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Poll: Was math...
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Invented by us
39.29%
11 39.29%
Discovered by us
14.29%
4 14.29%
A combination of invention and discovery
39.29%
11 39.29%
God did it.
7.14%
2 7.14%
Total 28 vote(s) 100%
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Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
#26

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
Math was discovered. If our species was wiped out down to the very last trace and a new sentient species arose they would discover the same mathematical relationships that we have. 1+1 would still equal 2 and the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter would still be pi. The terminology and symbols would be different but the underlying concepts would be the same. The same can be said for the basic concepts of all of the physical sciences. The sentient raccoons the take our place will discover relativity and evolution just as we have.
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#27

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
(06-29-2019, 02:00 PM)SYZ Wrote: Maths can be super confusing though...

[Image: giphy.gif]

      Big Grin


Took me a sharp knife and 47 chocolate bars but I finally figured it out.
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#28

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
(06-29-2019, 09:21 PM)jerry mcmasters Wrote:
(06-29-2019, 02:00 PM)SYZ Wrote: Maths can be super confusing though...

[Image: giphy.gif]

      Big Grin


Took me a sharp knife and 47 chocolate bars but I finally figured it out.


I tried too but most of the chocolate loss was accounted for by my nibbling so nothing conclusive.
"Talk nonsense, but talk your own nonsense, and I'll kiss you for it. To go wrong in one's own way is better than to go right in someone else's. 
F. D.
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#29

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
(06-28-2019, 08:35 PM)Jenny Wrote:
(06-28-2019, 07:23 PM)SteveII Wrote: It was definitely not invented. The relationship between the sides of a triangle are there regardless if someone is there to perceive it or not. Therefore, it was discovered. The entire universe is constructed in a common language: mathematics. If humans did not exist, it would still operate according to its laws which can only be described mathematically. If the correct word is 'described', then 'invented' is the wrong concept.  

Nearly all of science depends on mathematics. We cannot do science unless we understand it. We assume the truth of mathematical principles and that we can describe the entire world with them BEFORE we start. If we do that before we start, we have committed to the ontological nature of mathematics--in other words, that it can be used to describe reality. That is different than we are going to investigate reality and then describe it mathematically.

While physics uses math, there are aspects of science where math doesn't work as well--such as in the fields of meteorology and in certain areas of biology. There also fields of science that don't really require a heavy math background such as in the field of geology for example.  

I thought the doc I watched was interesting and I think Stephen Wolfram in the documentary said it best "I think it's an illusion because I think what's happened is that people have chosen to build physics using the mathematics that has been practiced--has developed historically--and then they're looking at everything and they are choosing to study things that are amenable to study using the mathematics that happens to have arisen.  But actually there's a whole vast ocean of other things that are really quite inaccessible to those methods."

I think you're missing the point. ALL mass and energy in the entire universe--right down to the forces that keep atoms together can be laid out mathematically. E=mc^2 alone shows a relationship between everything physical in the universe that can be described by mathematics. Even the relationships of the three dimensions of space and time--that everything exists in can be laid out mathematically. So, we can describe everything physical that happens mathematically--including predicting with extreme accuracy what will happen in myriads of conditions. We see that these relationships between things have intrinsic meaning (meaning that was not assigned to it) and we use mathematics to describe them.

Notice that this is not the same thing as inventing something to describe what we see. We actually discovered the code on how the universe works and can apply this code to accomplish things (like sending a spacecraft to Mars or build a nuclear power plant). The fact that we invented the symbols to reflect the discovery of the relationship between everything is inconsequential.

Regarding Stephen Wolfram, mathematics is pure logic. Logic is used to make sense of reality. Of course physics is based on the logic that forms the basis of reality. There are plenty of areas that can not be described mathematically. You can't draw any conclusion from those two facts or you get a non sequitur.

1. Mathematics (the use of abstraction and logic) can be used to describe the entire physical world.
2. Mathematics does not describe the non-physical world
3. Therefore mathematics is an illusion.
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#30

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
(06-28-2019, 08:42 PM)Deesse23 Wrote:
(06-28-2019, 07:23 PM)SteveII Wrote: It was definitely not invented. The relationship between the sides of a triangle are there regardless if someone is there to perceive it or not.
Math is not the relationship of a triangle. Math is the tool to describe the relationship of a triangle.

