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On Plato, the Early Church, and Modern Science: An Eclectic Meditation
November 30, 2004 | Jean F. Drew

Posted on 11/30/2004 6:21:11 PM PST by betty boop

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To: stripes1776
You can get rid of your unease: you have the good fortune of living in a time after infinitesimals were put on a sound logical footing. And in two different ways--Robinson's 'Non-standard analysis' and Kock and Lawvere's 'Synthetic Differential Geometry'. The former takes the less radical 'may be regarded as zero' approach and uses abstruse constructions from set theory to develop a hierarchy of quantities each type of which when raised to some positive power 'may be regarded as zero' from the point of view of the 'less infinitestimal' types. The latter actually puts what Newton and Leibniz did (use non-zero quantities whose square not merely can be regarded as zero, but is zereo) on a sound logical foundation, but at the cost of abandoning classical two-valued logic and replacing it with intuitionistic logic (a perfectly well behaved logic which captures the continuous variation).

Actually, it's slightly amusing in the context of this thread to note that there plainly is one case in which the church (albeit the Anglican Church) attacked science and the church was right: a pamphlet attacking Edmund Halley (who used calculus to predict the return of the eponymous comet and was a notorious 'freethinker') written by Bishop Berkeley contains (in mocking tones) a proof of the absurdity of infinitesimals in the context of classical logic.

141 posted on 12/06/2004 5:38:49 AM PST by The_Reader_David (And when they behead your own people in the wars which are to come, then you will know what this was)
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To: stripes1776
Mathematicians haven't 'forbidden' division by zero: division by zero simply doesn't make sense. At a fundamental level (with the non-negative integers) division by d (with remainder) is an operation which gives solutions to the problem

N = qd + r for 0 <= r <= N-1

Now if d = 0, r must lie outside the range for remainders (r = N). We can liberalize the definition, and instead ask for solutions to the equation with minimal r, in which case one finds that any number can be q, so the problem has too many solutions to define an operation.

At the level of generality one uses in calculus, division by a 'static' zero still makes no sense because division now is the same as multiplication by the reciprocal (the reciprocal of a being defined independently from division as the solution to ax = 1). But division by 'dynamic' zeros can sometimes be made sense of. In an old approach to real and complex functions usually called by the German name Funktiontheorie, 'removable singularities'--those where the lack of definition of a function can be removed to give a point of continuity by definining the value at the point to be the limit at the point--are always 'removed', so x/x = 1 as functions even though when x = 0 one has 0/0. Of course 5x/x = 5, while x/(x^2) = 1/x, which still makes no sense for x = 0.

142 posted on 12/06/2004 6:06:48 AM PST by The_Reader_David (And when they behead your own people in the wars which are to come, then you will know what this was)
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To: Doctor Stochastic
"Most transcendentals?" How about all? There is a construction for a continued fraction expansion from a decimal or binary expansion (for positive reals: take integer part, reciprocate the fractional part, iterate). In any event the problems persist: there are uncountably many continued fractions expansions. Most of them are not only transcendental but can't be generated algorithmically and thus require an infinite amount of data to specify, etc. I'm thus not sure what the point of confusing the rhetorical and philosophical issue by moving from the familiar from school mathematics decimal and binary expansions to continued fractions was.

Sure you get rid of base-dependence, but if one treats 'terminating' decimal, binary, ternary, . . . expansions as ending in a repeated string of zeros, the set of numbers with repeating place-value expansions is base independent--the rationals--and the really intersting break, between numbers which admit place-value expansions generated by a Turing machine and those which don't is the same as the break between numbers which admit continued fractions expansions generated by a Turing machine and those which don't.

143 posted on 12/06/2004 6:24:32 AM PST by The_Reader_David (And when they behead your own people in the wars which are to come, then you will know what this was)
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To: The_Reader_David
Mathematicians haven't 'forbidden' division by zero: division by zero simply doesn't make sense.

I love Bertarnd Russel's definition for the number one. What is it? Twenty pages long? Or is it fifty?

Yes, I was being a little loose with the language. Division by zero is undefined under the real numbers because it is not a real expression.

