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math is not science

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-28 13:55 ID:7v2wH7yu

it's just logic

Name: CremaRoja 2007-08-28 15:38 ID:tcT25w6p

asi es!

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-28 15:57 ID:YmxfX+XZ

Of course, math is NOT science. Actually it belongs to the fields of humanities.

Math is only "a tool" anyway for the scientists, engineers, computing specialists etc. etc.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-28 17:32 ID:IkZNoIDk

>>3

You're a tool :(

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-28 17:36 ID:Heaven

Math is the modeling language. Science is the search for models that fit reality.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-28 18:23 ID:0m+mUyHE

science and math are both logic.

Name: sage 2007-08-28 19:14 ID:aSYvgw5H

It's science if you're a Platonist.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-28 20:48 ID:1PD5LLvG

i'd agree, except that math is increasingly expanding into computational fields, where guess and check work (science) is more important

but then again, that's fake math, real math is proofs, and proofs are logic.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-28 22:03 ID:Y2ND24Le

Math can be used as a philosophy for life

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-28 22:47 ID:1PD5LLvG

>>9
how, exactly, would that work

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-29 1:11 ID:Iccc4FKe

>>10 there is plenty of mathematic philosophy. Pythagoras for instance was a very famous mathematician/philosopher/scientist who completely unifies numbers and nature.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-29 1:56 ID:+vkedDqd

>>8
Math isn't "expanding" into computational fields, it created them.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-29 2:31 ID:Heaven

>>12
i'm sorry to hear all progress has stopped and the fields are withering away.  douchebag.

Name: Anonymouse 2007-08-29 3:11 ID:EgJ0hrZ3

Biology is science right?

Biology is complex chemistry
Chemistry is complex physics
Physics is complex math
....

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-29 4:52 ID:kU/vpi27

>>14

That's deductive, not objective. Try again!

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-29 5:13 ID:NLTyVxvh

>>14

Please think before when you are writing something.

It hurts my eyes!

Bah!

Complete FaiL!

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-29 5:13 ID:NLTyVxvh

>>14

Please think before when you are writing something.

It hurts my eyes!

Bah!

Complete FaiL!

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-29 10:47 ID:0clMikro

>>2

i fucking lawl'd at latino redcream.

math = deductive
science = inductive

deductive != inductive, math != science

/proof

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-29 10:59 ID:Heaven

>>14
>>Physics is complex math
Dont ever do that, idiot

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-29 11:13 ID:2aFPQ7n6

math is the science of counting things

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-29 11:26 ID:Heaven

>>20
no, thats accounting.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-29 12:14 ID:0clMikro

>>14

define complex, realise you're talking bullshit, and then shut the fuck up and get off /sci/

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-29 14:44 ID:3hREuvZO

>>11

Except that there's no real evidence of someone called "Pythagoras" existing, just an ancient, outdated group of people called "Pythagoreans" who believed in some fucked up shit.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-29 15:21 ID:Iccc4FKe

>>23 you don't happen to know, ermm, mathematics, do you?

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-29 15:23 ID:Iccc4FKe

And regardless of his existence the philosophy still stands. There isn't much evidence of socrates' existence either (his story is told by plato, who claims to have been his apprentice), but this doesn't at all effect the existence of "his" philosophy.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-29 15:24 ID:Iccc4FKe

(same person btw)

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-29 15:46 ID:pf3UsEgC

Actually, I'd say math is the purest science. All the other scientific fields have to rely heavily on models more than certainties/exactness. (That's not a slam against any sciences, it's just reality.)

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-29 20:07 ID:kU/vpi27

>>27

Nah, philosophy is the purest science. Hell, philosophers aren't even SURE if they exist. Isn't that enough for you?

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-29 21:20 ID:3hREuvZO

>>24
I'm not up to scratch on my history, but I've got a feeling that "Pythagoras' Theorem" predates the existence of the Pythagoreans or even the supposed "Pythagoras".

>>25
"his" philosophy, being of sound mathematical nature I presume, what with resurrection and being against democracy and so forth.

>>28
Be that as it may, mathematicians don't even CARE if they exist. Isn't that enough for you?

