Mathematics as a system is based on a few unprovable assumptions or axioms.
Indeed.
Such assumptions and axioms include the symbology of numbers representing quantities and the fact that the set of natural numbers exist in a set of ever-increasing symbols which represent ever increasing quantities.
Amongst these are 1 +1 =2; 1 x 1 = 1 etc. They are axioms
No they aren't. They logically follow from axioms.
If we agree on the symbology (such as "+" means "to add together") and we also agree on the axioms ("1" represents a single quantity and "2" is the symbol to represent the number which follows "1"), then "1+1 = 2" logically follows as true.
It is not axiomatic. It logically follows from the definitions and axioms.
Even making statements like "you have 1 and add 1 to make 2" remain axiomatic. Why not get 3 or 715.21?
Because, given the set of axioms about how we understand the set of integer numbers, "1+1 = 715.21" does not logically follow unless we re-define the symbol "715.21" to mean a different quantity than it currently represents.
It has never been proven, only accepted as logical it is 2.
You are trying to philosophize this into oblivion. But it doesn't work.
You have one apple. You have another apple. How many apples do you have?
Do you have 715.21 apples?
Please.
So if someone alters the answer to a base axiom of Mathematics, he creates a fully acceptable variant Mathematics which is as valid as our normal one.
If the new system is not logically consistent, then it is useless. Not only that, it is not even mathematics because part of what makes math math is that it is logically consistent.
If I say "1x1 = Abraham Lincoln", have I invented a new math?
The axioms aren't proven as such and even if we disagree with his axiom, to HIM it is as plain as the nose on your face and remains axiomatically valid. Maybe the rest of us are wrong after all.
If this guy in the OP's article took like three minutes to try to reason his way through his new math, he would quickly discover that it is not logically consistent.
So while not correct in standard Mathematics, there is nothing inherently wrong about 1 x 1 = 2.
Only if you completely alter the meaning of what we agree are the definitions for the symbols "1", "2", and "x".
Currently the "
a x
b" (times) symbol means: "make
a groups of
b and add them together"
So 1 x 1 means: "make 1 group of 1 and add them together." You've only got one group of one so what is the total number of objects? 1.
How can he get 2? The only way he can do so is if he changes the definition of what multiplication means.
For example, he could say that "
a x
b" means: "multiply the numbers and add one"
In this case 1x1 = 2, 3x4 = 13, 2x2=5, etc. He has not invented a new math, he has just redefined what the symbol "x" means. It is no longer multiplication. It is something else.
In "True Mathematics" this might be the case, for there is no reason to assume that just because the vast majority of humanity agrees that 1 x 1= 1 is obviously true, that it MUST be.
It MUST be, based on our definitions of the symbols.
If someone wants to change the definitions, go for it. But they can no longer call it multiplication.