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tzor wrote:First of all mathematics was neither invented or discovered. The laws of mathematics, on the other hand ... were both invented and discovered.
Metsfanmax wrote:Can we have another global warming thread maybe? Or evolution? I love seeing people talk about subjects for which their knowledge doesn't extend past grade school.
Metsfanmax wrote:I'm not being a dick, I'm serious, I love these threads. Please, give me more.
mets wrote:And... as usual, tzor wins the award for most pedantic and least informational post of the month.
Symmetry wrote:
And you like to feel superior, and make other people know you're superior, without actually saying why you think they're wrong.
.
Symmetry wrote:
Patches- think it might be a bit of a bigger question than you realise though. Mathematics and Philosophy have an uneasy relationship. It might be that Mets finds the question uncomfortable. Logic is a basic part of both, and there's some bleed between the disciplines.
I'd actually like to hear Mets' real take on this too.
patches70 wrote:My sarcasm detection software appears to not be functioning correctly. Your post seems sarcastic. It's odd since you gave tzor shit about-mets wrote:And... as usual, tzor wins the award for most pedantic and least informational post of the month.
when by my estimation your posts thus far in this thread are at the very least equal and most likely greater than tzor's in the least informative department.
Metsfanmax wrote:I'd actually like to hear Mets' real take on this too.
My real take on this question is that the question is meaningless, that it is a false dichotomy: mathematics need not be considered to have been either invented or discovered in the way patches is presenting. It's a question that sounds deep but really isn't.
Metsfanmax wrote:I'd actually like to hear Mets' real take on this too.
My real take on this question is that the question is meaningless, that it is a false dichotomy: mathematics need not be considered to have been either invented or discovered in the way patches is presenting. It's a question that sounds deep but really isn't.
Symmetry wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:I'd actually like to hear Mets' real take on this too.
My real take on this question is that the question is meaningless, that it is a false dichotomy: mathematics need not be considered to have been either invented or discovered in the way patches is presenting. It's a question that sounds deep but really isn't.
I agree on the false dichotomy. Language was my best analogue. I initially thought that maybe it's best to think of it as a tool, but language seems a better fit. It is both a describing thing and the thing that it describes.
How do you think about it, or do you prefer to avoid the more philosophical side? No meant as an insult if you do.
Dukasaur wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:I'd actually like to hear Mets' real take on this too.
My real take on this question is that the question is meaningless, that it is a false dichotomy: mathematics need not be considered to have been either invented or discovered in the way patches is presenting. It's a question that sounds deep but really isn't.
"Deep" or not is a value judgement, and it's not worth wading into that morass. The question is, however, "interesting" which is a term burdened with much less baggage.
There are certainly mathematical concepts that may have no real meaning. Infinity, for instance. It is well and good for us to postulate a universe of infinite size, or an infinite number of universes, but in fact there may be real constraints to either, and it may be that there is nothing whatsoever that is infinite, and that infinity is a truly imaginary thing that simply does not exist anywhere.
Symmetry wrote:Dukasaur wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:I'd actually like to hear Mets' real take on this too.
My real take on this question is that the question is meaningless, that it is a false dichotomy: mathematics need not be considered to have been either invented or discovered in the way patches is presenting. It's a question that sounds deep but really isn't.
"Deep" or not is a value judgement, and it's not worth wading into that morass. The question is, however, "interesting" which is a term burdened with much less baggage.
There are certainly mathematical concepts that may have no real meaning. Infinity, for instance. It is well and good for us to postulate a universe of infinite size, or an infinite number of universes, but in fact there may be real constraints to either, and it may be that there is nothing whatsoever that is infinite, and that infinity is a truly imaginary thing that simply does not exist anywhere.
Do you think that there are a finite number of numbers? Think of the biggest number you can. Now add 1. There are an infinite number of numbers.
Don't bother posting your number. You should have figured out that you're wrong by this point.
Metsfanmax wrote:Symmetry wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:I'd actually like to hear Mets' real take on this too.
My real take on this question is that the question is meaningless, that it is a false dichotomy: mathematics need not be considered to have been either invented or discovered in the way patches is presenting. It's a question that sounds deep but really isn't.
