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Let's say reality is composed of two sets:1. The set of all existent things2. The set of all non-existent thingsIf nothing existed at all, then set one would be emtpy, while set two would contain everything.
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Jason
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I wonder if philosophers have noticed that properties can be separated from objects in quantum mechanics, c.f. Cheshire Cat experiments?
On Thu, May 30, 2019 at 9:54 AM Tomas Pales <litew...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Thursday, May 30, 2019 at 4:14:48 PM UTC+2, Jason wrote:Let's say reality is composed of two sets:1. The set of all existent things2. The set of all non-existent thingsIf nothing existed at all, then set one would be emtpy, while set two would contain everything.What do you mean by existent? How are existent things different from non-existent things?That's the $64K question, isn't it? If "existence" is a difference that makes no difference, then it is a meaningless concept altogether.
On 5/30/2019 7:14 AM, Jason Resch wrote:
On Thursday, May 30, 2019, Philip Thrift <cloud...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Thursday, May 30, 2019 at 7:50:37 AM UTC-5, Tomas Pales wrote:
On Wednesday, May 29, 2019 at 10:15:46 PM UTC+2, Jason wrote:Appears to predict the arithmetical reality:
"There exists, unless I am mistake, an entire world consisting of the totality of mathematical truths, which is accessible to us only through our intelligence, just as there exists the world of physical realities; each one is independent of us, both of them divinely created and appear different only because of the weakness of our mind; but, for a more powerful intelligence, they are one and the same thing, whose synthesis is partially revealed in that marvelous correspondence between abstract mathematics on the one hand and astronomy and all branches of physics on the other."
Jason
In philosophy, the relation between abstract and concrete objects is called "instantiation", for example between the abstract triangle and concrete triangles. It is a relation whereby the abstract object is a property of the concrete objects and the concrete objects are instances of the abstract object. The instantation relation is regarded as primitive, similarly like the composition relation between a collection of objects and the objects in the collection. The instantiation relation may appear more mysterious though, because while it is quite easy to visualize a collection, it is impossible to visualize an abstract object.
Abstract and concrete objects are existentially dependent on each other, because there can be no property without an object that has the property, and there can be no object that has no property.
In the fictionalist philosophy of mathematics
there are no such things as abstract objects.
So such troubles do not arise.
Let's say reality is composed of two sets:
1. The set of all existent things2. The set of all non-existent things
If nothing existed at all, then set one would be emtpy, while set two would contain everything.
Now take the nominalist position. Set one would contain the physical universe while set two would contain all abstract objects: arithmetical truth, executions of programs, histories of non-existent universes, etc.
What puzzles me, is that in the program executions and in the histories of non-existent universes you will find worlds where life evolves into more complex forms, you will find the risings and fallings of great civilizations, you will find literature written by the philosophers of those civilizations, their treatises on ontology, on why their universe is concrete while others are abstract, on the mysteries of consciousness and strangeness of qualia. If all these things can be found in the abstract objects of the set of non-existent things, then how do we know we're not in an abstract object of that set of non-existent things?
Does it matter at all which set our universe resides in? Can moving an object from one set to another blink away or bring into being the first person experiences of the entities who inhabit such objects, or is their consciousness a property inherent to the object which cannot be taken away merely by moving it from one set to another?
Much to think about.
You're equivocating on "existent". The set of all non-existent things is empty because non-existent things don't exist in one sense of the word.
But then you switch to the other sense of the word so that "non-existent"="imaginary" and conclude that there are lots of imaginary things and therefore lots of non-existent things.
@philipthrift
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On Thursday, May 30, 2019 at 3:30:56 PM UTC-5, Brent wrote:
On 5/30/2019 1:17 PM, Philip Thrift wrote:
On Thursday, May 30, 2019 at 3:03:30 PM UTC-5, Brent wrote:
On 5/30/2019 11:47 AM, Tomas Pales wrote:
On Thursday, May 30, 2019 at 8:02:12 PM UTC+2, Brent wrote:I wonder if philosophers have noticed that properties can be separated from objects in quantum mechanics, c.f. Cheshire Cat experiments?
What does it mean that a property is "separated" from an object? That an object loses a property? That happens all the time.
arXiv:1312.3775v1 [quant-ph] 13 Dec 2013
Brent
We know that a molecule's histories can interfere with each other:
In 2013, the double-slit experiment was successfully performed with molecules that each comprised 810 atoms (whose total mass was over 10,000 atomic mass units).
Does this mean that a molecule's properties can be separated from itself?
