polymath
Bluelight Crew
I know most people don't like math, but this thread is about the philosophy of mathematics.
Math can be approached from two different philosophical viewpoints:
1. Mathematics is a man-made logical construction, and numbers exist only as far as someone thinks about them.
2. Numbers are natural objects with independent existence, and the laws of addition, multiplication etc. governing the behavior of numbers are of similar status as the laws of physics governing the behavior of matter and energy.
One can also think of math in a utilitarian way, i.e. it's a useful tool that can be used to describe natural phenomena.
Both viewpoints have their proponents... I personally would like to think that numbers are natural and would exist even without anyone thinking about them. The reason for this is that even though numbers are supposedly man-made, we often have no a priori knowledge of how they behave in a particular situation.
Let me demonstrate this with a relatively familiar example: Let us choose some complex number c and then construct a sequence of numbers z0, z1, z2, z3, ... such that z0=0 and zn=(zn-1)2+c . Depending on the choice of number c, the sequence can either grow without bound, with numbers zn getting larger and larger with increasing n, or they can stay within some bounds.
Already in the 19th century, it was known that it's very hard to characterize the set of numbers c for which this sequence doesn't grow without bound. They couldn't draw a picture of the set in the complex plane, because they didn't have computers. Only in the mid-20th century it became possible to draw a picture:
Everyone has seen this picture... It's the familiar fractal Mandelbrot set. Probably everyone who has done some programming has once written a code that draws a picture of MS.
Before Benoit Mandelbrot got the the idea to draw this with a computer, people had no idea how complex the structure of MS would be. If one zooms to the border of the set, one finds ever finer details at all scales.
Finding out that numbers can exhibit this kind of unexpected and complex behavior feels a lot more like studying a phenomenon of nature than playing with a construction you invented yourself. (BTW in nature there are lots of chaotic phenomena that are related to fractals)
Of course this is not a proof that numbers are natural, it's just an attempt to make it seem plausible.
What do you think, are numbers artificial or natural?
Math can be approached from two different philosophical viewpoints:
1. Mathematics is a man-made logical construction, and numbers exist only as far as someone thinks about them.
2. Numbers are natural objects with independent existence, and the laws of addition, multiplication etc. governing the behavior of numbers are of similar status as the laws of physics governing the behavior of matter and energy.
One can also think of math in a utilitarian way, i.e. it's a useful tool that can be used to describe natural phenomena.
Both viewpoints have their proponents... I personally would like to think that numbers are natural and would exist even without anyone thinking about them. The reason for this is that even though numbers are supposedly man-made, we often have no a priori knowledge of how they behave in a particular situation.
Let me demonstrate this with a relatively familiar example: Let us choose some complex number c and then construct a sequence of numbers z0, z1, z2, z3, ... such that z0=0 and zn=(zn-1)2+c . Depending on the choice of number c, the sequence can either grow without bound, with numbers zn getting larger and larger with increasing n, or they can stay within some bounds.
Already in the 19th century, it was known that it's very hard to characterize the set of numbers c for which this sequence doesn't grow without bound. They couldn't draw a picture of the set in the complex plane, because they didn't have computers. Only in the mid-20th century it became possible to draw a picture:

Everyone has seen this picture... It's the familiar fractal Mandelbrot set. Probably everyone who has done some programming has once written a code that draws a picture of MS.
Before Benoit Mandelbrot got the the idea to draw this with a computer, people had no idea how complex the structure of MS would be. If one zooms to the border of the set, one finds ever finer details at all scales.
Finding out that numbers can exhibit this kind of unexpected and complex behavior feels a lot more like studying a phenomenon of nature than playing with a construction you invented yourself. (BTW in nature there are lots of chaotic phenomena that are related to fractals)
Of course this is not a proof that numbers are natural, it's just an attempt to make it seem plausible.
What do you think, are numbers artificial or natural?