I agree on the false dichotomy. Language was my best analogue. I initially thought that maybe it's best to think of it as a tool, but language seems a better fit. It is both a describing thing and the thing that it describes.
Yeah but that's not really a perfect analogy to the question at hand because the confusion about mathematics is whether it is inherent to the way the universe works, whereas language is a human-created construct used primarily to describe the universe. There is an analogue in the Platonic/ancient Greek view that language actually does describe things intrinsically and that there are 'correct' words for certain objects. In this view language is discovered, not invented. But I'm pretty sure this view should be rejected because the existence of multiple languages severely casts into doubt the idea that there are 'natural' names for things waiting to be discovered by humans. To the extent that humans naturally gravitate toward certain ways of describing things, it's a product of human behavior and evolution, not a property of the universe itself.How do you think about it, or do you prefer to avoid the more philosophical side? No meant as an insult if you do.
I'm not smart enough to try and answer these philosophical questions. I'm of the "shut up and calculate" school. Much more fun to do math than to philosophize about it.
Dukasaur wrote:Symmetry wrote:Dukasaur wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:I'd actually like to hear Mets' real take on this too.
My real take on this question is that the question is meaningless, that it is a false dichotomy: mathematics need not be considered to have been either invented or discovered in the way patches is presenting. It's a question that sounds deep but really isn't.
"Deep" or not is a value judgement, and it's not worth wading into that morass. The question is, however, "interesting" which is a term burdened with much less baggage.
There are certainly mathematical concepts that may have no real meaning. Infinity, for instance. It is well and good for us to postulate a universe of infinite size, or an infinite number of universes, but in fact there may be real constraints to either, and it may be that there is nothing whatsoever that is infinite, and that infinity is a truly imaginary thing that simply does not exist anywhere.
Do you think that there are a finite number of numbers? Think of the biggest number you can. Now add 1. There are an infinite number of numbers.
Don't bother posting your number. You should have figured out that you're wrong by this point.
Really? A number is a concept, and you have to somehow either store or express that concept. We can hypothetically say there is an infintely large number, but if you can't write it down, or type it into a computer, or speak it out loud, or store it in your own memory, then does it really exist?
Yes, we can hypothesize an infinitely large number, but if we can neither demonstrate it nor store it nor express it, is it real?
Symmetry wrote:Dukasaur wrote:Symmetry wrote:Dukasaur wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:I'd actually like to hear Mets' real take on this too.
My real take on this question is that the question is meaningless, that it is a false dichotomy: mathematics need not be considered to have been either invented or discovered in the way patches is presenting. It's a question that sounds deep but really isn't.
"Deep" or not is a value judgement, and it's not worth wading into that morass. The question is, however, "interesting" which is a term burdened with much less baggage.
There are certainly mathematical concepts that may have no real meaning. Infinity, for instance. It is well and good for us to postulate a universe of infinite size, or an infinite number of universes, but in fact there may be real constraints to either, and it may be that there is nothing whatsoever that is infinite, and that infinity is a truly imaginary thing that simply does not exist anywhere.
Do you think that there are a finite number of numbers? Think of the biggest number you can. Now add 1. There are an infinite number of numbers.
Don't bother posting your number. You should have figured out that you're wrong by this point.
Really? A number is a concept, and you have to somehow either store or express that concept. We can hypothetically say there is an infintely large number, but if you can't write it down, or type it into a computer, or speak it out loud, or store it in your own memory, then does it really exist?
Yes, we can hypothesize an infinitely large number, but if we can neither demonstrate it nor store it nor express it, is it real?
No, you can't hypothesise an infinitely large number. Whatever that number would be, there would be an infinitely large number of numbers larger.
You're not really getting this as a concept, are you?
Shall we try something a bit less theoretical?
Pi is a pretty key constant- practical too. It's a small number. Do you think that Pi is finitely repeatable in its decimal places?
Hopefully you've realised that you're wrong by this point, at least.
Infinite doesn't mean "big", mate. It means something more akin to "limitless".
Metsfanmax wrote:tzor wrote:First of all mathematics was neither invented or discovered. The laws of mathematics, on the other hand ... were both invented and discovered.
And... as usual, tzor wins the award for most pedantic and least informational post of the month.
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