I am not sure we are talking about the same thing anymore.
Apparently we're not. I'm talking about mathematics, and you're talking about the concept of mathematics.
Its like computer science, right. There is no abstract world of software that floats around independent of reality, and programmers don't "discover" software. We work with a very small set of rules and produce incredibly complex emergent behavior from those rules.
I think you mean computer programming. Computer science works with things such as "discovering" the Halting Problem.
You're making grand statements without any meaning, by the way, and quite possibly committing a straw man while doing so. The term "exist" has a
mathematical meaning (no, not the one you're using... the one mathematics uses... you know, "for all", "exists", that sort of thing?) Keep this meaning in mind--the
mathematical meaning of exists. Got it? Good.
Now, when we speak in terms of the abstract world of mathematics, we're speaking of things that
exist. Don't backslide now--keep track of what we're talking about. We're in mathematics land.
Now, here's the thing. SCGC denotes a particular number. Does that number
exist? That is a question in the realm of mathematics. It's a
meaningful question, I assure you. It
has an answer--I assure you. It doesn't
become true or
become false when we prove it--when we come up with a finite algorithm that is able to describe how it is
logically related to the existing set of relationships we do happen to know about. The logical extension of those relationships either includes, or does not include, SCGC.
I am saying that the GC itself is isomorphic to some mathematical statement because it is a well formed sentence of English (or whatever language it is stated in).
Sure, and unicorns and fairies are isomorphic in the same sense. They
are isomorphic. It's perfectly true that they are. But it has absolutely nothing to do with whether or not there
are unicorns, or whether or not there
are fairies. You're just saying, essentially, that everything we say here involves internet protocols. Big deal.
Yes, it's no longer what you were talking about, once we consider whether or not there actually
are unicorns, or whether or not there actually
are fairies, or whether or not there actually
does exist an SCGC. But I really don't care--it was
never what you were talking about. That itself is the entire point I was bringing up.
I mean, you can take two views of mathematics in this context. The first view, which I think is a cop-out, is that there just happens to be a world of mathematics out there and we are discovering it. The other view, which I hold, is that we are simply uncovering the emergent behavior of physical world.
What a navel gazer! Either this is true or that is true. Has it ever occurred to you that they are completely different kinds of things, and they are
both true? And that only the "discover" thing has anything to do with what mathematics is, just like only that actual creature with the horn has to do with what a unicorn is?
This "cop out"--this thing other than the "view" you take--that is not "the other view". That is another true thing.