I did not define math as the relationship of a triangle--only that a relationship exists regardless if we describe it.
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#31

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
I think you're missing a few things in your analysis, Steve. For one, meaning is not intrinsic to mathematical relationships in the same way that reflecting a certain wavelength of light is intrinsic to an apple (I believe? I think?). So I don't know that you can necessarily move from the kind of intrinsic you have identified to an intrinsic which is the sign post of something objective. I'm just spitballing here, so I could be wrong, but that one seems to stick out from the rest. (After a moment's thought, I'll have to think about it more, but describing the meaning of mathematical relationships as intrinsic may ultimately be begging the question. I think at minimum you need to establish what you are trying to establish by another route as it's not at all clear that doing so the way you have simply winds up in the brambles associated with figuring out what meaning, intrinsic meaning, a priori, and so on ultimately indicate. Is it possible for a priori knowledge to be wrong? I don't offhand have an answer to that question. Mathematics itself, with the examples of arbitrary choices based upon utility and things like dialetheism certainly give me reason to want to pause and think long and hard about that before taking the step that they are necessarily true and that intrinsic meaning is a sign of objectivity.)
Mountain-high though the difficulties appear, terrible and gloomy though all things seem, they are but Mâyâ.
Fear not — it is banished. Crush it, and it vanishes. Stamp upon it, and it dies.


Vivekananda
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#32

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
(07-01-2019, 02:46 PM)Dānu Wrote: I think you're missing a few things in your analysis, Steve.  For one, meaning is not intrinsic to mathematical relationships in the same way that reflecting a certain wavelength of light is intrinsic to an apple (I believe? I think?).  So I don't know that you can necessarily move from the kind of intrinsic you have identified to an intrinsic which is the sign post of something objective.  I'm just spitballing here, so I could be wrong, but that one seems to stick out from the rest.

There might be a better word than 'meaning'. If we use the example of energy and mass being related, the relationship is not the same as the constituent parts and is a third fact. The third fact, the relationship is the part that mathematics can describe.
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#33

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
(07-01-2019, 04:18 PM)SteveII Wrote:
(07-01-2019, 02:46 PM)Dānu Wrote: I think you're missing a few things in your analysis, Steve.  For one, meaning is not intrinsic to mathematical relationships in the same way that reflecting a certain wavelength of light is intrinsic to an apple (I believe? I think?).  So I don't know that you can necessarily move from the kind of intrinsic you have identified to an intrinsic which is the sign post of something objective.  I'm just spitballing here, so I could be wrong, but that one seems to stick out from the rest.

There might be a better word than 'meaning'.  If we use the example of energy and mass being related, the relationship is not the same as the constituent parts and is a third fact. The third fact, the relationship is the part that mathematics can describe.

I'll have to think about this before giving a more substantive answer, but it seems that these relationships exist because things in the universe have some degree of order and regularity. First of all, there are only two possibilities here, either there is no order in the universe, or there is some order in the universe. That the human mind can pick out things resulting from order in the universe doesn't overwhelm me, nor does trying to suggest that something which may be dependent on the mere existence of order, such as mathematics here seems to be, strike me as anything more than something of a bait and switch. I'll elaborate more on that if you like. The bigger problem is that according to Ramsey theory, there will exist "pockets" of order in any random or chaotic set, so even if the universe were completely random and chaotic, we would still expect there to be pockets of order within it, and therefore relationships, and if relationships are all that is required for mathematical truth to exist, then it will necessarily exist whether or not the universe is or is not completely random and chaotic. So, rather than picking out anything meaningful, it seems that, if relationships == math, as you seem to be suggesting, it's simply an inevitable consequence of the fact that things exist. If all that what you're suggesting is reducible to the proposition that things exist and that proposition is objectively true, then I have some serious reservations about your claiming that you have shown that mathematics is discovered and not invented. I also have to add additional reservations given that in order to form a consistent set of mathematical truths, some rather arbitrary decisions need to be made and so the given set of mathematical truths we choose to embrace is highly suspect as a supposedly found object. And further, Godel's theorems leave us questioning whether a consistent set of mathematical truths without any arbitrary or subjective inclusions in it can even exist.
Mountain-high though the difficulties appear, terrible and gloomy though all things seem, they are but Mâyâ.
Fear not — it is banished. Crush it, and it vanishes. Stamp upon it, and it dies.


Vivekananda
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#34

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
This thread discriminates against the mathicapped. I broke my math bone in the fifth grade and it never healed properly.

