corvus_corax said:
Hey RP?
Post 20 please?
Or perhaps I missed your reply. If so, let me know and I'll go back and look for it.
I apologize. My browser had divided pages just after your post and I missed it (happens too often).
I tried to explain in post #3 why I couldn’t just spit out the logic of it all. It is an issue of communication rather than merely one of knowing the logic. I had explained that if I or anyone is to explain something, then the reader must make some attempt to understand how the writer is using words so as to allow the concepts to be properly relayed. Many people would be able to easily see that this would be important, but many seem to just assume that a word is equal to whatever impression they already had even if they never considered what the word truly meant in its origin nor what the writer might be meaning by the word even in error. This leads to erroneous presumptions of what is being said and thus argument. This problem has proven itself once again on this thread just as I predicted.
But to get a little closer to the point (as requested), imagine for a moment that you are in a time when people have not yet accepted the concept of calculus even though it is being taught. Architects are accustomed to using an approximation for calculating the circumference of a circle. Some extremist named Eudoxus proposed that mathematics can be used in some way involving infinite concepts (a dubious existence at best) and Archimedes is trying to get people to see the light of how to use these concepts so as to achieve an exact answer to not only circumferences but also volumes, surface areas and many other concerns. The resident authorities on the subject proclaim that exactness cannot be achieved as history has proven time and time again.
But society is in a process of change due to its newly acquired authority over other countries and is involved in trying to get its populous to change the way they think on almost every subject so as to handle greater responsibilities of world management. This process involves confusing the population on every issue so that new perspectives can be established on a base level of the society. This leaves Archimedes with a serious problem because people are not calmly listening, but rather impassioned over every issue imaginable and easily triggered into argument as they defend their random individualized cause.
At this stage in the society, there is no high authority to which Archimedes can appeal and explain his principles because even the authorities are caught in the struggle to rearrange who shall have authority and who shall not. Thus Archimedes is left with only the general population to try to teach his mathematics principles to so as to allow progress to be made despite the times.
So as Archimedes tries to relay his concepts, he discovers that dealing with the general population is quite different than dealing with the more disciplined architects and mathematicians. The population at large struggles with more simple concerns of mere arithmetic and algebra. They even debate that mathematics is really only there to force them into slavery to the self interest of architects and the like. Other countries are still trying to break free of any authority so they are glad to help further inspire any confusion and resistance to potential sanity. The notion that mathematics isn’t even real and is merely a hoax slips into any discussion of the subject.
Archimedes tries to just present his case and quickly realizes that trying to explain calculus to those who aren’t really stable in algebra is somewhat futile and worse, leads to a flood of argument over every word he presented even before he got to the relevant parts. He faces constant heckling from the political crowd wanting to ensure that no one is seen as right on any issue. They shout, “Oh you’re just another egotist and think that you’re superior to everyone. You’re just lost in your fantasy delusions of grandeur. You should wakeup to the reality that no one can truly know anything and if you think that you do, then you are even more lost than anyone.” He tries briefly to discuss the rationality of the statement that anyone could know that no one knows, but gets nowhere because they don’t really care if their statements make sense anyway. That isn’t their agenda. Another crowd controlling voice from the back throws in a quick, “Calculus is just another old myth” and quickly slips away.
So he decides to pre-qualify anyone wishing to know of the subject by boldly stating publicly that he can calculate the
exact circumference of a circle without the slightest error and presenting a few simple algebra questions then watching who, if any, can even get that far through the math. He figures that if a few can at least see the reasoning involved in algebra, then he can propose some concerns about trigonometry and eventually get to those concerns of infinite equations and calculus which finally would allow the many concerns plaguing builders to be more perfectly handled. But of course, “building” is something that a large portion of the population is pointedly against regardless of any correctness. Thus Archimedes faces the constant fire of those who simply want to disrupt any sign of organized thought.
They try to argue that numbers are not real. They argue that infinity is just imagination and doesn’t exist. They argue that Eudoxus was just a charismatic delusional dreamer trying to keep society from their more natural true sanity and natural progress and all of this trouble is because of him and those like him who try to control people with invented invisible concepts.
The easy and tempting thing for Archimedes to do is to simply let it go. He can see that eventually very many years later, someone will realize how it all works anyway. But he is plagued with the notion of all of needless struggle between now and then so he is equally tempted to not give up despite the wide spread insanity with which he must deal.
---.
Now if the analogy of that short story isn’t sufficient, I can bring it even closer to home with far more real and evident events concerning recent times and what you might call a “world-view”, but in doing so, the guilty will become exposed and very serious passion will be invoked to disrupt any further conversation because if there is one thing the deceiving vampires fear, it is you being able to
see them by exposure to the clear light of day.
So, did all of this answer your question as to why I don’t just state it rather than presenting what you have called “baiting” questions? They are not intended to bait, but rather merely to qualify.