SteveL27
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Willowz said:Whereof one cannot speak thereof, one must be silent.
Wittgenstein never saw the Internet.
Willowz said:Whereof one cannot speak thereof, one must be silent.
Willowz said:Anyway, all that I have done in this thread is draw a false dichotomy between mathematics being platonic or non platonic. It is what it is. Whereof one cannot speak thereof, one must be silent.
Willowz said:I don't understand why many/some mathematicians believe that mathematics is platonic. I mean, how would they know if mathematics is platonic? Surely, mathematics does depend in some way on the world.
How do you convince a mathematician that mathematics is not platonic.
Why so?disregardthat said:If you have read Wittgenstein on mathematics at all, you will see he is a strong opponent of platonism.
I don't know how you can prove that. Maybe it's just another conventionalist interpretation that has falsely become an explanation that nobody really bothers with any more.As far as my view is concerned and as I have expressed several times, I don't consider it a dichotomy at all. Platonism isn't false, it's meaningless in a very fundamental manner.
Willowz said:Why so?
I don't know how you can prove that. Maybe it's just another conventionalist interpretation that has falsely become an explanation that nobody really bothers with any more.
Willowz said:I wonder if his views are shared today. Maybe it'd be better if I just look at Quine's, Putnam's views on platonism/ect.
PlatosHeaven said:If you're willing to accept this relativist position with respect to truth, then I suppose it's a consistent position. However, I believe that the enormous empirical success of math (and thus physics) would be a miracle if they were simply constructions without any external notion of truth.
Willowz said:So, what you are saying is that whatever the mathematical statement, we can make it refer to something? Isn't this a quasi-distinction between applied math and pure maths.
apeiron said:Why is it a miracle that if we are free to model reality, that our models might not approach some consistent state? It is what we should expect of modelling.
Equally, why would it be a miracle that a reality also approaches some self-consistent state? To persist long enough to have observers, a reality would have to be well-behaved. It would have to fall into the patterns we call lawful.
So we have two processes going on - the epistemic (our invention/discovery of mathematical truths), and the ontic (reality's development/discovery of its own persisting equilibrium balance).
Conflation here is to conflate the two - epistemic discovery and ontological self-invention. Although they are certainly parallel stories. There is a modelling relation that connects them.
PlatosHeaven said:Modelling is not the same thing as reference. Arguably, a mathematical model refers to mathematical objects--which are non-physical and causally inefficacious--and draws a comparison between them and physical objects. Of course, this is a simplification. The success of a model doesn't necessarily imply truth, but I think it does imply some sort of reference.
BWV said:Roger Penrose has offered the Mandelbrot set as proof of mathematical Platonism - the object, being infinite, must exist outside of ourselves and is no invention of the human mind - it has to be discovered, not merely thought up
Hells post 63 said:Mathematics is simply a tool we create to model reality. The concept of quantities and shapes are ingrained in us, but they are merely evolutionary products.
lol, I just looked over the thread and got it. Good one!SteveL27 said:Wittgenstein never saw the Internet.
I just read it today. Nice read, but it was mostly history and some feeling about math in general from physicists. But, a nice read.Oldfart said:By coincidence, the Aug 2011 SciAm has an interesting artical about this -- Page 80
Kherubin said:I, as others before me have stated, have a paltry understanding of the philosophical underpinnings of this thread, however, if I could offer some simple definitions, which may or may not be useful by others' reckoning, but which I have seen stated numerous times in the subject literature:
Formalism:- School of thought suggesting mathematics is 'invented'
Platonism:- School of thought suggesting mathematics is 'discovered'
The most interesting views that I have come across regarding the subject are those of Stephen Wolfram, as expounded in a video I have posted previously:
http://www.closertotruth.com/video-profile/Is-Mathematics-Invented-or-Discovered-Stephen-Wolfram-/1384
His suggestions are all the more riveting considering the seemingly 'objective' viewpoint he has taken on the subject of mathematics, and the years he has spent studying this topic, if you will, from the 'outside'.
Now, regarding whether or not I understand his conclusions is another matter.
His initial statements, that our mathematics is an 'artifact', a product of human culture, and hence (as others have posited) would be, in some ways, markedly different from extraterrestrial 'mathematics' is, at first glance, Formalist.
However, all this argument apparently does is to push the debate back a 'step'. The 'Universe of Possible Mathematicses' which he introduces, could be thought of as Platonic in nature. Or, at this stage, with a sufficiently general definition of mathematics as a formal system composed of an arbitrary string of symbols, is the question of Formalism vs. Platonism defunct?