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| Prerequisite #1: Ending the Metaphysics of Math |
Posted by Karl on Monday February 09, @09:03AM
from the dept.
In order to move past modernism (and postmodernism) we have to cough up the last hairball of the old metaphysics that keeps us imagining a split between the sciences and the arts. The place to begin is with the last bastion of elitist intellectualism: mathematics.
What I'm talking about is the book Where Mathematics Comes From, by George Lakoff and Rafael Nunez. This has gotta sound like dry stuff--but trust me, it's important, because math is one of those things that has a domino effect on everything else: culture, science, our sense of human dignity. This book is important because the authors show how modern empiricism has finally toppled the ancient Pythagorean and Platonic religion of transcendent mathematics. And the howls of protest about the book make it clear that a very large proportion of today's scientists, engineers and programmers believe, secretly or openly, in this religion.
Over the past few centuries we've learned that the sun does not revolve around the earth. We've learned that we evolved from smaller (I won't say lesser) creatures over aeons of time. We've learned that our behavior is that of a particular kind of primate, and that even our most sophisticated endeavors all reflect our evolutionary heritage.
But, throughout this process of social disappointment and readjustment, we've always been able to say that at least mathematics is a real and incontrovertible link to the Divine. At least here, in the fortress of our own minds, we can transcend our earthly shell.
Well, no, we can't.
As Lakoff and Nunez show in exhaustive detail in this book, cognitive science has uncovered how the human thought processes underlying mathematical reasoning actually work. These thought processes, it turns out, aren't just different from the classical and Platonic models of human reasoning--they preclude them. Very briefly put, we reason mathematically by using systems of metaphor that are grounded in our use of the human body and in its sensorimotor system. There is no evidence that mathematical reasoning (as opposed to calculation) can be done in any other way and still be what we would recognize as mathematical. Mathematical thinking, it turns out, has no features that are different from other kinds of thought, it simply organizes these mental activities in a particular way.
At the very root of math lies metaphor; and at the root of metaphor lies the human body, which is both the dictionary and grammar of the metaphor-using brain. Mathematics never breaks free of its grounding in human existence; it can't (although, once again, calculation can be performed by machines, but calculation is not mathematical reasoning). The pythagorean religion is dead with our generation.
Of course, there have been rumblings of this sort for over a century. Russel and Godel undermined the self-consistency of math; but they didn't touch the issue of transcendence. The results of the cognitive scientists are of a completely different order, because not only have they shown that we perform math using the metaphor system grounded in our animal bodies; one could continue to argue that some sort of perfect transcendental mathematics exists that we clumsily mimic using our crude brains. In fact, the results of cognitive studies have shown that our actual ways of thinking about math indicate clearly that no such transcendent mathematical realm exists.
To understand that argument, you should read the book. I will say, however, that over the years I've known many people who are literally fanatical in their Pythagorean beliefs. It's very common for professionals and scientists to adhere to a quiet faith in the existence of a realm of mathematical truth that exists outside the universe itself, eternal and inviolable. The level of fanaticism in such people is often so deep that they will never accept the findings of Lakoff and Nunez, no matter how they're explained. In this, our best and brightest descend to the level of the worst religious fanatics that they themselves hold in contempt.
A perfect example is provided by one of the customer reviews of the book on Amazon.com's website. Here's how he starts out:
Firstly, I must admit I have not read the book.
It gets better. He goes on to say, ...The Book, "Where Mathematics Comes From" is flawed in that it attempts to describe the very mathematics that determines who we are and how our metaphorical conceptions evolve. We live in a Universe whose processes are determined by mathematical and physical laws. As such our embodied metaphorically predisposed minds are very much a product of that mathematics. Turner and Nunez have erred on this point. Our metaphors may determine how we perceive mathematics but, more importantly, it is the mathematics that determines how we become predisposed to use metaphor.
I've bolded the key indicator of where this reviewer's reasoning goes completely astray. He or she begins with the assumption that mathematics exists outside the universe, and shapes it from outside via actually existent, physical laws. In fact, scientists today tend to view physical laws as formulations to describe pre-existing phenomena; they are descriptions, not laws. The old way of thinking is that Newton saw the law of gravity as it exists in the mind of God; the modern view is that he used a special language to accurately describe a particular class of observations and potential observations. The reviewer above assumes without evidence that mathematics comes prior to physical reality, and so has no need to read the book. In fact, everything in Where Mathematics Comes From clearly shows that the world works the other way around: the orderly physical world allows us to formulate reliable descriptions of it using the language of mathematics.
So, dear reader, assuming that you care about such things, how adventurous are you, really? Do you believe in the old Pythagorean heaven, a perfect mathematical realm existing parallel but separate to our own? Or are you willing to strike out in a new direction, one more human-centric? I am; it's my commitment to such new directions that led to the name of this website, after all. I want to write SF that reflects a worldview of clearly 21st century pedigree, which is why books like Where Mathematics Comes From inspire me.
