Sy123
This too shall pass
- Joined
- Nov 6, 2011
- Messages
- 3,730
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2013
The philosophy of mathematics asks questions about the foundations of mathematics, validity of certain truths in mathematics, it's assumptions, implications, the correspondence of mathematics and reality and so on.
One primary question to ask is whether mathematics is a subject that refers to real mathematical entities, these entities are real and objective, and the job of the mathematician is to discover these entities and their relationships to each other. This is what is known as "mathematical realism", in opposition is "mathematical anti-realism", which seeks to ground mathematics not in 'reality' but in something different.
One way in which anti-realism was promoted was with what is called 'formalism', it is the idea that mathematics is simply a game in language, of manipulating symbols according to various symbolic rules (axioms), and then getting symbolic conclusions. These symbols are merely that, meaningless (meaningless insofar we are talking about objective reality) constructions of mathematicians. The most popular realist position on mathematics is mathematical platonism, which proposes that mathematical objects are really existing entities just like physical objects, like physical objects, mathematical objects are not reducible to mental entities and the imagination.
Where do you stand on this?
I wonder if we have any constructivists here who reject existence proofs that do not involve construction (if so, my (curious) question is how they prove the existence of the irrational numbers, as far as I can see, normal proofs for irrationality of certain numbers are not constructive, i.e. proof that sqrt(2) is irrational)
One primary question to ask is whether mathematics is a subject that refers to real mathematical entities, these entities are real and objective, and the job of the mathematician is to discover these entities and their relationships to each other. This is what is known as "mathematical realism", in opposition is "mathematical anti-realism", which seeks to ground mathematics not in 'reality' but in something different.
One way in which anti-realism was promoted was with what is called 'formalism', it is the idea that mathematics is simply a game in language, of manipulating symbols according to various symbolic rules (axioms), and then getting symbolic conclusions. These symbols are merely that, meaningless (meaningless insofar we are talking about objective reality) constructions of mathematicians. The most popular realist position on mathematics is mathematical platonism, which proposes that mathematical objects are really existing entities just like physical objects, like physical objects, mathematical objects are not reducible to mental entities and the imagination.
Where do you stand on this?
I wonder if we have any constructivists here who reject existence proofs that do not involve construction (if so, my (curious) question is how they prove the existence of the irrational numbers, as far as I can see, normal proofs for irrationality of certain numbers are not constructive, i.e. proof that sqrt(2) is irrational)