When I learned trigonometry, the instructor always wrote the symbol for infinity when a problem involved division by zero rather that saying it was undefined. I always liked his approach.

144 posted on 12/06/2004 6:38:00 AM PST by stripes1776
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To: The_Reader_David

I worded it badly. I meant to say that most transcendentals have no simple pattern in their continued fraction expansion (or decimal expansion also.) Of course some transcendentals such as e have "interesting" continued fraction expansions.

My overall point was that periodicity of expansions applies to rationals in decimal notation but with continued fractions, one gets the quadratic irrationalities. There isn't a good regular expansion for cubics (Jacobi doesn't always work) or for much else. It's funny to me anyway.

The algebraics are strange in some ways too, by Roth's theorem. None of them have good rational approximations. Likewise there is a (controversial because some reviewers think the paper is wrong) paper by (I think) von der Poorten claiming that no finite state machine can generate the decimal (or binary) expansion of an algebraic irrationality.


145 posted on 12/06/2004 7:15:57 AM PST by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch is der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: betty boop; Doctor Stochastic; The_Reader_David
Looks like the Pythagoreans are having a party.

Tell me, truly, does anybody really think these transcendentals (pace Doctor Stochastic and The_Reader_David) are some kind of generative sisters of Kant's Transcendental Ego? (No doubt Kant was a dropout mathematician and worded it badly!)

146 posted on 12/06/2004 7:33:15 AM PST by cornelis
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To: Matchett-PI
Christ (who dwells in ALL his elect - the invisible church) can be divided?

I wasn't suggesting that, Matchett. My point is that God knows who His elect are, but we don't. Then there is the matter of falling into a situation where we may place doctrine ahead of our duty to love God with our whole heart and soul and mind and strength, and our neighbor as ourself (which would be to flirt with idolatry). The commandment does not say, "Love thy neighbor who is elect of God." It simply says: "Love thy neighbor." I think God wants us to love our neighbor as God loves each of us, or at least as much as this is possible for us.

One other point: God saves whom He wills. We don't know much about that, either. To say otherwise seemingly implies we wish to place a limit on God. And this will not do! FWIW.

147 posted on 12/06/2004 8:06:04 AM PST by betty boop
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To: Doctor Stochastic
Not quite true. Were the expansion reversed, the universe would be compressed to a density beyond which current physical theories do not function.

Does this mean that the singularity itself is "dense?" If the physical theories do not function, how do we know this? By logical inference from an entirely hypothetical reversal of its expansion?

148 posted on 12/06/2004 8:22:00 AM PST by betty boop
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To: Eastbound

Thanks for the lovely "Greeting Card," Eastbound!


149 posted on 12/06/2004 8:24:02 AM PST by betty boop
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To: betty boop

As the densities get really big (lots of stuff packed into a small space), the methods of current physical theory no longer converge to an answer. It's not just that the errors get large (they do) but one fails to get any result at all.

This implies that new theories are needed and that experiments to select among the theories are also needed.


150 posted on 12/06/2004 8:36:19 AM PST by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch is der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: Doctor Stochastic
It's not just that the errors get large (they do) but one fails to get any result at all.... This implies that new theories are needed and that experiments to select among the theories are also needed.

It seems that the implication here that we need new theories is premised on the hypothesis that the universal expansion is factually a time-reversable process. But on what basis can we say that this is a valid statement, rather than an inference drawn from a (uncorroborated and uncorroboratable) thought experiment?

Do you see weakness in the theory of the Big Bang?

151 posted on 12/06/2004 8:50:14 AM PST by betty boop
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To: betty boop

There's no weakness in the big bang, at least the BB explains more of the observed phenomena than any competing theory. The problem is that the earliest moments (using the terms loosely) of the BB are not described well by current theory (nor by any other; they all have similar problems). All other theories do much worse; in fact, so far they all fail. (There's really only one, the steady state, and it doesn't work.)


152 posted on 12/06/2004 9:04:47 AM PST by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch is der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: Doctor Stochastic; Alamo-Girl; Eastbound; marron; Taliesan; ckilmer; escapefromboston; freeagle; ...
The problem is that the earliest moments (using the terms loosely) of the BB are not described well by current theory (nor by any other; they all have similar problems).

