seanieg89
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 8, 2006
- Messages
- 2,662
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2007
I have my own views on the matter which would have come up elsewhere on bos before, but I would be interested in hearing the thoughts of the mixture of (mostly) HS students, HS teachers, and undergraduates who frequent this site (without any bias from reading what I have to say first).
Some of the big questions which every view of the philosophy of mathematics should have at least a partial answer to, are:
1. What IS mathematics?
2. Would the theorems of mathematics "exist" if there were no humans to scribble things in formal language on paper?
3. Would mathematics be different in a hypothetical universe whose laws of physics differ from our own?
4. Can a choice of an axiomatic system to build a branch of mathematics be any more "correct" than another?
5. Are there any deeper truths about the world in which we live that the proof of a theorem reveals?
Feel free to share your thoughts or pose more questions along these lines, I find them very interesting to discuss!
Some of the big questions which every view of the philosophy of mathematics should have at least a partial answer to, are:
1. What IS mathematics?
2. Would the theorems of mathematics "exist" if there were no humans to scribble things in formal language on paper?
3. Would mathematics be different in a hypothetical universe whose laws of physics differ from our own?
4. Can a choice of an axiomatic system to build a branch of mathematics be any more "correct" than another?
5. Are there any deeper truths about the world in which we live that the proof of a theorem reveals?
Feel free to share your thoughts or pose more questions along these lines, I find them very interesting to discuss!