That's a non-sequitur. A double-slit experiment is not the same as a Cheshire cat experiment.
BrentThe same QM principles apply. It's just plain quantum mechanics going on whether it's a particle
On Thursday, May 30, 2019 at 4:38:10 PM UTC-5, Philip Thrift wrote:
On Thursday, May 30, 2019 at 4:35:14 PM UTC-5, Philip Thrift wrote:
On Thursday, May 30, 2019 at 3:30:56 PM UTC-5, Brent wrote:
On 5/30/2019 1:17 PM, Philip Thrift wrote:
On Thursday, May 30, 2019 at 3:03:30 PM UTC-5, Brent wrote:
On 5/30/2019 11:47 AM, Tomas Pales wrote:
On Thursday, May 30, 2019 at 8:02:12 PM UTC+2, Brent wrote:I wonder if philosophers have noticed that properties can be separated from objects in quantum mechanics, c.f. Cheshire Cat experiments?
What does it mean that a property is "separated" from an object? That an object loses a property? That happens all the time.
arXiv:1312.3775v1 [quant-ph] 13 Dec 2013
Brent
We know that a molecule's histories can interfere with each other:
In 2013, the double-slit experiment was successfully performed with molecules that each comprised 810 atoms (whose total mass was over 10,000 atomic mass units).
Does this mean that a molecule's properties can be separated from itself?
That's a non-sequitur. A double-slit experiment is not the same as a Cheshire cat experiment.
Brent
The same QM principles apply. It's just plain quantum mechanics going on whether it's a particle> or
molecule, or which experiment is being done:
Quantum Cheshire Cat effect may be explained by standard quantum mechanics.
@philipthrift
The "Cheshire Cat" claim that a property can be separated from the particle is just pseudoscience, as far as I can tell.
@philipthrift
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Is existence an intrinsic property or a relative one?
Quantum Cheshire Cat effect may be explained by standard quantum mechanics.
@philipthrift
On Thursday, May 30, 2019 at 1:02:12 PM UTC-5, Brent wrote:I wonder if philosophers have noticed that properties can be separated from objects in quantum mechanics, c.f. Cheshire Cat experiments?
On 5/30/2019 2:47 PM, Philip Thrift wrote:
On Thursday, May 30, 2019 at 4:38:10 PM UTC-5, Philip Thrift wrote:
Quantum Cheshire Cat effect may be explained by standard quantum mechanics.
@philipthrift
You imply that detecting the spin on a path different from the object is somehow contrary to standard quantum mechanics. I don't see that. It's just contrary to an assumption about the interaction of position measurements and spin measurements, i.e. the assumption that they have to happen at the same place. It's no more strange than violating the assumption that a particle can't go thru two different slits at the same time.
"In no way this is a definitive answer," Corrêa said. "As usual in science, new explanations can always show up and are always welcome, and that's what characterizes its development. In fact, we can't even say that we proved the authors wrong in their interpretation—we simply provided a different interpretation of the results.
Brent
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The "Cheshire Cat" claim that a property can be separated from the particle is just pseudoscience, as far as I can tell.
@philipthrift
Is existence an intrinsic property or a relative one?
On 30 May 2019, at 14:50, Tomas Pales <litew...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Wednesday, May 29, 2019 at 10:15:46 PM UTC+2, Jason wrote:Appears to predict the arithmetical reality:"There exists, unless I am mistake, an entire world consisting of the totality of mathematical truths, which is accessible to us only through our intelligence, just as there exists the world of physical realities; each one is independent of us, both of them divinely created and appear different only because of the weakness of our mind; but, for a more powerful intelligence, they are one and the same thing, whose synthesis is partially revealed in that marvelous correspondence between abstract mathematics on the one hand and astronomy and all branches of physics on the other."JasonIn philosophy, the relation between abstract and concrete objects is called "instantiation", for example between the abstract triangle and concrete triangles.
It is a relation whereby the abstract object is a property of the concrete objects and the concrete objects are instances of the abstract object. The instantation relation is regarded as primitive, similarly like the composition relation between a collection of objects and the objects in the collection. The instantiation relation may appear more mysterious though, because while it is quite easy to visualize a collection, it is impossible to visualize an abstract object.Abstract and concrete objects are existentially dependent on each other, because there can be no property without an object that has the property, and there can be no object that has no property.
