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mathematicians /philosophers
thx
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.second, not all mathematicians are philosophers, and not all philosophers are mathematicians.
however, some mathematicians are also philosophers because they, for example, use their interpretation of their maths to try and make sense and form of the world around them.
There is also the domain of objective thought as found in the Objectivist philosophy. Objectivism asserts that concepts possess a mathematical aspect in the form of measurment which enables knowledge to branch logically from the directly perceived.
For a detailed explanation of this see, "Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology" by Ayn Rand.
mibn2cweus has obviously been reading some philosophy texts with lots of big words in them. (And I thought Nietzsche was heavy going!).
As a humble graduate mathematician, with a love of philosophy, might I simply suggest that an ability to analyse and process logical thought is necessary for both mathematics and philosophy?
Chris
It can also be described as a philosophy in itself - link.
The other lot, the Rationalists (Descartes, for example) believed that you could know everything that there was to know by logically working through things (mathematically, for example) without ever having to leave your room.
The most reliable logic form is maths, and so quite a few Philosophers dabbled in maths in attempt to acquire more knowledge of the world.
[can you tell i'm a physicist? ;)]
Science is a method for understanding (gaining knowledge about) the nature of the physical world.
Since measurement is involved in virtually all aspects of determining the nature of objects in the physical world, mathematics is a cornerstone of science.
Philosophy is the study of what constitutes knowledge and what its purpose is so all three are different but intimately related.
mibn2cweus has got some very odd ideas about what mathematics is. His wording seems closer to defining arithmetic than mathematics. (Arithmetic, incidentally, has no more to do with Mathematics than handwriting has to do with English). The certificate on my wall says that my degree is in 'mathematics as a double subject' but not one part of my studies ever had anything to do with measurement. (I must assume that mibn2cweus has never come across real mathematics such as set theory, group theory, ring theory, field theory, linear and non-linear analysis, differential and integral calculus, chaos theory, symbolic logic, diophantine equations, etc. None of these branches of mathematics have got anything to do with measurement!).
Despite fo3nix being one of those nasty physicists, I find myself generally agreeing with his view of the relationship between mathematics and science (and totally disagreeing with mibn2cweus!). Pure mathematics, at its finest, is an art form. Applied mathematics is a tool. Measurement does not form an intrinsic part of either of them.
The first thing any mathematician has to, when researching a new area of mathematics, is to determine what may be regarded as axiomatic and what has to be investigated or proved. The same principles apply to the study of philosophy. Maybe that's why philosophers often have an interest in mathematics?
Chris
Gef: most are crap at it because either they do not put much effort into it (instead, learning about other things), or (considering a-levels, etc.) chemistry is much more about learning lots and lots of facts, much like a biology a-level. maybe physicists are generally not as good as this as people only studying biology and chemistry (presumably a lot to become doctors) are? i'm not sure.
but you must agree that Neils Bohr was a physicist, and much of modern chemistry is based on his model of the atom, and subsequent discoveries. J J Thompson, discoverer of the electron (essentially, the particle that is responsible for a lot of important chemical processes), was also a physicist.
Buenchico: it may settle your stomach to learn that I am a theoretical physicist, and thus do appreciate more of the finer qualities of mathematics than some of my straight physics friends.
Lord have mercy on me a sinner with �very odd ideas� cast down from the ivory tower!
Oh, by the way, �odd ideas� are not necessarily bad or evil. Relativity and string theory are pretty damn weird to most people.
I'm definitely not looking for a fight with nibn2cweus (who makes many helpful & positive contributions to AB) but since he's asked a question, he deserves an answer:
Q: "...what would be the proper term to use to describe the process of using quantity of units to measure length, radius, density, temperature, etc? "
A: "Metrology"
Chris
yes, this is true. its just a physics thing; we try and say that everything is based on physics.
at the heart of chemistry, and i mean the real heart.. its just physics. explaining why electrons are in subshells, 1s2 and all that stuff is nothing but atomic physics. but yea, lots and lots of chemistry is so far removed from the original physics that it is very loosely physics (hence a different name, "chemistry").
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