I think the problem is that it's probably impossible to apply the physical laws when space, time, and matter do not yet exist. It may be that science cannot tell us much about the "early universe" -- i.e., what's going on in the Planck era -- in principle, because its method cannot find anything to "work with," so to speak.

Pretty weird, huh?

153 posted on 12/06/2004 9:27:44 AM PST by betty boop
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To: betty boop
It may be that science cannot tell us much about the "early universe" -- i.e., what's going on in the Planck era -- in principle, because its method cannot find anything to "work with," so to speak. Pretty weird, huh?

"A man's gotta know his limitations."
-- Clint Eastwood as Dirty Harry

154 posted on 12/06/2004 9:35:07 AM PST by PatrickHenry (The List-O-Links for evolution threads is at my freeper homepage.)
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To: betty boop; All
Thank you so much for the ping to this fascinating discussion about infinity! I haven’t given a “two cents” on the subject yet, but can’t resist any longer, so here goes…

I’d like to take the approach of simplifying the issue for Lurkers to the thread.

Infinity of space/time is a necessary pre-condition to atheism (metaphysical naturalism). This is because a disbelief in God or someone or something “beyond” seeks to explain away the extraordinary unlikelihood of the physical constants, the beginning of real time and the unreasonableness of math in this universe as happenstance, i.e. that anything that can happen, has (the plentitude argument).

We sometimes seek to avert the concept of infinity by using a reasonable substitute. That does not however change the import of infinity.

Take pi for instance. The decimal expansion of it never repeats or terminates. Yet we use reasonable substitutes in our calculations. Zero is another. It alone is neither positive nor negative. No matter how close to zero a number might be, and no matter how effective it might be in getting a job done – it’ll never be zero. Likewise, the inability to describe a universe at Planck length does not substitute for the fact the universe had a beginning.

Returning to the plentitude argument, there is no number of multi-verses which can substitute for infinity of opportunity where from this universe would have to have arisen by happenstance.

Moreover, the beginning of real time (space/time) in this universe means that this universe is finite, not infinite. That there was a beginning is the most theological statement to ever come out of modern science.

Or to put it another way, the issue is geometry. Space/time transforms (relativity, Lorentz transformation). It is expanding from a beginning. All of the fields, waves, energy, etc. exist within space/time. A field in fact exists at all points in space/time. Thus, no space/time – nothing else in this universe.

The fact of a beginning points to something “beyond” which caused it. The alternative materialistic (metaphysically naturalist or atheist) theories suggest that this universe is the effect of a prior material cause. All that accomplishes is to move the goalpost further back to a prior beginning (multi-verse, epyrotic, imaginary time, etc.).

Theologians, philosophers and radical mathematical Platonists - on the other hand – say there is a “beyond” – a being as compared to a becoming (this universe, etc.).

In the case of the radical mathematical Platonists, that “beyond” consists of mathematical structures as existents. Even if true, there remains the issue of causation – where’d they come from? The causation question remains for those who suggest the “beyond” is a “collective consciousness” of physical existence.

This is why the fact of a beginning (finite v infinite) is such a theological statement. Every case points to an uncaused cause, a Creator, God.

155 posted on 12/06/2004 9:49:21 AM PST by Alamo-Girl
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To: The_Reader_David
Most modern philosophers read like third-rate mathematicians who haven't bothered to carefully work out what they really mean

The names in credentialed, professional philosophy have--for the most part, most of the time--impeccable reasoning. The majority of students have little reasoning, and the little they have is flawed. We ought to distinguish between real philosophers and those extracurriculars who use some of the form of philosophic process, but without the depth, breadth, and skill of real philosophers.

156 posted on 12/06/2004 10:11:51 AM PST by RightWhale (Destroy the dark; restore the light)
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To: betty boop
"Do you see weakness in the theory of the Big Bang?"

Is it possible that the Big Bang was a series of mini- implosions? Not implosions as such, but similar to a changing of ice to liquid and gases. In the process, space is created where the ice was, an environment for the liquid and gases to move around. And to reverse the process would merely expand the gases and liquid to its former solid state, using all the space that was created.

