IMO the distinction between pure and applied math is artificial, or at least contingent; today’s pure math may be tomorrow’s applied math. This point was made in VKS’s comment referenced above:
Yes, we might not immediately know where a given mathematical fact will come in handy when observing the world, but by their nature, mathematical facts tell us exactly when to expect them
The question is whether anyone should believe pure maths now. If you are allowed to believe things that might possibly pay off, then the criterion excludes nothing.
Metabeleifs! Applied math concepts that seem useless now, have, in the past, become useful. Therefore, the belief that “believing in applied math concepts pays rent in experience” pays rent in experience, so therefore you should believe it.
If you believe in applied math, what are the grounds for excluding “pure” math? Most of the time “pure” just means that the mathematician makes no explicit reference to real-world applications and that the theorems are formulated in an abstract setting. Abstraction usually just boils down to figuring out exactly which hypotheses are necessary to get the conclusion you want and then dispensing with the rest.
Let’s take the theory of probability as an example. There’s nothing in the general theory that contradicts everyday, real-world probability applications. Most of the time the general theory does little other than make precise our intuitive notions and avoid the paradoxes that plague a naive approach. This is an artifact of our insistence on logic. A thorough, logical examination of just about any piece of mathematics will quickly lead to the domain “pure” math.
There are beliefs that directly pay rent, and then there are beliefs that are logical consequences of rent-paying beliefs. The same basic principles that give you applied math will also lead to pure math. We can justify spending effort on pure math on the grounds that it may pay off in the future. However, our belief in pure math is tied to our belief in logic.
If you asked whether this can be applied to something like astrology, I’d ask whether astrology was a logical consequence of beliefs that do pay rent.
Unlike scientific knowledge or other beliefs about the material world, a mathematical fact (e.g. that z follows from X1, X2,..., Xn), once proven, is beyond dispute; there is no chance that such a fact will be contradicted by future observations. One is allowed to believe mathematical facts (once proven) because they are indisputably true; that these facts pay rent is supported by VKS’s argument.
Truths of pure maths don’t pay rent in terms iof expected experience. EY has put forward a criterion of truth, correspondence, and a criterion of believability, expected experience , and pure maths fits neither. He didn’t want that to happen, and the problem remains, here and elsewhere, of how to include abstract maths and still exclude the things you don’t like. This is old ground, that the logical postivists went over in the mid 20th century.
My initial interpretation of EY’s original post is that he was explicating a scientific standard of belief that would make sense in many situations, including in reasoning about the physical world (EY’s initial examples were physical phenomena—trees falling, bowling balls dropping, phlogiston, etc.). I did not really think he was proposing the only standard of belief. This is why I was baffled by your insistence that unless a mathematical fact had made successful predictions about physical, observable phenomena, it should be evicted.
However, later in the original post EY used an example out of literary criticism, and here he appears to be applying the standard to mathematics. So, you may be on to something—perhaps EY did intend the standard to be universally applied.
It seems to me that applying EY’s standard too broadly is tantamount to scientism (which I suspect is more-less the point you were making).
Of course astrological claims pay rent. The problem with astrology is not that it’s meaningless but that it’s false, and the problem with astrologers is that they don’t pay the epistemological rent.
Also, a proof is a different thing from a mathematician saying so. The rent that is being paid there is not merely that the theorem will be asserted but that there will be a proof.
The original post does not mention astrology. If you want to spy out some place where Eliezer has said that astrological claims are meaningless, go right ahead. I am not particularly concerned with whether he has or not.
Here and now, you are talking to me, and as I pointed out, the belief can pay rent, but astrologers are not making it do so. Those who have seriously looked for evidence, have, so I understand, generally found the beliefs false.
I think this is both right and not in contradiction with the post.
The belief that pays the rent here is that there is going to be a high correlation between Mars being in conjunction with Jupiter and astrology believers born around August experiencing heightened feelings of being in danger.
That does not say anything on the “truth” of astrology itself.
Same applies to the article’s example on Wulky Wilkinsen. The belief that alienated resublimation justifies the fictional author’s retropositionality does not pay rent. The belief that failing to mention retropositionality correlates with higher chances of failing a literature test on Wilkinsen does probably pay rent.
That was the point. Its a cheat to expect astrology truths to product experiences of reading written materials about astrology, so it’s a cheat expect to pure maths truths …
That was the point. Its a cheat to expect astrology truths to product experiences of reading written materials about astrology, so it’s a cheat expect to pure maths truths …
Let me complete the ellipsis with what I actually said. A mathematical assertion leads me to expect a proof. Not merely experiences of reading written materials repeating the assertion.
Note the word “pure”. By definition, pure maths doesn’t pay off in experience. If it did, it would be applied.
IMO the distinction between pure and applied math is artificial, or at least contingent; today’s pure math may be tomorrow’s applied math. This point was made in VKS’s comment referenced above:
The question is whether anyone should believe pure maths now. If you are allowed to believe things that might possibly pay off, then the criterion excludes nothing.
