doronshadmi
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Mar 15, 2008
- Messages
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Before,Now and Afrer: G,o,d
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If Mr. Negation doesn't enter the stage, then X is not all that one gets.
epix said:So there is a good chance that he cracks the mystery of the burning Venn diagram soon.
[qimg]http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4080/4866288016_8538f2c413.jpg[/qimg]
Doron,
You haven't replied to my post yet. But I know you're going to find fault with the way I used the word, "serial."
Never mind that. Let me back away a bit to make it more clear what I'm asking.
I take it that the ordinary mathemmatical set is a special case of a complex.
Or so it seems you have said in the past.
Complexes are basically amorphous and "foggy." Like clouds they gather and dissolve.
But there is the special case were a complex is somewhat solidified with class identities.
It seems to me that you want to present the complex in it's degrees of mistiness to mathmatical solidity, by "bridges" or "linkages" that map out the degrees of numerical and class certainty.
The presentation so far is still unclear to me. It's unclear how you arrive at the kind of (let's say local-only-like) set that our mathematicians are familiar with. It's one end of the complex spectrum. I want to understand how you construct that special case.
I have some ideas, but I've not been able to fit them together in a way that shows me how it works, or at least fits together the pieces of your exposition.
Worng The Man.
Mutuality and Dependency a synonyms, so if there are different things in the same system, then we are based on not less than mutual independency, exactly as two axioms are mutual independent w.r.t each other.
"Shared", "mutual", "dependence" describe the connectivity aspect among things, where things are the connected aspect.Once again Doron not all dependencies or independencies are mutual, which is why mutual dependence refers specifically to a shared dependence (changes to one result in changes to the other) and mutual independence refers specifically to a shared independence (changes to one do not result in changes to the other). "different things in the same system" are not inherently independent nor is any independency inherently mutual. Again this is simply your imaginary “mutual independency”.
"Shared", "mutual", "dependence" describe the connectivity aspect among things, where things are the connected aspect.
Before,Now and Afrer: G,o,d
Let me help you.
The right one is: "... only within local logical constructs".
In that case you have a meta-view of X and ~X, which is not limited by any one of them (it is non-local w.r.t X or ~X).
This is not the case if X is all one gets.
1) If Y belongs NXOR ~belongs w.r.t X, then Y is Non-local w.r.t X
2) If Y belongs XOR ~belongs w.r.t X, then Y is Local w.r.t X
According to (1) and (2) definitions, X or ~X are local w.r.t ___, and ___ is non-local w.r.t X or ~X.
You've only given me examples, not definitions.
- What are X and Y? Are they sets, elements/atoms of a set or something else?
- What do you mean by "belongs"? (This question may be answered depending on your previous reply.
- Would you agree that XOR's definition basically means "one or the other, but not both"?
- Would you agree that NXOR (NOT XOR) definition is the opposite of XOR, meaning "either none or both"?
- What does ____ mean?
Wrong, (1) and (2) are definitions.
Aagin, definitions (1) and (2):
1) If A belongs NXOR ~belongs w.r.t B, then A is Non-local w.r.t B
2) If A belongs XOR ~belongs w.r.t B, then A is Local w.r.t B
According to (1) and (2) definitions, X or ~X are local w.r.t ___, and ___ is non-local w.r.t X or ~X. in X__~X example, which is a complex result of Non-locality\Locality Linkage.
X or ~X are the local aspects of X___~X linkage that are located at the ends of ___, where ___ is the non-local aspect of X___~X linkage, which extends X location or ~X location (which is a property that X or ~X do not have w.r.t ___, under X___~X linkage).
Still does not make “Mutuality and Dependency a synonyms”.
It does not matter, think general.It appears that you don't read things, you just regurgitate replies since your last few posts contain X and Y, not A and B.
Originally Posted by epix
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There is no Before, Now and After, as much there are no lower-case, middle-case and upper-case letters used in written English.
Do you understand this change?
From: %, A, B
To: %, A_B
The change is based on
Domain: Microsoft keypad
PQ = letters
~PQ = anything else but letters
The Man said:In the case of mutual dependency or mutual independency it is specifically that dependence or independence that is the “thing” that is being, well, shared.
It does not matter, think general.
No.So then, you can't answer basic questions about your "idea". Generally.
I'm just lost again.
I don't even get what serial and parallel bridging are or how a Local/Non-Local linkage produces a quantity.
Interesting that it's a quantity that has nothing to do with collection by classes or Set Theory.
But then again, I suggested a visual configuration type perception of number.
Though I doubt now that is of any use or relevance to OM.
I'm not getting the foundation for number as contemporary mathematicians understand number. If what you are presenting actually has anything to do with that (as the supposed "special case.").
Anyway I'm back to cluelessness again.
Using the exact phrases with quotes, I get "Returned no results,"
Which is a little bit surprising, because I expected at least one url leading to you.
concept of number
concept of quantity
These yield much more and a history of thought about numbers and counting.
A lot of that is too academically deep for me, at least without a foundation.
