he had the right idea in his later posts.