Got me out of algebra class.
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#35

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
(07-01-2019, 05:17 PM)Gawdzilla Sama Wrote: This thread discriminates against the mathicapped. I broke my math bone in the fifth grade and it never healed properly.

Got me out of algebra class.

I think all caps matter and resent your picking out mathicaps for special treatment. Deadpan Coffee Drinker
Mountain-high though the difficulties appear, terrible and gloomy though all things seem, they are but Mâyâ.
Fear not — it is banished. Crush it, and it vanishes. Stamp upon it, and it dies.


Vivekananda
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#36

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
(07-01-2019, 04:42 PM)Dānu Wrote:
(07-01-2019, 04:18 PM)SteveII Wrote:
(07-01-2019, 02:46 PM)Dānu Wrote: I think you're missing a few things in your analysis, Steve.  For one, meaning is not intrinsic to mathematical relationships in the same way that reflecting a certain wavelength of light is intrinsic to an apple (I believe? I think?).  So I don't know that you can necessarily move from the kind of intrinsic you have identified to an intrinsic which is the sign post of something objective.  I'm just spitballing here, so I could be wrong, but that one seems to stick out from the rest.

There might be a better word than 'meaning'.  If we use the example of energy and mass being related, the relationship is not the same as the constituent parts and is a third fact. The third fact, the relationship is the part that mathematics can describe.

I'll have to think about this before giving a more substantive answer, but it seems that these relationships exist because things in the universe have some degree of order and regularity.  First of all, there are only two possibilities here, either there is no order in the universe, or there is some order in the universe. [1] That the human mind can pick out things resulting from order in the universe doesn't overwhelm me, nor does trying to suggest that something which may be dependent on the mere existence of order, such as mathematics here seems to be, strike me as anything more than something of a bait and switch.  I'll elaborate more on that if you like.  The bigger problem is that according to Ramsey theory, there will exist "pockets" of order in any random or chaotic set, so even if the universe were completely random and chaotic, we would still expect there to be pockets of order within it, and therefore relationships, and if relationships are all that is required for mathematical truth to exist, then it will necessarily exist whether or not the universe is or is not completely random and chaotic. [2] So, rather than picking out anything meaningful, it seems that, if relationships == math, as you seem to be suggesting, it's simply an inevitable consequence of the fact that things exist.  If all that what you're suggesting is reducible to the proposition that things exist and that proposition is objectively true, then I have some serious reservations about your claiming that you have shown that mathematics is discovered and not invented [3]. I also have to add additional reservations given that in order to form a consistent set of mathematical truths, some rather arbitrary decisions need to be made and so the given set of mathematical truths we choose to embrace is highly suspect as a supposedly found object.  And further, Godel's theorems leave us questioning whether a consistent set of mathematical truths without any arbitrary or subjective inclusions in it can even exist.[4]

1. I think there is a third: that the entire universe is ordered. Even if you introduce QM indeterminacy, the net effect on the macro world is an order well beyond the accuracy threshold to discover and test such order.
2. We do not see "pockets" of order. The entire universe seems to be ordered--from the very large to the very small. From physical relationships to spacial and temporal relationships. From stealing 3 shiny objects from someone who has 10 and leaving her 7.
3. Order of this magnitude cannot be considered random and it is quite warranted to infer that the order is baked into reality. We do not invent this order, we discover this order. The order would be there for the next mind to evolve to understand.
4. Do you have to prove mathematics to discover that the universe is orderly and can be expressed in mathematical relationships? That does not seem to be a necessary condition to discover the relationship.
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#37

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
(07-01-2019, 05:50 PM)Dānu Wrote:
(07-01-2019, 05:17 PM)Gawdzilla Sama Wrote: This thread discriminates against the mathicapped. I broke my math bone in the fifth grade and it never healed properly.

Got me out of algebra class.

I think all caps matter and resent your picking out mathicaps for special treatment. Deadpan Coffee Drinker

ALL CAPS DO MATTER!
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#38

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
(07-01-2019, 06:04 PM)SteveII Wrote:
(07-01-2019, 04:42 PM)Dānu Wrote:
(07-01-2019, 04:18 PM)SteveII Wrote: There might be a better word than 'meaning'.  If we use the example of energy and mass being related, the relationship is not the same as the constituent parts and is a third fact. The third fact, the relationship is the part that mathematics can describe.

