Numbers are not things seen, heard, smelled, tasted, or touched. They are thoughts.
Quote from: Prime Multivac on February 13, 2016, 05:32:35 PMNumbers are not things seen, heard, smelled, tasted, or touched. They are thoughts.i still don't fully agree with this
if you'd extend that also to other describable qualities of things, like... roughness, sharpness, softness, etc., then surebut when you feel two objects at once, you can tell based on the sensation that there are indeed two things theretwoness is a describable quality of matter--as is threeness, fourness, and so forthnot to undermine your argument, but i just don't think you can use that example
Quote from: eggsalad on February 13, 2016, 05:17:22 PMWhat is thought without external stimuli? I can't envision thought ever being independent of external influences.i hope this isn't what you're trying to do
What is thought without external stimuli? I can't envision thought ever being independent of external influences.
Quote from: eggsalad on February 13, 2016, 05:27:56 PMQuote from: Prime Multivac on February 13, 2016, 05:26:24 PMQuote from: eggsalad on February 13, 2016, 05:17:22 PMQuote from: Prime Multivac on February 13, 2016, 05:01:51 PMQuote from: eggsalad on February 13, 2016, 04:00:26 PMQuote from: Prime Multivac on February 13, 2016, 12:21:28 AMYou cannot be tricked into thinking that you're thinking (because that means you're already thinking). Thinking inherently requires the capability of thought. If a being is thinks, then in can think; if it thinks, then it exists.From what observation can you derive this if we have established that all observation we can make of this world is unreliable.Thought it not perceived through the senses. In what way can one be manipulated into thinking without thinking in the first place? Thought, as the most basic rationality, cannot be deceived like touch, taste, smell, sight, and hearing. if this is all a dream, you cannot rely on your five senses to seek knowledge. You can "see" green where green may not truly be; this is the basis of illusion. You cannot think where there is not the capability of thought because the existence of thought presumes thought. Thinking requires the ability to think.What is thought without external stimuli? I can't envision thought ever being independent of external influences.a + b = b + a, regardless of if we can see, hear, smell, taste, or touch. Thought is an entirely separate thing from the senses.um how can you prove that without observation?Well, for starters, it's an axiom. It's unquestionable. Second, our concept of a number represented by a and a number represented by b is just that: conceptual. Numbers are not things seen, heard, smelled, tasted, or touched. They are thoughts.
Quote from: Prime Multivac on February 13, 2016, 05:26:24 PMQuote from: eggsalad on February 13, 2016, 05:17:22 PMQuote from: Prime Multivac on February 13, 2016, 05:01:51 PMQuote from: eggsalad on February 13, 2016, 04:00:26 PMQuote from: Prime Multivac on February 13, 2016, 12:21:28 AMYou cannot be tricked into thinking that you're thinking (because that means you're already thinking). Thinking inherently requires the capability of thought. If a being is thinks, then in can think; if it thinks, then it exists.From what observation can you derive this if we have established that all observation we can make of this world is unreliable.Thought it not perceived through the senses. In what way can one be manipulated into thinking without thinking in the first place? Thought, as the most basic rationality, cannot be deceived like touch, taste, smell, sight, and hearing. if this is all a dream, you cannot rely on your five senses to seek knowledge. You can "see" green where green may not truly be; this is the basis of illusion. You cannot think where there is not the capability of thought because the existence of thought presumes thought. Thinking requires the ability to think.What is thought without external stimuli? I can't envision thought ever being independent of external influences.a + b = b + a, regardless of if we can see, hear, smell, taste, or touch. Thought is an entirely separate thing from the senses.um how can you prove that without observation?
Quote from: eggsalad on February 13, 2016, 05:17:22 PMQuote from: Prime Multivac on February 13, 2016, 05:01:51 PMQuote from: eggsalad on February 13, 2016, 04:00:26 PMQuote from: Prime Multivac on February 13, 2016, 12:21:28 AMYou cannot be tricked into thinking that you're thinking (because that means you're already thinking). Thinking inherently requires the capability of thought. If a being is thinks, then in can think; if it thinks, then it exists.From what observation can you derive this if we have established that all observation we can make of this world is unreliable.Thought it not perceived through the senses. In what way can one be manipulated into thinking without thinking in the first place? Thought, as the most basic rationality, cannot be deceived like touch, taste, smell, sight, and hearing. if this is all a dream, you cannot rely on your five senses to seek knowledge. You can "see" green where green may not truly be; this is the basis of illusion. You cannot think where there is not the capability of thought because the existence of thought presumes thought. Thinking requires the ability to think.What is thought without external stimuli? I can't envision thought ever being independent of external influences.a + b = b + a, regardless of if we can see, hear, smell, taste, or touch. Thought is an entirely separate thing from the senses.