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-29 21:22 ID:+XI9a4M5

triangles didnt even exist until 20 B.C.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-29 22:38 ID:+vkedDqd

>>13
Work on your reading comprehension. I didn't say anything like that. >>8 makes about as much sense as saying "physics is expanding into string theory", or "biology is expanding into evolution." It implies that there was some sort of study of computation that didn't involve math, and now math is expanding INTO it. If you meant to say that these subfields of math are themselves expanding, I agree. However, that is not what you said.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-29 23:23 ID:kU/vpi27

>>29
Be that as it may, mathematicians don't even CARE if they exist. Isn't that enough for you?

Yeah, it is.

Name: 4tran 2007-08-29 23:27 ID:31arHB7g

>>21
No, counting things is combinatorics.  Accounting is intentionally failing to count things or counting non existent things in an effort to increase a company's profit margins.

I'm under the impression that logic is a subset of mathematics, rather than the other way around.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-30 2:45 ID:waIZo6t8

>>32
Assuming you're >>13, you really need to learn English before you post here. Your responses are nonsensical and seemingly unrelated to anything that has been said. gb2/lang/.

If you're not >>13, then you're just a garden variety idiot.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-30 5:27 ID:PblJZQxw

OMG, i thought on 4Chan there would be more intelligent nerds, but i failed.

Math is not really science however it is of course cross-linked with every thinkable kind of things even in our daily life!

>>3 is right.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-30 6:25 ID:iqSjHh7V

>>35

troll award

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-30 6:36 ID:wxVK8nm+

>>36
troll award

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-30 17:15 ID:OmgSSPOu

>>28
>philosophers aren't even SURE if they exist

Yes they are. Much of philosophy treats existence as the only fact that you can stand on to come to any conclusion. While no one might be able to speculate as to anything else about existence, contemplating that we DO exist is possibly the only real fact that we have.

"I think, therefore I am." - Rene Descartes

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-30 17:21 ID:d/lkX0ir

>>38
" treats existence as the only fact that you can stand on to come to any conclusion"

so it's an axiom, and it's an axiom because it can't be verified from something else.

also, descartes's quote is a non-sequitur, and he knew it.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-30 17:54 ID:OmgSSPOu

Existence is verified by existing. Any phenomenon happening at all verifies existence at least at the simplest and least implicative form. Therefore, calling it non sequitur is bollocks, tbh.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-30 18:35 ID:d/lkX0ir

>>40
thats another axiom usually taken as self-evident, one that presumably was thrown out when descartes threw out all assumptions.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-30 19:53 ID:pAAt3I41

>>41
It would seem axioms are necessary for logical deduction though, so we'll have to assume he didn't. Or he may have considered it not of the outside world.

Gotta love 'ol Dessy, though;
Descartes: To find real truth, I must throw away all my assumptions, and discover the world in terms of only the most self-evident realizations.
Impartial Observer: Yeah, sure, sounds interesting. Go for it!
Descartes: But as I have no faith in the world around me, I doubt, and as I doubt, I think, and as I think, I am.
IO: Wow, that's pretty deep. But it kind of makes sense. I think you're on to something here.
Descartes: There is a God.
IO: Hey, wait, I'm not following you there. I think you missed a couple o...
Descartes: The human soul is separate from the body, and controls the body like a clockwork through the pineal gland.
IO: Dude, if you are high, just say so.

So yeah, no stranger to non-sequiturs.
Dude didn't need no stinkin' 'scientific method'.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-30 20:16 ID:OmgSSPOu

^^you took the last two quotes completely out of context.

The second one out of context is particularly bad, and people taking that same part out of context is exactly why so many people interpret what he said as dualism.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-30 20:22 ID:kL76ZAD5

Mathematical philosophy contains the secrets to getting laid

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-30 22:10 ID:iqSjHh7V

>>44

dick and pussy intersect iff pussy(slutty) is true amirite

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-31 3:54 ID:kJRQKXKH

>>43
Well, yeah, it's more fun that way. Still, now I'm curious. He did claim those things, so how is that not dualism?
And concluding the existence of God was pretty much the second step, right after the existance of the self. It's what he used to affirm the reality of his senses and the outside world, right?

