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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago

broke: "in math we get perfect certainty, but in science the best we can hope for is high probability" leopard: a problems "level of complexity" matters more than if it's formal or empirical, math or science https://t.co/Yx3PQJwlam

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3/30/2020
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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago
Replying to @natural_hazard

i think you're still secretly a Platonist when it comes to the philosophy of math or at least you still have dirty platonist thoughts in your head which i will try to evict (analogous to DD's shtick about the cartesian theatre and dualsim, but with platonism and math) https://t.co/Bbxgj82nzP

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3/30/2020
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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago
Replying to @natural_hazard

WHY am i trying to do this? why does it matter that i evict platos ghost? ...dunno This idea felt HUGE working through it because of how many labels and floating beliefs got smashed around in my head, but i've yet to find a consequence that feels important

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3/30/2020
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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago
Replying to @natural_hazard

...the closest is that mayhaps having crappy Platonist ideals floating around would eventually pressure me into believing something else even shittier. who can say onto content!

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3/30/2020
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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago
Replying to @natural_hazard

we're used to the idea that when it comes to the Real World, you're not guaranteed that you can figure out a given problem less common, but still palatable, is the idea that different empirical problems can have varying levels of difficulty

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3/30/2020
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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago
Replying to @natural_hazard

things that are falsifiable or verifiable form some of the lower tier difficulties. one black swan falsifies the white swan hypothesis. finding those extra particles verifies aspects of super symmetry harder is "what was Louise XVI last thought before dying?"

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3/30/2020
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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago
Replying to @natural_hazard

fun aside, Kevin Kelly (not that one) at CMU has made a dope framework for framing the complexity of inductive empirical problems in terms of topology. he's got an old book on it, and one of his phd peeps did same thing for stats https://t.co/kVTzqSxcFV https://t.co/dlc8sDXMs6

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3/30/2020
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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago
Replying to @natural_hazard

^(it ends up having a cool connection to borel hierarchy which has cool connections to arithmetic hierarchy. his work spawned all this thinking, but is not needed to get any of this thread)

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3/30/2020
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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago
Replying to @natural_hazard

so empirical problems come in various flavors of difficulty/unsolveability turns out, so it is with math. you can go multiple routes, turing or godel, I think it's easier to think about in terms of the halting problem, so lets stick with that.

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3/30/2020
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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago
Replying to @natural_hazard

Halting problem is a concrete example of a math problem about "computers" that just can't be solved. (halting problem is the problem of induction but for computers https://t.co/vNaq5SAa50) above that, there's an inf hierarchy of "even more uncomputable" problems, cuz why not?

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3/30/2020
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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago
Replying to @natural_hazard

though this has already sunk into pop culture, this is relatively new! for most of history, it looks like people thought that if you could put something into math, all formal question you can ask would be answerable math = simple/totally understandably ^ not quite true

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3/30/2020
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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago
Replying to @natural_hazard

so that's the upwards direction. both formal and empirical domains have problems of increasingly difficult complexity what about the downards direction? surely 1 + 1 = 2 is more sacred than any profane empirical facts? lol nah.

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3/30/2020
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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago
Replying to @natural_hazard

"math nerds prove things right? they can even completely formalize the notion of proof, and have machines verify proofs, can't they? you can't do that with the real world!" yes yes sorta common refrain, since math is about "abstract entities" things are nice and pretty...

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3/30/2020
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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago
Replying to @natural_hazard

u: numbers are "abstract entities" and thus you've got none of the yucky *nebulosity* in the real world me: wait, so you think numbers aren't part of the real world? u: um... well no, but.... they're different than other things... me: i smell plato 😡 https://t.co/wK3VWd0hE8

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3/30/2020
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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago
Replying to @natural_hazard

me: "abstract objects" are when you're brain is representing some *concrete irl thing* that is simple enough that we can all agree on how/when to ignore the nebulosity around them https://t.co/R5S2TNYrqp

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3/30/2020
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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago
Replying to @natural_hazard

we ignore nebulosity all the time (for good and bad) talking about abstract objects means you've already apriori decided to ignore nebulosity when you fuck up addition, you don't consider that a refutation of math, because it's easy to tell when you've messed up

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3/30/2020
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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago
Replying to @natural_hazard

because math (even advanced math) is actually pretty simple, it's something you can do in your head or on paper, and do it again and again, and robustly see the same results. thought there is nebulosity (cosmic rays, u drunk) , it's a lot less than in some other domains

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3/30/2020
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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago
Replying to @natural_hazard

another framing: you "know for certain" a mathy thing is true when you see a proof, or when you run a proof through a theorem prover both of these processes are susceptible to whatever bullshit demons/hallucinations you want to postulate (same as everything else)

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3/30/2020
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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago
Replying to @natural_hazard

btw I feel GREEEEEEEEEEAT about ignoring the nebulosity surrounding what i've done with my mind to believe 1 + 1 = 2 fuck cosmic rays, i bank on the lack of hallucinations 24/7/365 i'm not tryna convince you math is weak. just that it's not of a SPECIAL PLATONIC TYPE

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3/30/2020
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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago
Replying to @natural_hazard

(og inspiration for all this was this book. it explores what people actually do in their heads when doing math. fun shit. funny, it took me two reads to go from "they seem to have an obviously dumb thesis" to "ooooooooooh shit, yeah, i feel you dog") https://t.co/MlfAFmvcsh

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3/30/2020
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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago
Replying to @natural_hazard

okay, so i haven't really dunked platonism i've just given a hella plausible alternative, so why would you even want to hang with that plato hoe when you could chill with chapman, lakoff, and a leopard?

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3/30/2020
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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago
Replying to @natural_hazard

crux of my whole arg is my notion of what is going on in our heads when we think of what we call "abstract objects", and the implicit agreement to ignore, which is easy given the low nebulosity environment of symbols on paper and thoughts in heads https://t.co/L0gPLkL3wx

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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago

me: "abstract objects" are when you're brain is representing some *concrete irl thing* that is simple enough that we can all agree on how/when to ignore the nebulosity around them https://t.co/R5S2TNYrqp

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3/30/2020
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Hazard@natural_hazardover 5 years ago
Replying to @natural_hazard

again, the point: you don't need platonism to explain math it smells fishy seems to lead to other batshit thinking and it'll probably give you erectile disfunction Stay Away 😡 Stay Lucky 😎🐆

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3/30/2020