Quote from: Prime Multivac on February 13, 2016, 05:01:51 PMQuote from: eggsalad on February 13, 2016, 04:00:26 PMQuote from: Prime Multivac on February 13, 2016, 12:21:28 AMYou cannot be tricked into thinking that you're thinking (because that means you're already thinking). Thinking inherently requires the capability of thought. If a being is thinks, then in can think; if it thinks, then it exists.From what observation can you derive this if we have established that all observation we can make of this world is unreliable.Thought it not perceived through the senses. In what way can one be manipulated into thinking without thinking in the first place? Thought, as the most basic rationality, cannot be deceived like touch, taste, smell, sight, and hearing. if this is all a dream, you cannot rely on your five senses to seek knowledge. You can "see" green where green may not truly be; this is the basis of illusion. You cannot think where there is not the capability of thought because the existence of thought presumes thought. Thinking requires the ability to think.What is thought without external stimuli? I can't envision thought ever being independent of external influences.
Quote from: eggsalad on February 13, 2016, 04:00:26 PMQuote from: Prime Multivac on February 13, 2016, 12:21:28 AMYou cannot be tricked into thinking that you're thinking (because that means you're already thinking). Thinking inherently requires the capability of thought. If a being is thinks, then in can think; if it thinks, then it exists.From what observation can you derive this if we have established that all observation we can make of this world is unreliable.Thought it not perceived through the senses. In what way can one be manipulated into thinking without thinking in the first place? Thought, as the most basic rationality, cannot be deceived like touch, taste, smell, sight, and hearing. if this is all a dream, you cannot rely on your five senses to seek knowledge. You can "see" green where green may not truly be; this is the basis of illusion. You cannot think where there is not the capability of thought because the existence of thought presumes thought. Thinking requires the ability to think.
Quote from: Prime Multivac on February 13, 2016, 12:21:28 AMYou cannot be tricked into thinking that you're thinking (because that means you're already thinking). Thinking inherently requires the capability of thought. If a being is thinks, then in can think; if it thinks, then it exists.From what observation can you derive this if we have established that all observation we can make of this world is unreliable.
You cannot be tricked into thinking that you're thinking (because that means you're already thinking). Thinking inherently requires the capability of thought. If a being is thinks, then in can think; if it thinks, then it exists.
Quote from: Prime Multivac on February 13, 2016, 05:32:35 PMQuote from: eggsalad on February 13, 2016, 05:27:56 PMQuote from: Prime Multivac on February 13, 2016, 05:26:24 PMQuote from: eggsalad on February 13, 2016, 05:17:22 PMQuote from: Prime Multivac on February 13, 2016, 05:01:51 PMQuote from: eggsalad on February 13, 2016, 04:00:26 PMQuote from: Prime Multivac on February 13, 2016, 12:21:28 AMYou cannot be tricked into thinking that you're thinking (because that means you're already thinking). Thinking inherently requires the capability of thought. If a being is thinks, then in can think; if it thinks, then it exists.From what observation can you derive this if we have established that all observation we can make of this world is unreliable.Thought it not perceived through the senses. In what way can one be manipulated into thinking without thinking in the first place? Thought, as the most basic rationality, cannot be deceived like touch, taste, smell, sight, and hearing. if this is all a dream, you cannot rely on your five senses to seek knowledge. You can "see" green where green may not truly be; this is the basis of illusion. You cannot think where there is not the capability of thought because the existence of thought presumes thought. Thinking requires the ability to think.What is thought without external stimuli? I can't envision thought ever being independent of external influences.a + b = b + a, regardless of if we can see, hear, smell, taste, or touch. Thought is an entirely separate thing from the senses.um how can you prove that without observation?Well, for starters, it's an axiom. It's unquestionable. Second, our concept of a number represented by a and a number represented by b is just that: conceptual. Numbers are not things seen, heard, smelled, tasted, or touched. They are thoughts.What exactly gives axioms authority other than observed consistency? Are logical concepts not formed as a result of whether or not they are consistent within the context of our reality?
What exactly gives axioms authority other than observed consistency? Are logical concepts not formed as a result of whether or not they are consistent within the context of our reality?
Quote from: eggsalad on February 13, 2016, 06:36:02 PMWhat exactly gives axioms authority other than observed consistency? Are logical concepts not formed as a result of whether or not they are consistent within the context of our reality?this is where the conversation gets fuzzy, because what you're doing is questioning that which isn't supposed to be questionedx = x (the reflexive property of equality) is axiomatic, because it functions axiomaticallyif you question that property, you're not going to get a lucid answer--i can't tell you why the reflexive property of equality works; it just does, and i can demonstrate that to youbut as far as the hard reasoning behind it goes, there's literally no way to teach you that--it's just how reality worksso as far as i'm concerned, observed consistency is the only thing that you need in order to demonstrate an axiom
I'm not sure why you keep using observation as a criterion, either; I should state again that the Dream Argument and Evil Demon Scenario presume that you cannot know anything by means of the senses. You can have observed consistency via logic, something that is not a means of the senses.
i'm not familiar with this but was just reading about it. might be relevant:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurt_G%C3%B6del#The_Incompleteness_Theoremregarding the axiomatic system used to define arithmetic with natural numbers, "The consistency of the axioms cannot be proven within the system."
