Defending points you don’t care about

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/eCJJyHLGxdQMYEa8a/defending-points-you-don-t-care-about

This post is part of my Hazardous Guide To Rationality. I don’t expect this to be new or exciting to frequent LW people, and I would appreciate comments and feedback in light of intents for the sequence, as outlined in the above link. A dialogue: Nicky: I’ve been wondering, do you think math was invented or discovered?> Dee: Seems like it must have been discovered. I read about how circles are everywhere in nature, and that you can even find the fibonacci sequence in plants!Nicky: Yeah, but there aren’t actually any numbers in nature. Numbers are just something we made up to describe and talk about these patterns that we see in nature. Numbers themselves don’t really exist out in the world.Dee: Of course numbers are real! Made up constructs don’t have the predictive power that math does. They totally exists.Nicky: Well if numbers exist, where are they? You can’t show me where a number is. You can’t empirically test for numbers. You can’t find them anywhere in the physical world. They’re just constructs!Dee: Sure, they don’t a physical location in the world. That’s silly. There’s no circles floating around out behind the moon. What I’m saying is that they exist outside of space and time. Mathematical existence is it’s own sort of domain, separate from the domain of physical existence.Nicky: Bleh, next you’re going to tell me that you believe in cartesian dualism.Dee: Bleh, next you’re going to tell me that math is arbitrary and people can build rockets that work however they feel like.The two never talked again. Dee, remembering this conversation in great detail, went on the become a commited Platonist and write many articles trying to defend this complex philosophical viewTo help draw out the point I’m trying to make, here’s an alternative history of this conversation. Nicky: Hey Dee, you got any views on mathematical platonism?> Dee: What’s that?Nicky: It’s the idea that mathematical objects exist in reality, but seperate from physical reality. Physical reality defines what’s true about the world we live in, and mathematical reality defines what’s true about math objects.Dee: Hmmmm, I’m not sure. I mean, that seems like it would explain why math is so certain and precise, but it also feels weird to posit a whole new fundamental element of reality, and I’m partial to materialism. I’ll have to think about this.Dee didn’t really care about or have well formed beliefs about whether or not mathematical Platonism is true. Yet a conversation happened in such a way that left Dee defending Platonism. That seems a little weird, let’s look at what happened.

Comment

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/eCJJyHLGxdQMYEa8a/defending-points-you-don-t-care-about?commentId=z2e3aTmW2LxkWCpF6

Errata:

When Dee hear’s "social construct" she thinks about things> Nicky here’s "real" and things about things that can be located in time and space.> the think I want to be in definitionhears, hears, thinks, thing

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/eCJJyHLGxdQMYEa8a/defending-points-you-don-t-care-about?commentId=MMZ68cv9YqYFYwvWP

FWIW I found this highly valuable in that it used simple examples and simple words to explain an important concept. This idea is pointing at several other articles in the sequences, and ideas like Bucket Errors, but does it without having to go through complex explanations or coin new terms.

Comment

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/eCJJyHLGxdQMYEa8a/defending-points-you-don-t-care-about?commentId=psxe6H6JhNiwqdeJu

Getting across those ideas in a simple distilled version is what I’m shooting for. Thanks for confirming I’m on the right track.

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/eCJJyHLGxdQMYEa8a/defending-points-you-don-t-care-about?commentId=2SSYpz4wf7XA7K6mH

To me this dialog looks like an implicit argument about definitions. What does it mean to be invented vs discovered? What does it mean for something to exist? Neither party realizes that they have incompatible definitions, so they get nowhere.

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/eCJJyHLGxdQMYEa8a/defending-points-you-don-t-care-about?commentId=rgSdbBL6atC2mAfga

I didn’t read this. There seemed to be no way to tell if it would be of interest other than to read the whole thing. No summary, no tldr, even the title is vague.

Comment

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/eCJJyHLGxdQMYEa8a/defending-points-you-don-t-care-about?commentId=wjQp2x94YEoPC4cYL

There is no frame, and it’s not clear what this point is until about half way through a dialogue between several people which needs to be thought through carefully to really understand.