The_Blue_Rider said:
FalloutJack said:
Zack1501 said:
Math can only be disproven by philosophy. Of course, some math IS less math and more philosophy...and also some philosophers are extreme mathmaticians. So...only math can disprove math after all?
"Ayah! Magic can only be defeated magic!"
Nope, sticking with my guns. Philosophy.
Im pretty sure actual guns could disprove math as well. No ones going to try argue with your theories when threatened with the prospect of becoming swiss cheese.
OT: I've only just passed IGSCE math and I can tell that this is wrong. Not because I know math incredibly well, but more because every time I see a statement like this I know that people who are paid to do this have already analyzed the problem and declared it false.
"This...statement...is...false.
Don'tthinkaboutit! Don'tthinkaboutit!"
*Looks down at guns, then back at the post, then down at the guns again, then grins*
I've constructed a logical hypothesis for solving my problems with violence!
OT: I always felt that dedicated mathmaticians were essentially paid to create highly-elaborate problems and then watch others attempt to unravel them. I believe it's fair that I started calling bullshit when we started on imaginary numbers, as though working with ones that actually exist wasn't good enough. It's at about...that point right there that math becomes a bit of an ass-pull philosophy and less of a science, unless of course you mean the kind of science that is all theory and no possible proof.
The thing about philosophy is that it's brilliant and completely ridiculous all at once, and math's inexorable link with it gives that subject the same quality. It holds a double-standard of being both logical and not. In philosophy, you can hammer out some very depthy thoughts and meditations about anything in the world...and yet you can also defeat the purpose with one dismissal of "That argument would not fit in with the perception I am conveying", even if...you know...it DOES. Similarly, math is this very precise and intricate thing right up until you start building things into it that are NOT precise and intricate that cause paradoxes by design, for the express purpose of making X
not equal Y. And then, you ASK why!
"What is it all for?", I ask sometimes. Math has some very practical and profound applications in mostly everything we do. SOMEWHERE in there, it is true, in essense. But then you add on some bells and whistles that seem there for their own sake, without a real reason other than to be bells and whistles and so on. And...funny story. A bit of philosophy for you. Math is creating a universal map to understand said universe, but it does not actually know the universe. The universe actually makes no distinction if two and two equal four, since it...just IS. We are, therefore, creating our OWN universe in the universe, which is an effect of post-modernism long before we were into ANY modernism.
Yeah, I do profound. Next week, I'll tell you how I proved that god can be an asshole and ace one of my courses doing just that.