As for your approach (the Local/Non-Local Linkage), I keep trying to understand how that works, how that yields the concepts of number and quantity. And also how it's supposed to be the foundation of cognition.
In all your verbage, I'm not finding the how.
Imagine that I'm a child and show me. I need a concrete demonstration.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantity
Two basic divisions of quantity, magnitude and multitude, imply the principal distinction between continuity (continuum) and discontinuity.
...
In mathematics, magnitudes and multitudes are not only two kinds of quantity but they are also commensurable with each other.
How do we know that the two semantic dimensions are involved under a one framework, called Logic ?http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantity
Quantity in logic and semantics
In respect to quantity, propositions are grouped as universal and particular, applying to the whole subject or a part of the subject to be predicated. Accordingly, there are existential and universal quantifiers. In relation to the meaning of a construct, quantity involves two semantic dimensions: 1. extension or extent (determining the specific classes or individual instances indicated by the construct) 2. intension (content or comprehension or definition) measuring all the implications (relationships and associations involved in a construct, its intrinsic, inherent, internal, built-in, and constitutional implicit meanings and relations).
As for your approach (the Local/Non-Local Linkage), I keep trying to understand how that works, how that yields the concepts of number and quantity.
Non-locality\Locality Linkage notion is not limited to any particular representation, graphical or symbolic.Nevermind.
I can't do the graphic I wanted.
No.
You can't get basic questions and basic answers of basic ideas because you do not think general.
In order to think general you open your mind to the represented idea (or notion) and not to the particular tools (diagrams or strings of notations) that represent it.
If you really do that, then:
1) If A belongs NXOR ~belongs w.r.t B, then A is Non-local w.r.t B
2) If A belongs XOR ~belongs w.r.t B, then A is Local w.r.t B
3) Linkage is the result of (1) (2) definitions.
X___~X is (3) example, where X or ~X represent (1) and ___ represent (2).
X or ~X are the local aspects of X___~X linkage, which are located at the ends of ___, where ___ is the non-local aspect of X___~X linkage, which extends X location or ~X location (which is a property that X or ~X do not have w.r.t ___, under X___~X linkage).
Originally Posted by epix
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Non-locality is included NXOR excluded w.r.t a given domain.
Locality is included XOR excluded w.r.t a given domain.
Do you get the qualitative difference?
If you don't want to, or can't, explain your ideas clearly, then perhaps you should stop, look over your notes, and come back after you've organized your thoughts.
EDIT:
You may say that by knowing A one knows also ~A, but in that case one know both A and ~A of a given realm (abstract or not).
This is possible if both Mutuality (the ability of getting more than a single thing) AND Independency (the ability of getting a single thing) are the linked qualitative foundations of a given realm (abstract or not).
What you call "mutual dependency" is "two things that depend on each other".
What you call "mutual independency" is "two things that are not depend on each other".
But first you have to ask yourself: "What enables two things?"
Traditional Mathematics does not ask this question, and as a result it does not understand Mutuality (the ability of getting more than a single thing) AND Independency (the ability of getting a single thing) as the linked qualitative foundations of a given realm (abstract or not).
Again a boundary can be part of one of those two things or even considered as a third domain, depending on how those domains are defined.
You simply can't get http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=6202461&postcount=10987, because you have no generalization skills.But you can't even define what "belongs" mean. You invent "~belongs". You can't define what A, B, X, and ~X are. You can't even keep your variable names constant. If you're using A and B in examples 1 and 2, where do X and ~X come in? You won't acknowledge, let alone answer, someone asking if you use a layman's definition of NXOR or XOR.
If you don't want to, or can't, explain your ideas clearly, then perhaps you should stop, look over your notes, and come back after you've organized your thoughts.
Your professed “ability of getting more than a single thing” would in fact require “the ability of getting a single thing”
It can be done only by Mutually-Independent framework, where ~A,A are different but connected.it is simply a result of the fact that A defines ~A as ~A defines A.
No, it is fudamental and profound question, which you do not ask exactly because think it is trivial by taking things obviously, without understand their must-have foundations.Doron in “Traditional Mathematics” that question is trivial
To paraphrase De Morgan, contrary to appearances, Doron is not insane. The insane reason rightly from wrong premises (e.g., if they were actually super-secret agents, it would make sense to be scared of everybody as a potential enemy). Doron reasons wrongly based on no premises at all.
If he were to do that, he'd only discover his fantastic ideas are nothing more than metaphysical trivia and/or gibberish. Either would be unbearable for him, so he won't even try.
The mere fact he can't seem to coax a result, any sort of conclusion, out of all that grandeur should have forewarned him he was working in the landfill and not at the foundation of some extravagant high-rise.
You simply can't get http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=6202461&postcount=10987, because you have no generalization skills.
No. I don't get it because you speak gibberish. How can one get things when you can't define them. "~belongs"? How is one to know what A and B are? If A is the number of deaths from the Bubonic Plague in England between 1348 - 1350, how is it local to the class of sub-atomic particles found in the 1950's? What linkage is there?
jsfisher "What enables Quantity?"