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On 30 May 2019, at 15:28, Lawrence Crowell <goldenfield...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Wednesday, May 29, 2019 at 3:15:46 PM UTC-5, Jason wrote:Appears to predict the arithmetical reality:"There exists, unless I am mistake, an entire world consisting of the totality of mathematical truths, which is accessible to us only through our intelligence, just as there exists the world of physical realities; each one is independent of us, both of them divinely created and appear different only because of the weakness of our mind; but, for a more powerful intelligence, they are one and the same thing, whose synthesis is partially revealed in that marvelous correspondence between abstract mathematics on the one hand and astronomy and all branches of physics on the other."Jason
This is the opinion similar to what most mathematicians think. Mathematics is a system that has objective truth. I don't necessarily "believe this," but I can see its point and will tip my hat towards it. In physics we tend often to view mathematics as more similar to rules of chess, and where the use of the rules defines the game. Here the game being how to model the physical world. I can see this as well. There is the Brouwer constructionist idea of mathematics that is related to this. Hilbert thought that mathematics was something existing on its own, which is the objectivist opinion, objectivist not in line with the quasi-philosophy of Ayn Rand, which is related to Plato's ideas of there being ideal forms outside of physical forms.What is the relationship between physics and mathematics?
I have not the slightest clue. I see this as similar to Garrison Keillor's Guy Noir who in the introduction would have, "On a dark night in a city that knows how to keep its secrets, one man searches for life's persistent questions. Guy Noir private eye." As I recall the quote.LC
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On 30 May 2019, at 16:52, Tomas Pales <litew...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Thursday, May 30, 2019 at 3:32:41 PM UTC+2, Philip Thrift wrote:
On Thursday, May 30, 2019 at 7:50:37 AM UTC-5, Tomas Pales wrote:
On Wednesday, May 29, 2019 at 10:15:46 PM UTC+2, Jason wrote:Appears to predict the arithmetical reality:"There exists, unless I am mistake, an entire world consisting of the totality of mathematical truths, which is accessible to us only through our intelligence, just as there exists the world of physical realities; each one is independent of us, both of them divinely created and appear different only because of the weakness of our mind; but, for a more powerful intelligence, they are one and the same thing, whose synthesis is partially revealed in that marvelous correspondence between abstract mathematics on the one hand and astronomy and all branches of physics on the other."Jason
In philosophy, the relation between abstract and concrete objects is called "instantiation", for example between the abstract triangle and concrete triangles. It is a relation whereby the abstract object is a property of the concrete objects and the concrete objects are instances of the abstract object. The instantation relation is regarded as primitive, similarly like the composition relation between a collection of objects and the objects in the collection. The instantiation relation may appear more mysterious though, because while it is quite easy to visualize a collection, it is impossible to visualize an abstract object.
Abstract and concrete objects are existentially dependent on each other, because there can be no property without an object that has the property, and there can be no object that has no property.
In the fictionalist philosophy of mathematicsthere are no such things as abstract objects.So such troubles do not arise.
If there is no abstract triangle then there is no concrete triangle either, because what would it mean that there is a concrete triangle? That seems more of a trouble.
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On 30 May 2019, at 16:54, Tomas Pales <litew...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Thursday, May 30, 2019 at 4:14:48 PM UTC+2, Jason wrote:
Let's say reality is composed of two sets:1. The set of all existent things2. The set of all non-existent thingsIf nothing existed at all, then set one would be emtpy, while set two would contain everything.
What do you mean by existent? How are existent things different from non-existent things?
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On 30 May 2019, at 20:18, Philip Thrift <cloud...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Thursday, May 30, 2019 at 9:14:48 AM UTC-5, Jason wrote:
On Thursday, May 30, 2019, Philip Thrift <cloud...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Thursday, May 30, 2019 at 7:50:37 AM UTC-5, Tomas Pales wrote:
On Wednesday, May 29, 2019 at 10:15:46 PM UTC+2, Jason wrote:Appears to predict the arithmetical reality:"There exists, unless I am mistake, an entire world consisting of the totality of mathematical truths, which is accessible to us only through our intelligence, just as there exists the world of physical realities; each one is independent of us, both of them divinely created and appear different only because of the weakness of our mind; but, for a more powerful intelligence, they are one and the same thing, whose synthesis is partially revealed in that marvelous correspondence between abstract mathematics on the one hand and astronomy and all branches of physics on the other."JasonIn philosophy, the relation between abstract and concrete objects is called "instantiation", for example between the abstract triangle and concrete triangles. It is a relation whereby the abstract object is a property of the concrete objects and the concrete objects are instances of the abstract object. The instantation relation is regarded as primitive, similarly like the composition relation between a collection of objects and the objects in the collection. The instantiation relation may appear more mysterious though, because while it is quite easy to visualize a collection, it is impossible to visualize an abstract object.Abstract and concrete objects are existentially dependent on each other, because there can be no property without an object that has the property, and there can be no object that has no property.In the fictionalist philosophy of mathematicsthere are no such things as abstract objects.So such troubles do not arise.