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-31 13:22 ID:vIn26fwJ

We need a /phil/ board around here. Holy shit, can you imagine? The trolling/faggotry there would rival /newpol/.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-31 15:31 ID:W0KjwxtZ

>>46 because he always unified these things in the end. As a scientist, he stressed how important consistency is to logical thinking (see: the scientific method - utterly relies on objective consistency). The separation of science and belief (and soul and body) is dualism, and such is the antithesis of what he describes as logical thought through his method of thinking (and philosophy/science in general, in my opinion).

Yea he mentions god, but his description of god is so non-fundamentalist and so non-anthropomorphic that you could replace "God" with "the infinite universe" and it wouldn't detract from his philosophy much, if at all.

As for the reality of his senses, He used an analogy of candle wax in his second meditation to state that they aren't part of any objective reality (as they aren't), in the sense that the sounds and colors we take in are created in our own mind (as they are). His "dualism," if one might consider it that, is merely considering the relationship between our subjective senses' input and the objective world that our perceptions feed from.

>>47 good god it would be terrible.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-31 15:57 ID:5n2YVBJH

>>48

What infinite universe?

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-01 17:57 ID:Sa+xWPCb

49>> the one we live in.

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-01 18:39 ID:oWIzoNHN

>>50
You mean the one I live in, figment-of-my-imagination-san.

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-02 2:14 ID:zqsVGIcp

math is the language of science...
because with math... science is made easier...
you can put equations for cellular respiration... for photosynthesis... for chemical reaction and stuff like that

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-02 10:10 ID:eGm3fXIz

>>50

At any given point in time, the radius of the universe is finite.

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-02 11:25 ID:PNp1c5mZ

>>53

Not metaphysically!

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-02 11:33 ID:uQuXZ89L

Everyone should have a mathematical philosophy, I swear its awesome

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-02 17:09 ID:fb7pZGbi

>>53 the matter in the universe is finite, yea, but the empty space in the universe is looking infinite to general relativity and string/quantum theory (especially if you take into account time, which is infinite, as the 4th dimension) and [at least most western] philosophy for that matter.

Regardless, Descartes description of god is very non-fundamentalist and if you want to draw conclusions from what he is saying you should look at the content and not the fact that he refers to the infinite as god.

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-02 17:10 ID:mmlI1CUm

>>53

even if the universe is expanding at the speed of light?

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-02 19:10 ID:Zgu1AzN0

>>54
wut
>>56
"the matter in the universe is finite, yea, but the empty space in the universe is looking infinite to general relativity and string/quantum theory"

What the fuck are you talking about? There's no indication that "time" as we know it will go on "forever"

>>57
Yes. THE UNIVERSE HAS A CERTAIN RADIUS, AT THIS VERY SECOND. THAT'S HOW WE DETERMINE HOW LONG AGO THE BIG BANG HAPPENED.

The universe might well not expand forever, that depends on its average density, it might expand to a certain radius, then collapse back in on itself.

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-02 19:13 ID:mmlI1CUm

>>58

visible universe != universe.

if the edge of the universe is expanding at the speed of light, then thanks to mr einstein and his time dilation, it is instantaneously an infinite radius.

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-02 20:10 ID:Heaven

>>56
descartes believed in dualism and a supernatural mind because he didn't want to accept determinism as it applies to human nature.  i.e. he was a free will faggot.

>>59
no, in fact, that's completely wrong, because the speed of light is finite and constant.  in other words, it doesn't travel an infinite amount of space in any finite amount of time, which is less than what youre asserting with that shit you just pulled out of your ass.  to prove you wrong, i'm going to measure the distance the information on the fiber optice wire im about to transmit this information on is from my computer.  right now the distance its close to 0.  now i'm going to click reply, and you let me know if it gets to you in less than instanfuckingtaneously seconds.

Name: 4tran 2007-09-02 21:04 ID:6R7yMrVB

>>56 - 60
Wow, you guys totally fail GR.

>>56
We don't actually know whether any of those are finite.  It is true that there are a finite number of particles in the visible universe, but we don't know if there is more outside.

>>58
You're assuming that space has a global positive curvature, which is not proven.  A negative or zero curvature would indicate an infnitely large universe.  The current data suggests that the world is incredibly close to zero curvature (ie flat).

