I think there is no need to defend maths as being able to produce knowledge , pi = 3.142 the ratio of the diameter to radius of a circle is known, and is knowledge. Given X and an equation we can find Y. This does not need defending.Comte de Saint-Germain wrote:Actually, you haven't said why it is knowledge. The point is that knowledge can be defined quite clearly. The problem with mathematics is that if one accepts that as knowledge, one is basically allowing purely analytical statements. There's nothing in mathematics that we didn't put there.Little Idiot wrote:@ SoS and anyone else interested
My 'maths post'
I proved and demonstrated once already that mathematical knowledge exists without dependence on the empirical, you failed to dispute that point as I recall, please feel free to refer me to the post where you did dispute that point, if I missed it or if I am in error - as I may be, having but the intellect of a human.
<sniggers at the fools who think intellect is measure in volume terms, such as 'planet size'>
You know this, as you dont actually commit to saying mathd does not give knowledge, which is a shame, we could do with a laugh.
You do read English, dont you?So because Penrose thinks x it must be the case? What's the relevance of Penrose or the 'vast majority' of the academic maths community? Mathematical platonism isn't as popular as it used to be, by the way. Neither is what I'm suggesting popular, but I find it hard to believe we are now submitting these question to the popular vote, or to the discretion of Penrose.DISCLAIMER 'beyond*' and 'start*' are spatial and temporal term applied out side the space-time domain for suggestion of meaning - this does not suggest that I am ignorant of the inappropriate use of these terms, they are used for simplicity and for the purpose of suggestive communication only.
Assuming you can not disprove my earlier proof - in maths we do have proofs of course, assuming you can not dismiss my argument; then I have shown, and Penrose agrees (he's a mathematician, physicist and a lot smarter than anyone here even 'the planet' ) - I suggest tentatively along with the vast majority of the academic maths community - that maths describes an existence and a reality beyond the empirical.
I proved it my self first with 'odds and evens' (proof which no one could dismiss), the used my proof as foundation to link into Penrose. I and he prove the same point, I and my peers working with odds and evens, he and his working with the cosmos and residue from pre-big-bang. If I prove odds and even, thats OK, its a suitable level, if I claim to prove the existence of a cosmos before space time, and suggest examination of the background radiation can emperically show this, you must agree its best I use Penrose or other proffessors to argue the point?
Sorry, thats an epic fail for you.This is so awful it doesn't deserve a response.The fact that it is possible to construct mathematical models as Penrose (which may or may not be accurate – that’s not the point at this stage) does in the clip I link below of 'beyond*' the 'start*' of our space-time, proves beyond a shadow of a doubt that our maths does not need our space-time to be real, and thus does not need our empirical or physical to be real. Can you dispute that?
Not only does it prove mathematics can exist outside space time, it proves the principle of a human inside space-time discovering knowledge about 'beyond*' space-time, and I am happy to say it is empirically testable - we can in principle test the current physical world for traces of the previous one; he uses the analogy of looking at the ripples on a pond AFTER the rain stops to figure out where each rain drop fell.
Note that I am commenting on Penrose and only repeating his words.
That means you are saying in effect - even though Penrose holds one of the most prestigious chairs in maths, his work is so wrong that a simple assertion from me is all it takes to dismiss it.
Even if you were a maths proffessor that would be a laughable attitude, coming from you its just classic.

Not only do they 'let me' but I am paid a top salary in one of the most presitigious schools in the country to do so. They were so keen to 'let me' they paid for my international flight and hotel to come for interview when they were looking for elite skilled teachers.I still can't believe they let you teach physics to people.Sorry for over editorializing the clip, but it makes me think; 'FUCK FUCK FUCK! that’s Fucking awsome.'
Note; I never swear - when did I last swear on the forum? and the fact that I did so 4 times here doesn’t even begin to show how Fucking awesome that is.![]()
But your casual comment (like your earlier one line dismissal of a maths proffessor) fails completely to actually counter any thing in my post, I am sure you understand that.
Funny thing that.Yeah. No one takes Penrose - or Hameroff for that matter - seriously. It's a bit like you and jamest - no one takes you seriously either.Anyway I thought I'd share the link with you guys, now, honest answer please; doesnt that make you think the same?
(see how I give you an easy opener for a counter attack? I dont give a #0($ )
Bohr creditted the ancient traditions for his ideas.
Max Planck stated clearly that consciousness was behind all existence (I quote him earlier).
John Wheeler (last of the 'fathers of QM') said "No phenomenon is a real phenomenon until it is an observed phenomenon." As he aged (and had a heart attack) said he had only time left to focus on one idead and spent his last years on the point that "human consciousness shapes not only the present but the past as well" here is a link to Discover in 2002where at age 90 (with 6 years left to live) he confirms this. There is also a bit on his 'delayed choice experiment' where a photons path can change retro-spectively by millions of light years when a human observes it.
So it is fair to say the majority of the early scientists who descovered QM took this idea of 'consciousness as a foundation for reality' seriously. Its equally true to say that there are respectable current scientists who take it seriously.
Equally it is obviously valid to say "No one takes Penrose - or Hameroff for that matter - seriously." is both a profound error, and a statement from ignorance. You said yourself that we dont submit these things to public vote.
It is far more accurate to say nobody takes YOU seriously.
Again, as I told you earlier, this is not just about you.Strawman. My argument never asserted that we needed the empirical to get knowledge, it established empiricism as a source of knowledge. Second, metaphysics isn't invalid because all knowledge depends on the physical, metaphysics is a failed project because there is no evidence or argument for its possibility.The fact that it destroys your J team's petty argument (that we need the emperical to get knowledge, that metaphysics is invalid because all knowledge depends on the physical etc.) is trivial compared to what it actually really means.
SD made the exact claim more than once in this thread. As have others.
James and I have shown several foundations for metaphysics.
Modern QM is based on ideas of Bohr, which he stated clearly were drawn from ancient metaphysical knowledge. The principle of complementary opposites is his family moto, and 'yin and yang' is central to his coat of arms.
The question of previous or next universes is entirely separate from metaphysics.What it means is that we have a verifiable way of knowing if there have been previous universes.
Also it means we have at least one way of knowing not dependent upon the emperical, which is good as we agree emperical method cant find Truth.

That is fundamental error.
Knowledge that there was a previous universe before this one will provide an answer to metaphysical questions about the distant future and past of the universe, including the 'past* before* our time', and answer clearly the ultimate fate of the cosmos.