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I used algebra as an analogy during a recent discussion, and was told the situations I was comparing were "apples and oranges". See here:
/#post67475629
Given my poor, addled, foolish Christian brain, I don't understand all I should about higher mathematics. So, I don't understand how fruit and the arithmetic mentioned in the video were supposed to be an answer regarding my analogy about algebra.
So let's start with this: Can someone please define "2" for me. Thanks. This is really a puzzler.
So in order to understand "2", I need to understand "natural number", "0", and "successor" (is that the same as S?). Could you define those please?
And does this mean that "2" is an arbitrary definition? That it could easily be something else if one preferred?
But you're not actually defining 2 there, you're just saying it's something that satisfies the Peano axioms.
If I define 0 = {} and S(x) = {x}, then 2 would be {{{}}}
If I define 0 = (blank) and S(x) = | next to x, then 2 would be ||
Many other definitions of 2 would work equally well.
But what is 2? Is it an abstract Platonic concept?
It is arbitrary in the sense that we could have assumed different axioms to set up our arithmetic.
It is an idea. We can use ideas to describe the real things we see out in the world. But this is not a representation of an idea, but the use of an idea as a description.
"2" in algebra (as an entirely abstract concept), or "2" in "2 [insert object description of choice]"?I used algebra as an analogy during a recent discussion, and was told the situations I was comparing were "apples and oranges". See here:
http://www.christianforums.com/t7877904-25/#post67475629
Given my poor, addled, foolish Christian brain, I don't understand all I should about higher mathematics. So, I don't understand how fruit and the arithmetic mentioned in the video were supposed to be an answer regarding my analogy about algebra.
So let's start with this: Can someone please define "2" for me. Thanks. This is really a puzzler.
1) If we began our number system with different assumptions, would we produce different results in the "real" world by using that different system?
2) If we're using numbers to describe real things - what I would call a "property" of those real things - are we describing something inherent to these real things?
Different mathematical systems give different descriptions, but the underlying reality is the same in both cases.
Not necessarily. If I correctly describe that penny as the sixth penny I've picked up from the sidewalk this week, there is nothing inherently sixy about the penny.
In this case, "2" being a concept of quantity, it is the quantity that is the essential
The concept "2" subsumes all instances of the quantity 2 of anything be it apples, mountains or unicorns.
Those are not definitions, those are just different names for the same thing.
So language may be fluid
but "2" is an attempt to describe something "real" about the world. Yes?
So, while there isn't something "twoish" about a particular penny, isn't there something "twoish" about the set?
It is interesting the property we're discussing seems to appear with systems and disappear when the system is broken up.
Those were two possible definitions of things that satisfied the axioms, one a reasonably standard one in terms of set theory.
It is an idea. We can use ideas to describe the real things we see out in the world. But this is not a representation of an idea, but the use of an idea as a description.
I disagree, they were like translations into different languages, not novel definitions. Identifying 0 with {} is just a translation.
The axioms define the logical structure of the system.
I don't think so. You're throwing your mental construct (an idea) onto some chunk of reality. But it's not in the reality, it's in your head.
What else have we got?
ust because I call a leaf on a tree "green" and associate it with a concept of "color" doesn't mean the leaf is not reflecting light at specific wavelengths.
Maybe nothing, but we shouldn't mistake what's in our heads for what's out there in reality.
I think this is a separate issue, but.... there's the spectral reflectance of vegetation. It reflects more NIR than it does 'green'. And it reflects a continuous band of wavelengths, not just 'specific wavelengths'. Maybe one of those NIR wavelengths is the color it really is.
Or is the leaf really green because your eye is blind to most of what it's reflecting?