Let's say reality is composed of two sets:1. The set of all existent things2. The set of all non-existent thingsIf nothing existed at all, then set one would be emtpy, while set two would contain everything.
Now take the nominalist position. Set one would contain the physical universe while set two would contain all abstract objects: arithmetical truth, executions of programs, histories of non-existent universes, etc.What puzzles me, is that in the program executions and in the histories of non-existent universes you will find worlds where life evolves into more complex forms, you will find the risings and fallings of great civilizations, you will find literature written by the philosophers of those civilizations, their treatises on ontology, on why their universe is concrete while others are abstract, on the mysteries of consciousness and strangeness of qualia. If all these things can be found in the abstract objects of the set of non-existent things, then how do we know we're not in an abstract object of that set of non-existent things?Does it matter at all which set our universe resides in? Can moving an object from one set to another blink away or bring into being the first person experiences of the entities who inhabit such objects, or is their consciousness a property inherent to the object which cannot be taken away merely by moving it from one set to another?Much to think about.Jason
For the fictionalist, one can invent anything, including mathematics with different definitions of sets producing a multiverse of mathematical truths (Joel David Hamkins) and logics that are inconsistent (Graham Priest).Matter (the universe we live in) gives what it gives and nothing more.There is a story today about rare earth minerals:I suppose for those who think that matter doesn't exist, a shortage of rare earth minerals cannot be a problem. Maybe someday we build a matter compiler that can make them.
@philipthrift
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On 30 May 2019, at 20:18, Philip Thrift <cloud...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Thursday, May 30, 2019 at 9:14:48 AM UTC-5, Jason wrote:
On Thursday, May 30, 2019, Philip Thrift <cloud...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Thursday, May 30, 2019 at 7:50:37 AM UTC-5, Tomas Pales wrote:
On Wednesday, May 29, 2019 at 10:15:46 PM UTC+2, Jason wrote:Appears to predict the arithmetical reality:"There exists, unless I am mistake, an entire world consisting of the totality of mathematical truths, which is accessible to us only through our intelligence, just as there exists the world of physical realities; each one is independent of us, both of them divinely created and appear different only because of the weakness of our mind; but, for a more powerful intelligence, they are one and the same thing, whose synthesis is partially revealed in that marvelous correspondence between abstract mathematics on the one hand and astronomy and all branches of physics on the other."JasonIn philosophy, the relation between abstract and concrete objects is called "instantiation", for example between the abstract triangle and concrete triangles. It is a relation whereby the abstract object is a property of the concrete objects and the concrete objects are instances of the abstract object. The instantation relation is regarded as primitive, similarly like the composition relation between a collection of objects and the objects in the collection. The instantiation relation may appear more mysterious though, because while it is quite easy to visualize a collection, it is impossible to visualize an abstract object.Abstract and concrete objects are existentially dependent on each other, because there can be no property without an object that has the property, and there can be no object that has no property.In the fictionalist philosophy of mathematicsthere are no such things as abstract objects.So such troubles do not arise.
Let's say reality is composed of two sets:1. The set of all existent things2. The set of all non-existent thingsIf nothing existed at all, then set one would be emtpy, while set two would contain everything.Now take the nominalist position. Set one would contain the physical universe while set two would contain all abstract objects: arithmetical truth, executions of programs, histories of non-existent universes, etc.What puzzles me, is that in the program executions and in the histories of non-existent universes you will find worlds where life evolves into more complex forms, you will find the risings and fallings of great civilizations, you will find literature written by the philosophers of those civilizations, their treatises on ontology, on why their universe is concrete while others are abstract, on the mysteries of consciousness and strangeness of qualia. If all these things can be found in the abstract objects of the set of non-existent things, then how do we know we're not in an abstract object of that set of non-existent things?Does it matter at all which set our universe resides in? Can moving an object from one set to another blink away or bring into being the first person experiences of the entities who inhabit such objects, or is their consciousness a property inherent to the object which cannot be taken away merely by moving it from one set to another?Much to think about.JasonFor the fictionalist, one can invent anything, including mathematics with different definitions of sets producing a multiverse of mathematical truths (Joel David Hamkins) and logics that are inconsistent (Graham Priest).
