dmtlunatic
Ex-Bluelighter
- Joined
- Sep 30, 2012
- Messages
- 44
So mathematics is a language; with learned, human-rules, of when I can and cannot use certain terms correctly?
Imagine calculating with SQRT(-1) invented by a madman, who, attracted merely
by the paradox of the idea, does the calculation as a kind of service, or temple ritual, of
the absurd. He imagines that he is writing down the impossible and operating with it.
In other words: if someone believes in mathematical objects and their queer
properties--can't he nevertheless do mathematics? Or--isn't he also doing mathematics?
These are starting to come into use in the financial world, as game theory becomes ever more popular. Simply: the language that is being used changes; just as it does with "normal" human language -- nothing is static; except that which is thought to be being described -- except: we can't ever describe it; because we're describing a description!They were introduced in Donald Knuth's 1974 book Surreal Numbers: How Two Ex-Students Turned on to Pure Mathematics and Found Total Happiness. This book is a mathematical novelette, and is notable as one of the rare cases where a new mathematical idea was first presented in a work of fiction.
I think you're taking your "authority" a little too seriously. You moderate a forum of drug users who like to throw ideas around, not a peer reviewed journal.
No,but he claimed it permeated the physical world. I noted that is not a physical constant, nor have I ever found it during rigorous study of the physical world.No reference was made to physical constants.
ALet me guess - mathematically uneducated buffoons who have ingested one too many hallucinogenic fungi in their time, right? They're the ones with the insight, and everyone else falls under your sweeping indictment as the 'walking dead?' What a crock.
..but as you dive deeper into the quantum abyss our understanding of the world has to be bent to fit. Even then we have to fill in the blanks that no amount of scribbling on a chalk board can accurately describe.... for now.
I believe Lakoff doesn't take a stance on Platonic Realism. His point is whether or not mathematics signifies something "out there", it's simultaneously a human experience. That to understand the how and why of math you have to dig into biology and phenomonology.He rejects the Platonistic idea of mathematics, saying that all mathematics that we can ever know comes from human cognition. Instead of seeing mathematics as transcendent, he says that it is the result of human culture and intelligence.
Mysticism seems to be implying his ideas as religious which they are distinctly not
I see this all the time in psychedelic users: they sense science and math as being some sort of constriction on their "anything wacky is possible" mentality and so they align themselves in opposition to it. And I guess what I'm trying to say is, who cares? Most of these people haven't even taken a basic calculus course, so what do they know about real math or what it entails or says about physical systems? Intuition about mathematics is gained by actually working problems of many different types, in many different subfields of mathematics, over and over again until you can see the subtle analogies that exist between axiomatic systems, and even analogies that link together those analogies.
I hope that made sense, I haven't had my coffee yet this morning so I'm having trouble gettin' those thoughts out :D
if we just made up maths Why is the physical world so amenable to mathematical description?
alasdair
Our engagement of the world (a way in which the universe folds in on itself, partially perceiving and acting upon itself in time in the way we do) implies the project of mathematized concepts produced in this interaction. What is description other than rendering parts of the amorphous whole into comparable, discrete, static units amenable to quantification? This process is the order arising of chaos, to return to the latter at some point.
While we know not the universe 'as such' (for we encounter nothing of the sort), it's not just cognitive imposition going on here; the act of creation is at once an act of discovery, two sides of the same coin. This could account for why the universe 'for us' is amenable to mathematization. We 'discover' the creations wrought of the conditions of possibility for our investigation, in our case mathematized.
Edit: Why are the three of you insulting psychedelic users? Seems like stereotyping people in this way cannot be a good thing, especially on a website devoted to issues surrounding drugs. It smells of small-mindedness and bias to me. Mainstream society stereotypes drug users, then different factions of drug users stereotype each other. Reminds me of African Americans who insult each other for having darker skin.
Slimvictor, this is the first time I have ever been discussing this and someone brought up my view before I did. I didn't even know Lakoff had the same view as I did (I never thought I came up with this view as I once heard a teacher argue with a student about whether math was representative of the natural world and the teacher took this view; it did't convince me then as my view was probably far closer to Platonism back then, but after a few more years I understood what my teacher was saying). We interact with world through our senses and reason. When you hear 1+1=2 you have an emotional response telling you that it makes sense and it's correct. Experience may be a prerequisite for that feeling, but you only need at most need a limited experience showing that basic math is true before you can understand all of it. If I say 1,000,000,000,000+1,000,000,000,000=2,000,000,000,000, most of us have never seen a trillion things added with another trillion things and seen two trillion as a result, but it still yields the emotional response of making sense. Our reason creates a representation of the world which operates based on Mathematics. Our reason is astoundingly accurate, allowing us to slam things as small Protons together at the speed of light, so we have at least a mostly accurate picture of the world in our head, but is it perfect? Well, by definition, no
Edit: Why are the three of you insulting psychedelic users? Seems like stereotyping people in this way cannot be a good thing