As you said, a lot depends on the mass density and cosmological constant.

>>59
That is not how time dilation works.

>>60
Time varying metrics can cause things to separate faster than light (eg inflation theories).  Light is defined to travel along null geodesics.  Any particle that tries to follow photons will still be slower.

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-02 23:34 ID:Heaven

>>61
So are you saying the speed of light is not finite or constant?

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-03 14:37 ID:67kbztCY

If you are not sure you exist, you either have a severe mental disorder or you're trying to get attention.

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-03 17:59 ID:CNS9khwM

>>58
>"What the fuck are you talking about? There's no indication that "time" as we know it will go on "forever""

No but if you factor in the relativity of time, the big bang was technically infinity years ago, meaning that even the universe ends, time has been forever.

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-03 20:33 ID:Heaven

>>64
you're pretty damn retarded.

Name: RedCream 2007-09-04 4:11 ID:qh/92BHS

>>64
Stating that:

14 billion years = ∞

... will get you thrown out on your ear from any university.  Good luck proving that.

The truth is that you're unable to distinguish between these things:

→ ↔

One is a bounded line, and the other is an unbounded line.  Both are "infinite" ... yet one still has a STARTING POINT.

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-04 5:13 ID:x+Wdo45y

>>66
you blatant, blatant faggot.

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-04 10:21 ID:ZbhI6sIp

>>14 sex is complex Biology

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-04 14:19 ID:wQ7C3mpL

>>66

14 billion years ago in time as it passes at the surface of the earth, yea. But Time is relative. According to Einstein's field equations, the presence of matter pulls on the geometry of space time, and a singularity, being infinitely dense, has infinite density - so the space-time continuum is stretched by an infinite amount.

>"will get you thrown out on your ear from any university"

I guess Stephan Hawking gets thrown out all the time then.

Name: RedCream 2007-09-04 14:31 ID:9vn5yL2J

>>69
You must be talking about this:

http://www.scienceacademy.co.uk/page.asp?id=1516

... which is not what we're talking about.  If you change the definition of time as you approach the Big Bang, then you're outside the sense of the claim of 14 billion years.

An infinite quantity of infinitesimals still arrives at a finite number.  Again, make your claim in university and they'll toss you out on your ear.

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-04 15:01 ID:wQ7C3mpL

How the fuck is that not what we're talking about?

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-04 15:03 ID:/HijQnCI

All of this is a lie, the Earth is only around six thousand years old.

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-04 15:39 ID:9KAq6Wc9

>>70
you blatant, blatant faggot

Name: RedCream 2007-09-04 16:48 ID:IhfWmMWU

>>71
"Imaginary time"?  Time at a "right angle" to the timestream we experience?  14 billion years is not a piece of imaginary time -- whatever the fuck THAT is.  Again, when you change the definition of time, then your "infinity" assertion becomes nonsensical.

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-04 19:22 ID:wQ7C3mpL

I never said "imaginary" time or "right angle," ever. Don't know where you pulled that from.

- Time slows down at points in space-time where gravitational pull is stronger.
-Gravitational pull shares a relationship to mass.
-The mass of the singularity at the point of the big bang was infinitely dense.

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-04 19:54 ID:Heaven

>>75
if you asked "how is that not what we're talking about" in reference to a link that he said "this is not what we're talking about" about, then, imo, you're kind of asserting that we were all talking about whatever was in that link.

just sayin'

Name: 4tran 2007-09-05 5:17 ID:Pq04upPJ

>>62
After some thought, I can say that light speed is still constant and finite in all reference frames.  Because light travels along null geodesics, the 4-length of any path it takes is 0.  4-lengths are invariant, and hence equal in all inertial reference frames.  A 0 4-length means that it travels the same distance in space and in time (c=1 units).

>>70
An infinite # of infinitesimals is not always finite.  There are plenty of diverging integrals over a finite domain.

The article is too coarse; I'm not sure exactly how they're defining imaginary time, other than it being perpendicular (probably in the same sense that imaginary numbers are perpendicular to the real numbers).

>>75
Whose reference frame are you talking about?  A photon will see all of existence appear and disappear in an instant.  For something stuck in a black hole singularity, it is not even obvious if time can still be meaningfully defined.

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