But that sentence literally implies that they are questionable. "The axioms cannot be proven within the system"
By unquestionable do you mean practically or absolutely?I'll have to read the paper myself I suppose; I'm only familiar with proofs that make use of these axioms, not proofs on the axioms themselves, and your explanation doesn't clarify much to me. Is it to say that we can conclude that some part of the axiomatic system is true even if we can't prove it? That seems contradictory to me.
Quote from: Prime Multivac on February 13, 2016, 05:26:24 PMQuote from: eggsalad on February 13, 2016, 05:17:22 PMQuote from: Prime Multivac on February 13, 2016, 05:01:51 PMQuote from: eggsalad on February 13, 2016, 04:00:26 PMQuote from: Prime Multivac on February 13, 2016, 12:21:28 AMYou cannot be tricked into thinking that you're thinking (because that means you're already thinking). Thinking inherently requires the capability of thought. If a being is thinks, then in can think; if it thinks, then it exists.From what observation can you derive this if we have established that all observation we can make of this world is unreliable.Thought it not perceived through the senses. In what way can one be manipulated into thinking without thinking in the first place? Thought, as the most basic rationality, cannot be deceived like touch, taste, smell, sight, and hearing. if this is all a dream, you cannot rely on your five senses to seek knowledge. You can "see" green where green may not truly be; this is the basis of illusion. You cannot think where there is not the capability of thought because the existence of thought presumes thought. Thinking requires the ability to think.What is thought without external stimuli? I can't envision thought ever being independent of external influences.a + b = b + a, regardless of if we can see, hear, smell, taste, or touch. Thought is an entirely separate thing from the senses.I'd like to chime in here and point out that you have to be more specific about what those variables represent, you can define an algebra with non commutative addition quite easily:Consider a point on the equator of a sphere, if you move halfway around the equator (x), and then half way up from the equator to the north pole (y), you'll find yourself at the coordinate defined by x + yBut if you move upwards first (y) then move the same distance parallel to the equator (x) then you end up a different point (y + x)And if you refer to the picture below you should see why x + y ≠ y + xCommutative addition isn't a universal property; you can create an algebra where any property does or does not hold provided it doesn't contradict itself.
Quote from: Tsirist on February 14, 2016, 03:05:46 AMBy unquestionable do you mean practically or absolutely?I'll have to read the paper myself I suppose; I'm only familiar with proofs that make use of these axioms, not proofs on the axioms themselves, and your explanation doesn't clarify much to me. Is it to say that we can conclude that some part of the axiomatic system is true even if we can't prove it? That seems contradictory to me.From my experience it's more correct to say that the axioms define truth for a system that obeys those axioms; I've recently been studying the hyperreal numbers system, a system where different scales of infinitely large and small numbers exist alongside real numbers; under the hyperreal axioms this is perfectly fine but under the real number axioms it's impossible.You can't prove or disprove the hyperreal axioms as universally true or false, you either accept them and work with a system in which they exist, or reject them and work with a system in which they don't.
Quote from: Cadenza on February 14, 2016, 05:34:42 PMQuote from: Prime Multivac on February 13, 2016, 05:26:24 PMQuote from: eggsalad on February 13, 2016, 05:17:22 PMQuote from: Prime Multivac on February 13, 2016, 05:01:51 PMQuote from: eggsalad on February 13, 2016, 04:00:26 PMQuote from: Prime Multivac on February 13, 2016, 12:21:28 AMYou cannot be tricked into thinking that you're thinking (because that means you're already thinking). Thinking inherently requires the capability of thought. If a being is thinks, then in can think; if it thinks, then it exists.From what observation can you derive this if we have established that all observation we can make of this world is unreliable.Thought it not perceived through the senses. In what way can one be manipulated into thinking without thinking in the first place? Thought, as the most basic rationality, cannot be deceived like touch, taste, smell, sight, and hearing. if this is all a dream, you cannot rely on your five senses to seek knowledge. You can "see" green where green may not truly be; this is the basis of illusion. You cannot think where there is not the capability of thought because the existence of thought presumes thought. Thinking requires the ability to think.What is thought without external stimuli? I can't envision thought ever being independent of external influences.a + b = b + a, regardless of if we can see, hear, smell, taste, or touch. Thought is an entirely separate thing from the senses.I'd like to chime in here and point out that you have to be more specific about what those variables represent, you can define an algebra with non commutative addition quite easily:Consider a point on the equator of a sphere, if you move halfway around the equator (x), and then half way up from the equator to the north pole (y), you'll find yourself at the coordinate defined by x + yBut if you move upwards first (y) then move the same distance parallel to the equator (x) then you end up a different point (y + x)And if you refer to the picture below you should see why x + y ≠ y + xCommutative addition isn't a universal property; you can create an algebra where any property does or does not hold provided it doesn't contradict itself.but my example of the reflexive property was right on the money, right