I'll have to think about this before giving a more substantive answer, but it seems that these relationships exist because things in the universe have some degree of order and regularity.  First of all, there are only two possibilities here, either there is no order in the universe, or there is some order in the universe. [1] That the human mind can pick out things resulting from order in the universe doesn't overwhelm me, nor does trying to suggest that something which may be dependent on the mere existence of order, such as mathematics here seems to be, strike me as anything more than something of a bait and switch.  I'll elaborate more on that if you like.  The bigger problem is that according to Ramsey theory, there will exist "pockets" of order in any random or chaotic set, so even if the universe were completely random and chaotic, we would still expect there to be pockets of order within it, and therefore relationships, and if relationships are all that is required for mathematical truth to exist, then it will necessarily exist whether or not the universe is or is not completely random and chaotic. [2] So, rather than picking out anything meaningful, it seems that, if relationships == math, as you seem to be suggesting, it's simply an inevitable consequence of the fact that things exist.  If all that what you're suggesting is reducible to the proposition that things exist and that proposition is objectively true, then I have some serious reservations about your claiming that you have shown that mathematics is discovered and not invented [3]. I also have to add additional reservations given that in order to form a consistent set of mathematical truths, some rather arbitrary decisions need to be made and so the given set of mathematical truths we choose to embrace is highly suspect as a supposedly found object.  And further, Godel's theorems leave us questioning whether a consistent set of mathematical truths without any arbitrary or subjective inclusions in it can even exist.[4]

1. I think there is a third: that the entire universe is ordered. Even if you introduce QM indeterminacy, the net effect on the macro world is an order well beyond the accuracy threshold to discover and test such order.
2. We do not see "pockets" of order. The entire universe seems to be ordered--from the very large to the very small. From physical relationships to spacial and temporal relationships. From stealing 3 shiny objects from someone who has 10 and leaving her 7.  
3. Order of this magnitude cannot be considered random and it is quite warranted to infer that the order is baked into reality. We do not invent this order, we discover this order. The order would be there for the next mind to evolve to understand.
4. Do you have to prove mathematics to discover that the universe is orderly and can be expressed in mathematical relationships? That does not seem to be a necessary condition to discover the relationship.

Steve, I'll get back to you on this, as I don't want to spend time on detailed explanation, and will defer full explanation and reply to your points until then. In the interim, I'll simply point out that, if we grant, ex hypothesi, that the universe is completely and perfectly ordered, any change would result in a partially and not completely ordered universe. So if the universe is perfectly ordered at time T, then it will not be so at time T+1. It is therefore impossible for change and complete order to exist over time. The law of entropy tells you quite plainly that this is the case, and so your arguments here involve some confusion and conflation of terms, a serious misunderstanding of what I was saying regarding the nature of order in the universe (as well as a lack of imagination regarding such), as well as a rather ridiculous and prima facie false claim about order in the universe. Stop pulling my leg Steve. Give me a real argument.
Mountain-high though the difficulties appear, terrible and gloomy though all things seem, they are but Mâyâ.
Fear not — it is banished. Crush it, and it vanishes. Stamp upon it, and it dies.


Vivekananda
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#39

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: I think you're missing the point. ALL mass and energy in the entire universe--right down to the forces that keep atoms together can be laid out mathematically. 

As has been said elsewhere, mathematics is just a specialized language.  

It can be used to formulate what is observed as you point out.  When used in that fashion, it comes after, as opposed to preceding, the ideas in question.

It can also be used to facilitate new insights.  It's use in this fashion is predicated on formulations previously shown to have basis in the real world.

But it can also perfectly logically express things that have nothing to do with reality.  This is all consistent with a language.  It's similar to grammatically correct but untrue, even meaningless, ideas in everyday language.

(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: E=mc^2 alone shows a relationship between everything physical in the universe that can be described by mathematics. Even the relationships of the three dimensions of space and time--that everything exists in can be laid out mathematically. 

E=mc^2 can also be described in plain English, as can the relationships that you mention.  Even the shortcomings of mathematical theories, such as when observations do not match predictions, can be expressed in English.

(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: So, we can describe everything physical that happens mathematically--including predicting with extreme accuracy what will happen in myriads of conditions. 

The same can be done in Telugu.

(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: We see that these relationships between things have intrinsic meaning (meaning that was not assigned to it) and we use mathematics to describe them.

