expos4ever
Well-Known Member
- Oct 22, 2008
- 11,248
- 6,240
- Country
- Canada
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Christian
- Marital Status
- Private
I read an exchange earlier in this thread about the relationship between mathematics and scientific theories. I certainly believe that scientific theories are never generated by mathematics - mathematics does not, it certainly seems, have any kind of magical power to cause nature to behave in a particular way.
Or look at it this way. Many people, although I am actually not among them, believe mathematical truths have a kind of transcendent quality - that they somehow float free or are independent from the particularities of the physical world. In other words, in any conceivable world, 2 + 2 would always equal 4.
If one adopts this point of view - that mathematical truths are in some sense necessary and independent of the details of the real world in which we live - then it should be clear that mathematics has no power to generate scientific truth; after all, if mathematics is really universal, conceivable worlds with different characteristics would share a common universal mathematics. But then the problem is obvious, two different worlds would, of course, have different physical laws. How could this be if a common underlying set of mathematical truths were responsible for generating physical laws?
Or look at it this way. Many people, although I am actually not among them, believe mathematical truths have a kind of transcendent quality - that they somehow float free or are independent from the particularities of the physical world. In other words, in any conceivable world, 2 + 2 would always equal 4.
If one adopts this point of view - that mathematical truths are in some sense necessary and independent of the details of the real world in which we live - then it should be clear that mathematics has no power to generate scientific truth; after all, if mathematics is really universal, conceivable worlds with different characteristics would share a common universal mathematics. But then the problem is obvious, two different worlds would, of course, have different physical laws. How could this be if a common underlying set of mathematical truths were responsible for generating physical laws?
Upvote
0