Re: Mathematical Platonism
Reply #4 - February 04, 2011, 09:03 PM
Yes, I agree with all of you that numbers do describe our universe very well.
However, it's difficult to see exactly what is so "natural" about them. In most discussions on the philosophy of maths, we can oppose platonism to nominalism - which is the theory that all that exists are causal relationships within time/space and are part of the energy/mass nexus. Where do numbers fit in here? Clearly, they are a mental event that is used by us to describe the universe but where do they exist? Just in our mind or do they have an absolute objective existence outside of us that we can discover? If it is the latter then we open the door to something that is beyond the natural world - the world of objective numbers and mathematical principles.
Many famous contemporary mathematicians were platonists, like Godel and Penrose, believing their maths formulations were discoveries and not subjective creations - and thus, holding that there is exists apart from the natural world, an intelligible world of pure reason.
At evening, casual flocks of pigeons make
Ambiguous undulations as they sink,
Downward to darkness, on extended wings. - Stevens