Brent wrote:1. Presumably those true things would not be 'real'. Only provable things would be true of reality.
2. Does arithmetic have 'finite information content'? Is the axiom of succession just one or is it a schema of infinitely many axioms?Appreciable, even in layman's logic.In '#1' - I question "provable" since in my agnosticism an 'evidence' is partial only, leaving open lots of (so far?) unknown/able aspects to be covered. In the infinity(?) of the "world" also the contrary of an evidence may be 'true'.
#2 is a technically precise formulation of what I tried to express in my post to Bruno.IFF!!! "anything" (i.e. everything) can be expressed by numerals, the information included into arithmetic IS infinite,
however as it seems: in our (restricted) view of "the world" (Nature?) there seem to be NO numbers to begin with.In our human 'translation' we see 1,2, or 145, or a million "OF SOMETHING" - no the (integer?) numerals.Axioms? in my vocabulary: imagined things, necessary for certain theories we cannot substantiate otherwise.
In another logic than human, in another figment of a "physical world" different axioms would serve science.
2+2=4? not necessarily in the (fictitious) "octimality" of the '[Zarathustran' aliens in the Cohen-Stewart books(still product of human minds).
As Bruno said, "Provable is always relative to some axioms and rules of inference. It is quite independent of "true of reality". Which is why I'm highly suspicious of ideas like deriving all of reality from arithmetic, which we know only from axioms and inferences.
We don't give axioms and inference rule when teaching arithmetic in high school. We start from simple examples, like fingers, days of the week, candies in a bag, etc. Children understand "anniversary" before "successor", and the finite/infinite distinction is as old as humanity.
In fact it can be shown that the intuition of numbers, addition and multiplication included, is *needed* to even understand what axioms and inference can be, making arithmetic necessarily known before any formal machinery is posited.
Thanks, Brent and Bruno. You are kind to respond.The point I wanted to approach (far approach, indeed) is that whatever we derive (mentally) about Nature comes from our human mind, be it binary or not.
And: it is not BINDING (restricting?) upon Nature, there may be more we cannot even imagine within our limited capabilities.
We think in our 'model of knowables' and it is incredible how far we got.
A figment of a physical world, an 'almost' perfect technology with a reductionist (conventional) science and I don't even mention: math.I read your discussions with awe and keep my agnostic indeterminism.
But intuition fails us in precisely in questions like Hilbert's hotel.
Why should you be so trusting of your intuition is just this particular instance.
Brent
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I doubt infinities.
I can doubt actual infinities. Not potential infinities, which gives sense to any non stooping program notion.
Comp is ontologically finitist. As long as you don't claim that there is a biggest prime number, there should be no problem with the comp hyp. Infinities can be put in the epistemology, or at the meta-level: they are mind tool, souls attractor etc.
Bruno
On 29 May 2012, at 19:27, meekerdb wrote:
On 5/29/2012 12:27 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:I doubt infinities.
I can doubt actual infinities. Not potential infinities, which gives sense to any non stooping program notion.
Comp is ontologically finitist. As long as you don't claim that there is a biggest prime number, there should be no problem with the comp hyp. Infinities can be put in the epistemology, or at the meta-level: they are mind tool, souls attractor etc.
Bruno
But diagonalization arguments assume realized infinities.
Set theoretical diagonalizations, à-la Cantor, assume realized infinities (like analysis, by the way). I don't use them, if only to explain diagonalization.
Computer science or "arithmetical" diagonalization does not assume realized infinities, only potential. Kleene second theorem is constructive. Gödel's diagonalization is constructive: for each effective theory, it provides the undecidable sentences.
The intensional diagonalization, leading to reproduction, self-generation and self-reference are all constructive concepts.
The theory of everything is really just logic and
Ax ~(0 = s(x)) (For all number x the successor of x is different from zero).AxAy ~(x = y) -> ~(s(x) = s(y)) (different numbers have different successors)
Ax x + 0 = xAxAy x + s(y) = s(x + y) ( meaning x + (y +1) = (x + y) +1) = laws of addition
Ax x *0 = 0AxAy x*s(y) = x*y + x laws of multiplication
The observer is the same + the induction axioms. To define it in the theory above is of course a very long subtle and tedious exercise.
Bruno
On 5/29/2012 11:39 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:
On 29 May 2012, at 19:27, meekerdb wrote:
On 5/29/2012 12:27 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:I doubt infinities.
I can doubt actual infinities. Not potential infinities, which gives sense to any non stooping program notion.
Comp is ontologically finitist. As long as you don't claim that there is a biggest prime number, there should be no problem with the comp hyp. Infinities can be put in the epistemology, or at the meta-level: they are mind tool, souls attractor etc.
Bruno
But diagonalization arguments assume realized infinities.
Set theoretical diagonalizations, à-la Cantor, assume realized infinities (like analysis, by the way). I don't use them, if only to explain diagonalization.
Computer science or "arithmetical" diagonalization does not assume realized infinities, only potential. Kleene second theorem is constructive. Gödel's diagonalization is constructive: for each effective theory, it provides the undecidable sentences.
But they do depend on infinity (i.e. the axiom of succession).
The intensional diagonalization, leading to reproduction, self-generation and self-reference are all constructive concepts.
Can you explain "intensional diagonalization"?
The theory of everything is really just logic and
Ax ~(0 = s(x)) (For all number x the successor of x is different from zero).AxAy ~(x = y) -> ~(s(x) = s(y)) (different numbers have different successors)
Ax x + 0 = xAxAy x + s(y) = s(x + y) ( meaning x + (y +1) = (x + y) +1) = laws of addition
Ax x *0 = 0AxAy x*s(y) = x*y + x laws of multiplication
The observer is the same + the induction axioms. To define it in the theory above is of course a very long subtle and tedious exercise.
Bruno
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