I don't understand unassigned meanings, but language in general can describe everything math can.

(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: Notice that this is not the same thing as inventing something to describe what we see. We actually discovered the code on how the universe works and can apply this code to accomplish things (like sending a spacecraft to Mars or build a nuclear power plant). The fact that we invented the symbols to reflect the discovery of the relationship between everything is inconsequential.

Science and mathematics have filled huge gaps in our knowledge, but have also opened up new ones.  No, we do not have the code on how the universe works.  

(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: Regarding Stephen Wolfram, mathematics is pure logic. Logic is used to make sense of reality. 
Of course physics is based on the logic that forms the basis of reality. There are plenty of areas that can not be described mathematically. You can't draw any conclusion from those two facts or you get a non sequitur. 

1. Mathematics (the use of abstraction and logic) can be used to describe the entire physical world.
2. Mathematics does not describe the non-physical world
3. Therefore mathematics is an illusion.

Wolfram's characterization isn't wrong.  Because, while math facilitates how we can convey information about relationships in the real world, it can also convey logical ideas that have no representation in the real world.
If it doesn't work, it doesn't matter how fast it doesn't work. ~ ???
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#40

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: Ithink you're missing the point. ALL mass and energy in the entire universe--right down to the forces that keep atoms together can be laid out mathematically

Dark mass and dark energy make up 95% of the observable universe. We have not yet a clue what they are. They may show our current understanding of the laws of nature is largely incomplete, including the math to describe it.
R.I.P. Hannes
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#41

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
(07-01-2019, 06:10 PM)Gawdzilla Sama Wrote:
(07-01-2019, 05:50 PM)Dānu Wrote:
(07-01-2019, 05:17 PM)Gawdzilla Sama Wrote: This thread discriminates against the mathicapped. I broke my math bone in the fifth grade and it never healed properly.

Got me out of algebra class.

I think all caps matter and resent your picking out mathicaps for special treatment. Deadpan Coffee Drinker

ALL CAPS DO MATTER!


Do not.  Do not.  Do not.

There, now two of my older brother's three favorite persuasive methods are on display.  (The third would require closer proximity.)
"Talk nonsense, but talk your own nonsense, and I'll kiss you for it. To go wrong in one's own way is better than to go right in someone else's. 
F. D.
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#42

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
(06-29-2019, 08:23 PM)Paleophyte Wrote: Math was discovered. If our species was wiped out down to the very last trace and a new sentient species arose they would discover the same mathematical relationships that we have. 1+1 would still equal 2 and the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter would still be pi. The terminology and symbols would be different but the underlying concepts would be the same. The same can be said for the basic concepts of all of the physical sciences. The sentient raccoons the take our place will discover relativity and evolution just as we have.

The RELATIONSHIPS would be the same, but the tools used to describe them might not be the same.
The relationships were discovered. The descriptors used to describe those relationships were invented and formalized so they would be consistent.
Test
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#43

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
(07-02-2019, 04:50 PM)Deesse23 Wrote:
(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: Ithink you're missing the point. ALL mass and energy in the entire universe--right down to the forces that keep atoms together can be laid out mathematically

Dark mass and dark energy make up 95% of the observable universe. We have not yet a clue what they are. They may show our current understanding of the laws of nature is largely incomplete, including the math to describe it.

Are you actually expecting that when we figure it out that it can't be expressed mathematically? Seems to be a high price to pay for your point.
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#44

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
(07-02-2019, 08:38 PM)SteveII Wrote:
(07-02-2019, 04:50 PM)Deesse23 Wrote:
(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: Ithink you're missing the point. ALL mass and energy in the entire universe--right down to the forces that keep atoms together can be laid out mathematically

Dark mass and dark energy make up 95% of the observable universe. We have not yet a clue what they are. They may show our current understanding of the laws of nature is largely incomplete, including the math to describe it.

Are you actually expecting that when we figure it out that it can't be expressed mathematically? Seems to be a high price to pay for your point.
Do we or do we not know about dark matter and energy?
If you have to ask for the price, then you probably have no argument..... So to speak.
R.I.P. Hannes
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#45

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
(07-02-2019, 03:49 PM)tomilay Wrote:
(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: I think you're missing the point. ALL mass and energy in the entire universe--right down to the forces that keep atoms together can be laid out mathematically. 

As has been said elsewhere, mathematics is just a specialized language.  