What I hope will come from these studies (if I may don my SF-writer hat and look into the future) is a gradual shift in society away from an awed acceptance of the pronouncements of scientists and mathematical thinkers, towards a direct engagement with them as peers. The accuracy and value of mathematics can't be denied, especially not by the findings presented in this book; but the arrogance of an intellectual class that pretends to have a private pipeline to God in the form of mathematical truth can be reduced. Actually, there's scope for a better kind of pride now that we know the transcendent mathematical realm doesn't exist; a mathematician can no longer pretend modesty and claim he or she simply discovered what was there all along. No--you made it. Be proud of your creation, but don't hide behind the Ozma-mask of transcendence; be prepared to own mathematics as your creation.
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What is Postmodernism?
by Possum on Friday April 02, @11:30AM
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Hey Karl,
Just discovered this blog the other day. It looks promising.
I've started this book recently, and am impressed. Their argument that math is not the unique language of the universe,
but rather a human-invented language which takes advantage of certain commonly
used cognitive skills makes a great deal of sense.
This is something I have suspected for a long time, but unlike Lakoff
and Nunez, I didn't have the insight and knowledge to back up my
arguments.
Also of interest is their claim that the conceptual ideas of math can
be separated from axiomatic systems.
It hadn't occurred to me that math and logic could be separated in
this way, but in fact logic is a much more recent invention than
mathematics.
I've only read about three chapters so far, so I'll post more once
I've actually read the book.
From a previous conversation:
Possum wrote:
I'm not really sure how you see this as a hallmark of post post modern
era, however. From what I understand Post Modernist thinking is
saying that every view is valid, and that it's not sensible to speak
of a single correct view. How do you see this as contradictory to the
ideas in "Where Mathematics Comes From?" To me, it seems more that
the Post Modern Era is still in its early stages.
Karl wrote:
I don't think that the implication of "Where Mathematics Comes From" is that
every view is valid; mathematics still works, despite whatever origins it
might have in subjectivity. That the objective can grow out of the
subjective--and still be objective--is the "post-post" modern idea that I'm
focusing on in this blog. In other words, it is sensible to speak of a
single correct view in given contexts but those contexts are always pretty
tightly constrained. What's over is the era in which it was possible to
imagine one single all-encompassing view that would be true everywhere and
at all times. But the success of science over the past century shows that
it is not true that pure subjectivity is the result of abandoning this
dream. Something much more fluid is in the offing and that's what I'm
trying to nail down.
Yes that makes sense. I don't actually know too much about
postmodernism, but tend to think of myself as a postmodernist since
I've tended to agree with the few postmodernist articles I've read.
Let me illustrate my thinking, and you can tell me whether it can be
labeled as postmodern, or whether some other label applies.
To my thinking, concepts (as well as math and logic) are a form of
map. Any map can be useful to some sort of applied purpose. However,
no map should be considered "true," in the sense of perfectly defining
reality. Instead they should be considered useful (or not useful) for
a given situation. Some maps will tend to be much more helpful much
more of the time than other maps.
Do you know of any good links discussing modern and postmodern
thought? Perhaps it would be helpful to put a link to definitions or
discussions of these terms in the margin of your site, so we can all
speak the same language.
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Re: What is Postmodernism?
by Karl on Monday April 12, @01:47PM
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Well, I've started making up a list of links (see the home page for this blog). You might start with Bruno Latour's website, although he's deeply entrenched in the terminology and history of POMO and won't slow down to define his terms or give resumes of the main players.
In your post you're treading on the edge of the territory stomped by Saussure and others in their attempt to pin down the relationship between "signifier" and "signified". Concluding that there is no necessary relationship, they came up with the preposterous idea of language as totally disconnected with reality--the "prison-house of language" in which all relationships are ultimately about power and control, and description as such isn't really possible. Of course science is all about description... and it works, despite not generally worrying about the realtionship between symbol and thing. Which indicates to me that the problem of signifier vs. signified is far less important than the POMO crowd would like to admit... In any case the divide between the two only appears when you think of them as physically separate, but cognitive science is beginning to show how symbols can be thought of as parts of physical systems that include the thing symbolized. The separation between signifier and signified is bogus, in the end.
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Re: Prerequisite #1: Ending the Metaphysics of Ma
by Dan Moniz on Sunday April 25, @06:34PM
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| Hi guys! Karl, I'm very interested in this new blog and expect to be following it pretty closely. And Possum, hi to you also! I look forward to an interesting conversation, like the ones we all used to have back on Bloor and Church.
Regarding the book, I remember Karl recommending it to me when we were all at OC, and I only recently got around to buying it some months ago. I'm about a fourth of the way through, so I'll save any comments on it until I'm finished.
I agree with Possum in that having some pointers to explanatory texts about postmodernism would be good. I find the field to be intentionally closed intellectually, heavy on jargon, and light on understanding. It's hard for me to think of "postmodernist thought" or "postmodernism" as anything other than an offshoot of literary criticism that inbred its own dialect for the purposes of self-congratulatory back-patting. The same claim could be made of almost any insular-seeming field with its own specialized language, but there are usually people within those fields who do a good job of explaning them and what goes on inside them to outsiders. I don't see that in postmodernism; indeed, I see a disgust and revulsion with ever providing that.
Consequently, the document I agree with the most that says anything about postmodernism at all is Chip Morningstar's "How to Deconstruct Almost Anything", which betrays my obvious engineer-centric bias.
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