How platonistic is your attitude towards mathematics? - MathOverflow [closed] most recent 30 from http://mathoverflow.net 2013-05-24T02:13:13Z http://mathoverflow.net/feeds/question/4733 http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://mathoverflow.net/questions/4733/how-platonistic-is-your-attitude-towards-mathematics How platonistic is your attitude towards mathematics? Thomas Riepe 2009-11-09T15:45:43Z 2009-11-11T03:36:11Z <p>A <a href="http://golem.ph.utexas.edu/category/2009/11/interview_with_manin.html#c029001" rel="nofollow" title="link to n-cat cafe">discussion in the n-category cafe</a> about Manin's 'emotional Platonism' made me wonder how such a perception of mathematics is distributed among mathematicians and how that influences attitudes towards specific concepts and themes. How is it with you? Is 'Platonism' something you can connect with, something (ir)relevant, or even contrary your attitude towards math for you? </p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/4733/how-platonistic-is-your-attitude-towards-mathematics/4739#4739 Answer by Anna Varvak for How platonistic is your attitude towards mathematics? Anna Varvak 2009-11-09T16:30:59Z 2009-11-09T16:30:59Z <p>I must admit that I don't understand when mathematicians debate whether doing mathematics is a process of creation or discovery. I see it as a cycle of creation and discovery: I discover an interesting pattern within a logical structure which is already in use, explore whether the pattern is regular within that structure, or whether I can create a new, related structure where that pattern holds true.</p> <p>There is a similar process within study of human languages; a conjecture whose name for a moment escapes me claims, roughly speaking, that a person can't have a clear concept for unless she has a word for it. This conjecture is false, but it does point to the process that a person goes through: to clarify a vague concept, she explores it with the language tools at her disposal, and this exploration changes the concept. </p> <p>So, do we create concepts, or do they exist prior to the exploration? </p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/4733/how-platonistic-is-your-attitude-towards-mathematics/4740#4740 Answer by Jon Awbrey for How platonistic is your attitude towards mathematics? Jon Awbrey 2009-11-09T16:40:06Z 2009-11-11T03:36:11Z <p>The immediate occasion of the question was a comment posted at the n-Category Cafe:</p> <h2>Interview with Manin &rarr; The Wand Chooses The Wizard</h2> <blockquote> <p>I must explain to you how I imagine mathematics. I am an emotional Platonist (not a rational one: there are no rational arguments in favor of Platonism). Somehow or other, for me mathematical research is a discovery, not an invention. I imagine for myself a great castle, or something like that, and you gradually start seeing its contours through the deep mist, and begin to investigate something. How you formulate what it is you've seen depends on your type of thinking and on the scale of what you have seen, and on the social circumstances around you, and so on.</p> <p>Yuri Manin, in Mikhail Gelfand (interviewer), Mark Saul (translator), "We Do Not Choose Our Profession, It Chooses Us : Interview with Yuri Manin", <em>Notices of the AMS</em> 56 (November 2009), 1268&ndash;1274.</p> </blockquote> <p>Dialogging of comments at the n-Category Cafe is rather highly selective, so I've made a practice of backing up my comments on that blog at the Inquiry List. In particular, my comments on this question and the context out of which it arose will be logged on <a href="http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2009-November/thread.html#3578" rel="nofollow">this thread</a>.</p> <p>I see an important question here, but maybe it's a question that lurks beneath the surface appearance of an opinon poll. At any rate, I am reading the second person address of the question as more rhetorical than essential.</p> <p>But I'm still getting used to this space, so I may spend some time fiddling with this entry until I see what can be done here.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/4733/how-platonistic-is-your-attitude-towards-mathematics/4771#4771 Answer by fedja for How platonistic is your attitude towards mathematics? fedja 2009-11-09T20:30:10Z 2009-11-09T20:30:10Z <p>I don't know if it makes much sense at all to talk of such matters since all the words like "invention", "discovery", "exist", "create" are not something that is well-defined with sharp boundaries and the same clear meaning to everyone. Still, risking to bring the wrath of our respected administrator, who has already made it clear that this forum is ill-suited for such discssions, on my poor head, I'll try to answer. </p> <p>I am quite strongly on the Platonic side myself, which, in layman terms, means that I believe that in the phrase "five trees" or "five dinosaurs" the object (or, if you want, relation but the distinction between "objects" and "relations" is also quite mirky) described by the word "five" exists in much stronger sense than the objects described by the words "tree" and "dinosaur" and that, while the language we use to describe mathematics and the order in which we look at things are human-dependent (and, thus, "created"), the mathematics itself exists out there independently of the mankind (and, therefore, "discovered").</p> <p>The simplest example is the notion of a number. The words "one, two, three" are arbitrary and created by humans but the fact that sometimes you can give each person in the tribe one egg (or whatever they used to eat in the prehistoric times) and everybody will get his share and sometimes you cannot and that this result does not depend on whether you start distributing eggs starting from the chief or from the youngest and least distinguished member of the tribe is not. But this fact is just one (and rather trivial) manifestation of a relation called "number" in English. This manifestation certainly was observed (="discovered") and not created. This seems hard to argue with, but if you accept that the elementary arithmetic "exists" independently of the observer and (which is pretty much the same) its properties do not depend on who is watching its manifestations, you'll have to agree that the entire mathematics as we know it is out there. The question for me is rather whether mathematics is <em>everything</em> that is out there or there is also something else that escapes the nets of logic and counting. </p> <p>Of course, this all is just my personal view on things and some of you may have radically different systems of beliefs. It all doesn't really matter. One can believe whatever he wants about mathematics as long as he sticks to the rules of the game when doing it and considers mathematical research a decent human activity not less (though, probably, not more either) important than, say, growing strange green things, fighting small invisible creatures, programming mischievious electrochemical machines, and designing crazy contraptions. </p>