Can a mathematical formula describe its own inventor completely?

In summary, this mathematical formula seems to be able to describe its inventor (me), but it is not possible to construct it using standard mathematics.
  • #1
PIT2
897
2
Can a mathematical formula describe its own inventor completely?
 
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  • #2
Well, any mathematical theory that is rich enough to describe arithmetic is necessarily incomplete. Of course that includes infinitary operations like "For All" and "There Exists" applied to infinite sets, and you might not think a human mind does that kind of thing.

Oh, I take your point about the creator and the theory and the recursiveness thereof, but I don't think that by itself constrains. If the mind is really finitary or constructible, as is suggested by its material foundation on a finite number of cells which might seem to be continuous processors, but in fact themselves depend on finitely many molecules within them, then a finite mathematical theory could describe it.
 
  • #3
So even if the finite number of cells, etc. is true then there is no problem with the formula describing something which contains the origin of itself?
 
  • #4
PIT2 said:
So even if the finite number of cells, etc. is true then there is no problem with the formula describing something which contains the origin of itself?

Conceptually, I think one could follow Goedel's recursive procedure where he mapped the descriiption of arithmetic (by logical statements) into actual arithmetic statements such that if one logical statement followed from another then you could execute the arithmetic statement for the first and get the second among the results. This is possible and as I said he proved that it leads to an uncompleteness theorem in the case of arithmetic. But I think it would stay consistent if you so described a finite state machine. And if the human mind is such a machine - a big if, but not completely unreasonable to suppose - then you could get the description you ask about.
 
  • #5
I'd like to make a tiny point on "recursiveness"/self-reference that might suggest it isn't a particularly troublesome feature, in accordance, I believe, with SelfAdjoint's first comment.
Consider the equation:

x=2x-12 (having the solution x=12)

Now, we MIGHT regard this equation as defining "x as the number equal to twice itself minus twelve", i.e, containing a self-reference of some sort.

Furthermore, we can see that in a simple manner, this could lead to a seemingly endless chain of more complicated self-references:
Since x=2x-12, we evidently must have:
x=2(2x-12)-12=2(2(2x-12)-12)-12=2(2(2(2x-12)-12)-12)-12 and so on.

Despite this atrocious behaviour, it is in this case easy to remove the self-referencing definition of x, if that is what one might wish for.

This was probably off-topic..
 
  • #6
arildno said:
This was probably off-topic..

No, I think it was very relevant to the point I was making. Thank you.
 
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  • #7
Here is a facetious affirmative answer:

Let M denote the predicate 'being me' (insert your name for "me", and understand this predicate to denoate all of the various features of yourself).

Let x be a variable that ranges over persons.

Let n be a term that denotes a proper name that is your name (e.g., Fred, Ethel, etc).

Here is a "mathematical" formula (using predicate logic) that completely describes its inventor (i.e., me):

There exists an x such that Mx and x = n.

In English: There is a person, named "me" (whatever name you picked for "n"), who has all and only the properties that I have (i.e., the properties denoted by the predicate "M").

Not very informative, but something like this seems reasonable to me.

But perhaps there cannot be a predicate like "M"? Who knows...
 

1. Can a mathematical formula accurately describe a person's personality and characteristics?

No, a mathematical formula is a set of symbols and equations that describe a relationship between variables. It is not capable of capturing the complexity and nuances of a human being's personality and characteristics.

2. Is there a specific mathematical formula that can describe an inventor's traits and qualities?

No, there is no single mathematical formula that can fully describe an inventor's traits and qualities. Each individual is unique and cannot be reduced to a set of equations.

3. Can a mathematical formula be used to predict an inventor's future inventions?

No, a mathematical formula cannot predict an individual's future actions or creations. It can only describe patterns and relationships based on past data.

4. Is it possible for a mathematical formula to reveal an inventor's creative process?

No, a mathematical formula cannot reveal an individual's creative process as it is a complex and personal aspect of an inventor's mind. It involves a combination of experiences, thoughts, and inspirations that cannot be quantified.

5. Are there any studies or experiments that have attempted to use a mathematical formula to describe an inventor?

There have been some studies that have attempted to use mathematical models to analyze and predict inventors' behaviors and thought processes. However, these attempts have been met with limited success as it is difficult to accurately capture the complexity of human behavior through mathematical formulas.

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