Let me try to draw the model:

Supposing the universe was an ice cube. A really big one. How to create space in the middle of an ice cube without melting the whole ice cube? Supposing three lasers, exterior to the cube, were to be aimed at a common intersection within the cube, the combined heat would shrink the molecules at the intersection and we would have a drop of water suspended in space. Suspended because the vacuum created around the drop of water would pull it into a ball-shaped drop of water. Why not a square-shaped drop of water? Because an equal pressure pull from all sides surrounding the drop of water would mould the form into a natural ball.

Maybe that's why planets are round. To remove the presense of heat would cause the drop of water to expand to its former static state, fitting snugly in the middle of the cube.

I created this model while trying to understand what a vacuum was and why planets are round and couldn't come up with anything without visualizing the universe surrounded by something to contain it.

And, of course, the container turns out to be the same as its contents, except for localized changes in form from 'solid' to 'liquid.'

Just another thought experiment. But would time be reversed in the process of re-expansion? I don't think it would be reversed as much as traversed, during the instantaneous process of crystalization.

157 posted on 12/06/2004 10:18:14 AM PST by Eastbound ("Neither a Scrooge nor a Patsy be")
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To: Eastbound
The Big Bang can be viewed as a change of state of matter. We are familiar with the solid, liquid, gas, plasma states of matter, but there are other phase-states when temperatures are very high or very low. The Big Bang was over very quickly and the universe was roughly the size it is now at the end of that phase. Under the conditions of the Big Bang at the start, the mass of the universe was about 20 pounds, and the size was submicroscopic, that was dense and hot. In the blink of an eye the universe inflated hugely and the mass jumped to 1050 stars. Or more. Keep some attention on news from CERN, that is where the search for the Higgs particle is happening. The mass is due to a non-zero rest point in the Higgs field. The phase-state change was unusual if we are familiar with only solid-liquid-gas states.
158 posted on 12/06/2004 10:35:56 AM PST by RightWhale (Destroy the dark; restore the light)
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To: betty boop
M-PI: "Christ (who dwells in ALL his elect - the invisible church) can be divided?"

betty boop: "I wasn't suggesting that, Matchett."

I thought you were since you used the phrase, "Mystical Body ...".

Do you include the totality of the visible church within that phrase?

betty boop: "My point is that God knows who His elect are, but we don't."

True. That's why I'm confused by what you've written and asked you the above question to clarify.

betty boop: "Then there is the matter of falling into a situation where we may place doctrine ahead of our duty to love God with our whole heart and soul and mind and strength, and our neighbor as ourself (which would be to flirt with idolatry). The commandment does not say, "Love thy neighbor who is elect of God." It simply says: "Love thy neighbor." I think God wants us to love our neighbor as God loves each of us, or at least as much as this is possible for us."

Oh, let me reassure you. You needn't worry that I would fall into any such situation as "putting doctrine ahead of our duty to love God and.....". Of course, I can't be responsible for what others choose to do, and in no way would I assume to be their mother.

betty boop: "One other point: God saves whom He wills. We don't know much about that, either. To say otherwise seemingly implies we wish to place a limit on God. And this will not do! FWIW."

I'm aware of that, but thank you for the reminder lesson.

When you don't want to answer a question, though, you really don't need to supply me with wordy justifications.

159 posted on 12/06/2004 10:36:17 AM PST by Matchett-PI (All DemocRATS are either religious moral relativists, libertines or anarchists.)
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To: Alamo-Girl; Eastbound; marron; Taliesan; ckilmer; escapefromboston; freeagle; Scarchin; ...
That there was a beginning is the most theological statement to ever come out of modern science.

That's the truth! One imagines this is the reason the statement doesn't sit too well with some scientists as, for instance, Stephen Hawking....

A-G, you wrote:

"Space/time transforms (relativity, Lorentz transformation). It is expanding from a beginning. All of the fields, waves, energy, etc. exist within space/time. A field in fact exists at all points in space/time. Thus, no space/time – nothing else in this universe.... The fact of a beginning points to something “beyond” which caused it.

It needs to be said!!! Thank you for this excellent and informative post, Alamo-Girl.

160 posted on 12/06/2004 10:44:40 AM PST by betty boop
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