It can be used to formulate what is observed as you point out.  When used in that fashion, it comes after, as opposed to preceding, the ideas in question.

It can also be used to facilitate new insights.  It's use in this fashion is predicated on formulations previously shown to have basis in the real world.

But it can also perfectly logically express things that have nothing to do with reality.  This is all consistent with a language.  It's similar to grammatically correct but untrue, even meaningless, ideas in everyday language.

(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: E=mc^2 alone shows a relationship between everything physical in the universe that can be described by mathematics. Even the relationships of the three dimensions of space and time--that everything exists in can be laid out mathematically. 

E=mc^2 can also be described in plain English, as can the relationships that you mention.  Even the shortcomings of mathematical theories, such as when observations do not match predictions, can be expressed in English.

(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: So, we can describe everything physical that happens mathematically--including predicting with extreme accuracy what will happen in myriads of conditions. 

The same can be done in Telugu.

(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: We see that these relationships between things have intrinsic meaning (meaning that was not assigned to it) and we use mathematics to describe them.

I don't understand unassigned meanings, but language in general can describe everything math can.

This part of your reply illustrates where the problem is. No, non-math language cannot describe these relationships between physical things. For example, what is the relationship between the radius of a circle and its circumference? Answer in non-math terms. What is the relationship between mass and energy? Express that in non-math terms. Express any of these in their standard equations in non-math terms.

Quote:
(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: Notice that this is not the same thing as inventing something to describe what we see. We actually discovered the code on how the universe works and can apply this code to accomplish things (like sending a spacecraft to Mars or build a nuclear power plant). The fact that we invented the symbols to reflect the discovery of the relationship between everything is inconsequential.

Science and mathematics have filled huge gaps in our knowledge, but have also opened up new ones.  No, we do not have the code on how the universe works.  

It is not necessary to know how the universe works. EVERY physicist and cosmologist thinks the relationship between pairs of physical thing is mathematical though. Give me an example where the physical universe's relationships are not expressed mathematically or thought not to be able to be expressed mathematically.

Quote:
(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: Regarding Stephen Wolfram, mathematics is pure logic. Logic is used to make sense of reality. 
Of course physics is based on the logic that forms the basis of reality. There are plenty of areas that can not be described mathematically. You can't draw any conclusion from those two facts or you get a non sequitur. 

1. Mathematics (the use of abstraction and logic) can be used to describe the entire physical world.
2. Mathematics does not describe the non-physical world
3. Therefore mathematics is an illusion.

Wolfram's characterization isn't wrong.  Because, while math facilitates how we can convey information about relationships in the real world, it can also convey logical ideas that have no representation in the real world.

I'm not sure you understand the argument. No one is saying that we do not express these relationship is a language of our creation. What I am saying is that there ARE relationships everywhere and that these relationships are something MORE than a simple description of physical quality x and physical quality y. The relationship is not invented, it is discovered.
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#46

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
(07-02-2019, 08:38 PM)SteveII Wrote:
(07-02-2019, 04:50 PM)Deesse23 Wrote:
(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: Ithink you're missing the point. ALL mass and energy in the entire universe--right down to the forces that keep atoms together can be laid out mathematically

Dark mass and dark energy make up 95% of the observable universe. We have not yet a clue what they are. They may show our current understanding of the laws of nature is largely incomplete, including the math to describe it.

Are you actually expecting that when we figure it out that it can't be expressed mathematically? Seems to be a high price to pay for your point.

You missed the POINT, (as well as mis-characterized what was said).
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#47

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
(07-02-2019, 09:20 PM)SteveII Wrote:
(07-02-2019, 03:49 PM)tomilay Wrote:
(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: I think you're missing the point. ALL mass and energy in the entire universe--right down to the forces that keep atoms together can be laid out mathematically. 

As has been said elsewhere, mathematics is just a specialized language.  

It can be used to formulate what is observed as you point out.  When used in that fashion, it comes after, as opposed to preceding, the ideas in question.

It can also be used to facilitate new insights.  It's use in this fashion is predicated on formulations previously shown to have basis in the real world.

But it can also perfectly logically express things that have nothing to do with reality.  This is all consistent with a language.  It's similar to grammatically correct but untrue, even meaningless, ideas in everyday language.

(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: E=mc^2 alone shows a relationship between everything physical in the universe that can be described by mathematics. Even the relationships of the three dimensions of space and time--that everything exists in can be laid out mathematically. 