Matter (the universe we live in) gives what it gives and nothing more.There is a story today about rare earth minerals:I suppose for those who think that matter doesn't exist,
Bruce
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On 30 May 2019, at 14:50, Tomas Pales <litew...@gmail.com> wrote:In philosophy, the relation between abstract and concrete objects is called "instantiation", for example between the abstract triangle and concrete triangles.In philosophy base on the assumption that there is a primitively Aristotelian reality.Note that in math, an instantiation is when you replace a variable by a “concrete” number.
The number 17 is, for a mechanist, more concrete than the moon, which only seems concrete because the brain is programmed to make us feel that way.
Right. And that of course also applies to "non-existence". And
ontologies are theory dependent. To often the theory is assumed
implicitly and "exist" is use equivocally.
On 31 May 2019, at 22:27, Tomas Pales <litew...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Friday, May 31, 2019 at 11:04:53 AM UTC+2, Bruno Marchal wrote:On 30 May 2019, at 14:50, Tomas Pales <litew...@gmail.com> wrote:In philosophy, the relation between abstract and concrete objects is called "instantiation", for example between the abstract triangle and concrete triangles.In philosophy base on the assumption that there is a primitively Aristotelian reality.Note that in math, an instantiation is when you replace a variable by a “concrete” number.Yes. I didn't want to make my point about the instantiation relation too long but there is a hierarchy of abstract objects from the most abstract to the least abstract and under them are concrete objects. For example, "mathematical object" is instantiated in "number", which is instantiated in a specific number, for example in number 2, which is instantiated in the concrete relation between two concrete flowers. Concrete objects are the bottom of instantiation because concrete objects have no instances. Number 2 is instantiated in the relation between any two objects, or abstract flower is instantiated in any concrete flower, but a concrete flower has no instances; it cannot be said that the flower that is growing under my window is a property of something else.An interesting question is whether there are abstract objects that never bottom out in concrete objects. Similarly like for the composition relation where you have a collection of collections of collections etc. ad infinitum, never bottoming out in empty collections. But I guess these infinite chains are subject to Godel's second incompleteness theorem so we may never know whether they are consistent and thus whether they exist.
As for the most abstract object, I would say it is "existence" because it is instantiated in every object, including in itself.
Existence is just the principle of logical consistency or identity.
Inconsistent objects don't exist because they are not even objects. What kind of object is a "triangle that is not a triangle"? It's nothing. As you said, the set of inconsistent objects is empty.The number 17 is, for a mechanist, more concrete than the moon, which only seems concrete because the brain is programmed to make us feel that way.Number 17 is the property of the relation among any 17 objects. The moon orbiting our planet is not a property of anything. Therefore number 17 is an abstract object and the moon is a concrete object.
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On 31 May 2019, at 22:27, Tomas Pales <litew...@gmail.com> wrote:Existence is just the principle of logical consistency or identity.Almost. Peano arithmetic is consistent with the proposition that Peano arithmetic is inconsistent. Consistency is shown rather cheap, and far away from Truth, which is the key notion, but of course not a very obvious one.
Here I disagree. 17 is very concrete. It the successor of 16, which is very concrete, etc. With mechanism, 0, 1, 2, 3, … are taken as the most concrete “really existing” object. The moon, and yourself are extremely abstract type, having only phenomenological existence.
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On 1 Jun 2019, at 11:27, Tomas Pales <litew...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Saturday, June 1, 2019 at 10:06:31 AM UTC+2, Bruno Marchal wrote:On 31 May 2019, at 22:27, Tomas Pales <litew...@gmail.com> wrote:Existence is just the principle of logical consistency or identity.Almost. Peano arithmetic is consistent with the proposition that Peano arithmetic is inconsistent. Consistency is shown rather cheap, and far away from Truth, which is the key notion, but of course not a very obvious one.If PA is consistent, it exists. If PA is not consistent, it doesn't exist.
But since PA is subject to Godel's second incompleteness theorem, we may never know, right?
Here I disagree. 17 is very concrete. It the successor of 16, which is very concrete, etc. With mechanism, 0, 1, 2, 3, … are taken as the most concrete “really existing” object. The moon, and yourself are extremely abstract type, having only phenomenological existence.This is what I mean by "abstract" and "concrete":abstract: has instances/examples (is a property)concrete: has no instances/examples (is not a property)Number 17 has instances/examples in any collection of 17 objects (is a property of any collection of 17 objects). Therefore number 17 is an abstract object.Our moon has no instances/examples (is not a property of any object, just as Bruno Marchal is not a property of any object). Therefore our moon is a concrete object.
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