Metabeleifs! Applied math concepts that seem useless now, have, in the past, become useful. Therefore, the belief that “believing in applied math concepts pays rent in experience” pays rent in experience, so therefore you should believe it.
If you believe in applied math, what are the grounds for excluding “pure” math? Most of the time “pure” just means that the mathematician makes no explicit reference to real-world applications and that the theorems are formulated in an abstract setting. Abstraction usually just boils down to figuring out exactly which hypotheses are necessary to get the conclusion you want and then dispensing with the rest.
Let’s take the theory of probability as an example. There’s nothing in the general theory that contradicts everyday, real-world probability applications. Most of the time the general theory does little other than make precise our intuitive notions and avoid the paradoxes that plague a naive approach. This is an artifact of our insistence on logic. A thorough, logical examination of just about any piece of mathematics will quickly lead to the domain “pure” math.
I am not making the statement “exclude pure math”, I am posing the question “if pure math stays, what else stays?”
Maybe post utopianism is an abstract idealisation that makes certain concepts precise.
There are beliefs that directly pay rent, and then there are beliefs that are logical consequences of rent-paying beliefs. The same basic principles that give you applied math will also lead to pure math. We can justify spending effort on pure math on the grounds that it may pay off in the future. However, our belief in pure math is tied to our belief in logic.
If you asked whether this can be applied to something like astrology, I’d ask whether astrology was a logical consequence of beliefs that do pay rent.
Unlike scientific knowledge or other beliefs about the material world, a mathematical fact (e.g. that z follows from X1, X2,..., Xn), once proven, is beyond dispute; there is no chance that such a fact will be contradicted by future observations. One is allowed to believe mathematical facts (once proven) because they are indisputably true; that these facts pay rent is supported by VKS’s argument.
Truths of pure maths don’t pay rent in terms iof expected experience. EY has put forward a criterion of truth, correspondence, and a criterion of believability, expected experience , and pure maths fits neither. He didn’t want that to happen, and the problem remains, here and elsewhere, of how to include abstract maths and still exclude the things you don’t like. This is old ground, that the logical postivists went over in the mid 20th century.
I think I see where you are going with this.
My initial interpretation of EY’s original post is that he was explicating a scientific standard of belief that would make sense in many situations, including in reasoning about the physical world (EY’s initial examples were physical phenomena—trees falling, bowling balls dropping, phlogiston, etc.). I did not really think he was proposing the only standard of belief. This is why I was baffled by your insistence that unless a mathematical fact had made successful predictions about physical, observable phenomena, it should be evicted.
However, later in the original post EY used an example out of literary criticism, and here he appears to be applying the standard to mathematics. So, you may be on to something—perhaps EY did intend the standard to be universally applied.
It seems to me that applying EY’s standard too broadly is tantamount to scientism (which I suspect is more-less the point you were making).
Here is a truth of pure mathematics: every positive integer can be expressed as a sum of four squares.
Expected experiences: there will be proofs of this theorem, proofs that I can follow through myself to check their correctness.
Et voilà!
Truth of astrology: mars in conjunction with Jupiter is dangerous for Leos
Expected experience: there will be astrology articles saying Leo’s are in danger when mars is in conjunction with Jupiter.
Of course astrological claims pay rent. The problem with astrology is not that it’s meaningless but that it’s false, and the problem with astrologers is that they don’t pay the epistemological rent.
Also, a proof is a different thing from a mathematician saying so. The rent that is being paid there is not merely that the theorem will be asserted but that there will be a proof.
Try telling Eliezer
The original post does not mention astrology. If you want to spy out some place where Eliezer has said that astrological claims are meaningless, go right ahead. I am not particularly concerned with whether he has or not.
Here and now, you are talking to me, and as I pointed out, the belief can pay rent, but astrologers are not making it do so. Those who have seriously looked for evidence, have, so I understand, generally found the beliefs false.
I think this is both right and not in contradiction with the post.
The belief that pays the rent here is that there is going to be a high correlation between Mars being in conjunction with Jupiter and astrology believers born around August experiencing heightened feelings of being in danger.
That does not say anything on the “truth” of astrology itself.
Same applies to the article’s example on Wulky Wilkinsen. The belief that alienated resublimation justifies the fictional author’s retropositionality does not pay rent. The belief that failing to mention retropositionality correlates with higher chances of failing a literature test on Wilkinsen does probably pay rent.
From that belief, the expected experience should be Leo people being less fortunate during those days.
That was the point. Its a cheat to expect astrology truths to product experiences of reading written materials about astrology, so it’s a cheat expect to pure maths truths …
Let me complete the ellipsis with what I actually said. A mathematical assertion leads me to expect a proof. Not merely experiences of reading written materials repeating the assertion.
And a proof still isnt an .experience in the relevant sense. Its not like predicting an eclipse,
What’s the difference between behaviours of non-sentient objects and behaviours of sentient people that makes one an experience and the other not?