Physics Guy wrote: ↑Thu Dec 31, 2020 11:53 pm
This just sounds really dumb.
That is the hazard of quoting just a few paragraphs of a larger and complicated work. A handful of snapshots can be misleading to the person who didn’t choose, line up, and take the shots themselves. The reality is Craig is marshalling arguments originating from the debates raging between scholars about the foundation of mathematics during the 20th century.
What Craig is articulating comes straight out of the so-called “intuitionist” school and really isn’t anything the likes of a L.E.J. Brouwer hasn’t already put out there, especially in his contentious debates with David Hilbert and others. In fact, even David Hilbert and John von Neumann were ready to sacrifice actual infinities and transfinite induction in the so-called “formalist” metamathematics of the
Beweistheorie.
Craig isn’t just inventing this stuff in some dusty basement under the halls Talbot for an audience of seminary students. He is simply taking a minority position and making a defense of it so that his Cosmological argument has potential, we can’t begrudge him for doing that.
Physics Guy wrote: ↑Thu Dec 31, 2020 11:53 pm
If there really were an infinite number of red and blue books then it would be like that, because books may be real or hypothetical but numbers are numbers. The two-ness of two apples is the same as the two-ness of two unicorns.
Don’t get me wrong, I think our modern notions of set theory are correct and true, if they are correct and true then they are by necessity, so it seems to me that our universe is going to conform to it. That being said, that includes a host of assumptions and it isn’t absurd to call each of those assumptions into question.
Physics Guy wrote: ↑Thu Dec 31, 2020 11:53 pm
So I don’t see how it makes any difference whether the books are real or mathematical. If Craig thinks it does make a difference then as far as I’m concerned he’s only digging himself deeper into the hole.
Another underlying issue here is the reality of mathematical objects; Craig doesn’t think mathematical objects exist, but if they do exist they do so in an abstract manner that is causally inert with no spatiotemporal properties. Now Craig happens to be an anti-realist in this sense, but he doesn’t have to yield anything by simply pointing out that there is a difference between a mathematical object which is entirely conceptual in nature and a book with physical dimensions and dispositional properties. I mean a mathematical object and a physical book are far more different in nature than an apple and unicorn could ever be, is it really digging himself a hole to ask why we think one is going to behave just like the other?
Maybe you agree with Craig and even go so far to say that Mathematics are invented (not discovered); a human language used to describe the world. Mathematical objects are merely these conjectures we’ve fashioned much like our human alphabet that are extremely useful, but much like unicorns, just products of the human psyche.In this instance Craig can still ask the same question, on what basis do we think physical books can be treated identically to these concepts of a formal language?
Like I said before, I strongly believe Craig is wrong, but he can be wrong in interesting ways.
Lem wrote: ↑Fri Jan 01, 2021 12:08 am
Craig thinks infinity is a number?
He uses ω = א (subscript 0) as a number just like everyone else does.
Philo Sofee wrote: ↑Fri Jan 01, 2021 4:24 pm
Infinity is not a number.
Slipping into an informal use of infinity to make a point isn’t an error on Craig’s part, it happens a lot of mathematical texts.
Philo Sofee wrote: ↑Fri Jan 01, 2021 4:24 pm
Craig has been told this innumerable times.
By who, exactly?
Philo Sofee wrote: ↑Fri Jan 01, 2021 4:24 pm
You can't calculate to get to infinity anymore than you can...
Yes you can (in the sense of a maximal ordinal line), it's called transfinite induction (and recursion*) and there are rules and operations for it. All of this is assumed by both Craig and the people he is disagreeing with in the text, the mechanics are not disputed at all.