E=mc^2 can also be described in plain English, as can the relationships that you mention.  Even the shortcomings of mathematical theories, such as when observations do not match predictions, can be expressed in English.

(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: So, we can describe everything physical that happens mathematically--including predicting with extreme accuracy what will happen in myriads of conditions. 

The same can be done in Telugu.

(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: We see that these relationships between things have intrinsic meaning (meaning that was not assigned to it) and we use mathematics to describe them.

I don't understand unassigned meanings, but language in general can describe everything math can.

This part of your reply illustrates where the problem is. No, non-math language cannot describe these relationships between physical things. For example, what is the relationship between the radius of a circle and its circumference? Answer in non-math terms. What is the relationship between mass and energy? Express that in non-math terms. Express any of these in their standard equations in non-math terms.

Quote:
(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: Notice that this is not the same thing as inventing something to describe what we see. We actually discovered the code on how the universe works and can apply this code to accomplish things (like sending a spacecraft to Mars or build a nuclear power plant). The fact that we invented the symbols to reflect the discovery of the relationship between everything is inconsequential.

Science and mathematics have filled huge gaps in our knowledge, but have also opened up new ones.  No, we do not have the code on how the universe works.  

It is not necessary to know how the universe works. EVERY physicist and cosmologist thinks the relationship between pairs of physical thing is mathematical though. Give me an example where the physical universe's relationships are not expressed mathematically or thought not to be able to be expressed mathematically.

Quote:
(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: Regarding Stephen Wolfram, mathematics is pure logic. Logic is used to make sense of reality. 
Of course physics is based on the logic that forms the basis of reality. There are plenty of areas that can not be described mathematically. You can't draw any conclusion from those two facts or you get a non sequitur. 

1. Mathematics (the use of abstraction and logic) can be used to describe the entire physical world.
2. Mathematics does not describe the non-physical world
3. Therefore mathematics is an illusion.

Wolfram's characterization isn't wrong.  Because, while math facilitates how we can convey information about relationships in the real world, it can also convey logical ideas that have no representation in the real world.

I'm not sure you understand the argument. No one is saying that we do not express these relationship is a language of our creation. What I am saying is that there ARE relationships everywhere and that these relationships are something MORE than a simple description of physical quality x and physical quality y. The relationship is not invented, it is discovered.

You said NOTHING about "relationships" until it was pointed out to you.
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#48

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
(07-02-2019, 09:20 PM)SteveII Wrote:
(07-02-2019, 03:49 PM)tomilay Wrote:
(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: I think you're missing the point. ALL mass and energy in the entire universe--right down to the forces that keep atoms together can be laid out mathematically. 

As has been said elsewhere, mathematics is just a specialized language.  

It can be used to formulate what is observed as you point out.  When used in that fashion, it comes after, as opposed to preceding, the ideas in question.

It can also be used to facilitate new insights.  It's use in this fashion is predicated on formulations previously shown to have basis in the real world.

But it can also perfectly logically express things that have nothing to do with reality.  This is all consistent with a language.  It's similar to grammatically correct but untrue, even meaningless, ideas in everyday language.

(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: E=mc^2 alone shows a relationship between everything physical in the universe that can be described by mathematics. Even the relationships of the three dimensions of space and time--that everything exists in can be laid out mathematically. 

E=mc^2 can also be described in plain English, as can the relationships that you mention.  Even the shortcomings of mathematical theories, such as when observations do not match predictions, can be expressed in English.

(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: So, we can describe everything physical that happens mathematically--including predicting with extreme accuracy what will happen in myriads of conditions. 

The same can be done in Telugu.

(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: We see that these relationships between things have intrinsic meaning (meaning that was not assigned to it) and we use mathematics to describe them.

I don't understand unassigned meanings, but language in general can describe everything math can.

This part of your reply illustrates where the problem is. No, non-math language cannot describe these relationships between physical things. 

It seems we are in agreement that math is indeed a language.  It facilitates the expression of the relationships.  It's by no means the only language that can do it.  Think of it as a short-hand.

(07-02-2019, 09:20 PM)SteveII Wrote: For example, what is the relationship between the radius of a circle and its circumference? Answer in non-math terms.

2 multiplied by the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter multiplied by its radius.  It can be even more verbose depending on the amount of vocabulary in a language.  Mathematics makes it easier to distill the relationships.

