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05-27-2003, 07:57 PM | #11 | |
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Yes reality ultimately determines the truthfulness of these axioms, however I think they are probably known to humans via very strongly wired brain mechanisms.(Knowing such basic truths as the world was external would be essential for our survival.) But I do not of course mean reality determined this via meaning complete knowledge of reality. I am not saying you must know everything to know something. |
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05-27-2003, 08:16 PM | #12 | |
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Cheers, John |
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05-29-2003, 10:19 AM | #13 |
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Reality and Axioms
John: "Would you agree it appears that reality is the judge of the relative effectiveness of a set of axioms? The problem then becomes one of pinning down reality?"
Primal: Yes reality ultimately determines the truthfulness of these axioms, however I think they are probably known to humans via very strongly wired brain mechanisms.(Knowing such basic truths as the world was external would be essential for our survival.) I don't aree with either of you guys. Axioms are either tautologous or contradictory. If tautologous they claim nothing about the world at all. Reality is not tautologous. For example: that there are an infinite number of numbers between any two different numbers is a tautology (a theorem) of real numbers, but, there is no evidence that reality (space-time) is compact in this way. Witt |
05-29-2003, 11:41 AM | #14 | |
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Re: Reality and Axioms
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"There exists an objective reality" is an axiom of certain philosophies and this is neither a tautology or contradictory. Anything can be contradictory if one syas so! Cheers, John |
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05-29-2003, 01:39 PM | #15 | |||
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Re: Axiom of Choice, delusion or grandeur?
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The most accessible example is the so-called "parallel postulate" of elementary geometry. Accept the parallel postulate as an axiom, and one develops the results of plane geometry. Reject the parallel postulate as an axiom, and one develops some of the many results of non-Euclidian geometry. Mathematics is a tool for building models, not a tool for discovering heretofore unknown truths about the universe (see Physics). Most mathematicians (not including those operating in the universe of set theory) accept the axiom of choice because it simplifies their work and doesn't harm the model. Set theoreticians find this problem a useful conjecture. Quote:
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05-29-2003, 02:05 PM | #16 |
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Witt : Axioms are either tautologous or contradictory.
John: Axioms can be definitions or statements (which can be consider a definition of a state of affairs). Statements are not considered a definition of states of affairs. John: Tautologies need not be true e.g. "god exists therefore god exists". A tautologous falsity, is a contradiction in terms. All tautologies 'need' to be true. "god exists therefore god exists", is as tautologous as any statement can be. (p->p), is undeniable. But there is no inference here. The word 'therefore' does not apply! John: "There exists an objective reality" is an axiom of certain philosophies and this is neither a tautology or contradictory. I don't agree. All statements of existence are tautologous or contradictory, as are statements of identity. The generality of logic, demands it. John: Anything can be contradictory if one syas so! Certainly not...in my world. Truth is not a matter of whim, is it? Witt |
05-29-2003, 04:31 PM | #17 | |
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05-29-2003, 07:11 PM | #18 | ||
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Re: Re: Axiom of Choice, delusion or grandeur?
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Contradictions don't really occur in math because quantities (numbers of things) are homogenous. For logic, however, the interpretation of AC can result in violation of the LOI and Witt has expounded the theorems of logic he thinks are at fault in causing Russell's Antinomy. Cheers, John |
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05-29-2003, 07:28 PM | #19 | ||||
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How about "The experiment was carried out in total darkness"? Do you consider this qualifies? Quote:
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Cheers, John |
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05-29-2003, 07:32 PM | #20 | |
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It clears up a question I have been trying to answer for some time. |
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