Bill Thompson 75
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2010
- Messages
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I think it's fair to say that any argument based on the digits of pi is using circular reasoning.
Dave
Thank you for the straight line. I will now go off on a tangent.
I think it's fair to say that any argument based on the digits of pi is using circular reasoning.
Dave
...because pi didn't exist in the previous state of the universe?
I agree that his arguments are logically flawed; but not in quite the way that you argue. Your statement that "a man who is absent is an absent person" is not actually an equivalent statement, since your statement involves two identical identities, whereas his statement involves a set and a sub-set of identities.
Take the first part of his statement, "A system that contains non-deterministic action". This statement does not explicitly exclude deterministic action; it could, in fact, be a system that contains both deterministic and non-deterministic action. Nowhere do any of his arguments demonstrate that if some non-deterministic actions exist, therefore no deterministic actions will take place.
Thus, his conclusion that such a system is non-deterministic is fundamentally flawed, hoist upon the petard of his own faulty logic...since if by his definition a universe that can contain non-deterministic actions cannot be deterministic, then logically one must also argue that a universe that can contain determinisitic actions (as must be logically possible in his theoretical universe) cannot be non-deterministic.
The very best conclusion one could reach, if one accepted the proposition that non-deterministic actions take place, would be "In a system that contains non-deterministic action, non-deterministic actions are possible." And, of course, once we do that, we truly do have the entirely circular kind of logic that you were pointing out above.
However, the decision to do that, in your mind, might be deterministic. Since pi is fixed, the whole ball of wax remains deterministic.
Is pi truly non-deterministic? Insofar as you pick a digit to blink, you're really just picking a fixed number. Might as well pick from the number 123456789012345... You don't, offhand, know what the 124th of that sequence is, though, like pi, you could calculate a formula for it.
Actually, I think that non-deterministic is usually defined as including a mix of both deterministic and non-deterministic actions. Using your definitions, there would have to be three possible states: Deterministic, Non-deterministic and Mixed.
I was puzzled by this as well. Most of us were born into a world which contained, as far as we could determine, a pure randomising factor. There are people who don't like this for philosophical reasons, but the evidence is that the universe is non-deterministic, end of.
So, the value of Pi is not caused by the very shape and behavior of the universe?
The fact that George Washington was our first President, being information, was not caused by George Washington actually having been our first president?
I don't believe the universe is deterministic, but I don't think your reasoning provides any logical proof of it.
Causal does not equal determined.
That's a wrong analogy on your part. A set is not a proposition -- it's just data particularly organized. A circular fallacy applies to logical constructs, such as the theorem.A Theorem is a "formula, proposition, or statement in mathematics or logic deduced or to be deduced from other formulas or propositions." www.merriam-webster.com
Your analogy is false. Would you say that "an object which contains sets is itself a set" is circular?
In which case Determinism died 200 years earlier, in the 18th century, with David Hume.Determinism is the view that causality is absolute in the universe.
You mean like that the autopsy couldn't determine the cause of the death?In which case Determinism died 200 years earlier, in the 18th century, with David Hume.
Yes, it can be the basis for caused action but it does not come from causation.
So it is caused by assuming plane geometry then; it is implied by the chosen rules of logic and the chosen axioms.No, plane geometry is independent of the geometry of our universe.
Determinism is the view that causality is absolute in the universe.
So it is caused by assuming plane geometry then; it is implied by the chosen rules of logic and the chosen axioms.
I think it's fair to say that any argument based on the digits of pi is using circular reasoning.
Dave
I have not as yet been able to find the pure randomizing factor.
No, Pi is not caused by the value of Pi being consistent. That is not causality.
I explained why the premise is true and the theorems explain why the conclusion is true. That is the opposite of begging the question.