(07-02-2019, 09:20 PM)SteveII Wrote: What is the relationship between mass and energy? Express that in non-math terms. Express any of these in their standard equations in non-math terms.

You can use a similar approach to the previous question.

(07-02-2019, 09:20 PM)SteveII Wrote:
Quote:
(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: Notice that this is not the same thing as inventing something to describe what we see. We actually discovered the code on how the universe works and can apply this code to accomplish things (like sending a spacecraft to Mars or build a nuclear power plant). The fact that we invented the symbols to reflect the discovery of the relationship between everything is inconsequential.

Science and mathematics have filled huge gaps in our knowledge, but have also opened up new ones.  No, we do not have the code on how the universe works.  

It is not necessary to know how the universe works. EVERY physicist and cosmologist thinks the relationship between pairs of physical thing is mathematical though. Give me an example where the physical universe's relationships are not expressed mathematically or thought not to be able to be expressed mathematically.

All the relationships that are expressed mathematically in relation to the universe can also be expressed in plain English.  But we are not claiming the universe is intrinsically English, are we?

(07-02-2019, 09:20 PM)SteveII Wrote:
Quote:
(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: Regarding Stephen Wolfram, mathematics is pure logic. Logic is used to make sense of reality. 
Of course physics is based on the logic that forms the basis of reality. There are plenty of areas that can not be described mathematically. You can't draw any conclusion from those two facts or you get a non sequitur. 

1. Mathematics (the use of abstraction and logic) can be used to describe the entire physical world.
2. Mathematics does not describe the non-physical world
3. Therefore mathematics is an illusion.

Wolfram's characterization isn't wrong.  Because, while math facilitates how we can convey information about relationships in the real world, it can also convey logical ideas that have no representation in the real world.

I'm not sure you understand the argument. 

I understand him to be saying that we use logic to make sense of reality.  I am saying reality may be logic, but logic is not necessarily reality.

(07-02-2019, 09:20 PM)SteveII Wrote: No one is saying that we do not express these relationship is a language of our creation. What I am saying is that there ARE relationships everywhere and that these relationships are something MORE than a simple description of physical quality x and physical quality y. 

What more are they?

(07-02-2019, 09:20 PM)SteveII Wrote: The relationship is not invented, it is discovered.

I agree with that 100%.
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#49

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
@tomilay

In support of your point, mathematics is a formal language, and does differ from informal languages in certain respects. However, if informal languages were not capable of adequately capturing the semantics of a formal language then we would not be able to use formal languages as there would be no way to communicate their meaning using the informal languages we share, whether they be English or Chinese. So it seems necessary that an informal language such as English be capable of performing the same communicative function as the formal language of mathematics, or else one has a paradox that must be explained.

Once again we see theist arguments being used in a completely ad hoc manner, not because they have derived a conclusion from sound reasons, but because they have a conclusion and are only in hindsight looking for sound reasons to support it, often coming up with absurd and irrational notions in the process. Not that I'm characterizing it that way, but that seems to be the whole substance of reformed epistemology: ordinary epistemology won't confirm your conclusion, so you invent a new epistemology ad hoc to serve that purpose. It's wholly disgusting and a massive embarrassment for so-called "rational Christians."
Mountain-high though the difficulties appear, terrible and gloomy though all things seem, they are but Mâyâ.
Fear not — it is banished. Crush it, and it vanishes. Stamp upon it, and it dies.


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#50

Do you think Math was discovered, invented, or both?
(07-02-2019, 08:38 PM)SteveII Wrote:
(07-02-2019, 04:50 PM)Deesse23 Wrote:
(07-01-2019, 02:02 PM)SteveII Wrote: Ithink you're missing the point. ALL mass and energy in the entire universe--right down to the forces that keep atoms together can be laid out mathematically

Dark mass and dark energy make up 95% of the observable universe. We have not yet a clue what they are. They may show our current understanding of the laws of nature is largely incomplete, including the math to describe it.

Are you actually expecting that when we figure it out that it can't be expressed mathematically? Seems to be a high price to pay for your point.

This is on account of the greater difficulty in proving a negative.  That what we can’t describe resists our best attempts to do so is no proof that Dark energy and matter cannot be described by anyone, possibly evenourselves eventually.
"Talk nonsense, but talk your own nonsense, and I'll kiss you for it. To go wrong in one's own way is better than to go right in someone else's. 
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