godelian wrote: ↑Sun Oct 27, 2024 1:03 pm
Mathematical objects are not physical entities. That view has been abandoned almost two centuries ago.
It does not matter what anyone thinks, such as what happens to be popular among a particular group of people at a particular point in time, what matters is what is actually true.
Humans do not always develop in the positive direction, i.e. towards the better. They do not always move forward. They sometimes move backward. Moreover, they often do both at the same time, i.e. they make a number of steps forward and a number of steps backward. It's not as simple as, "Oh, look what we can do with this! Obviously, this is better in every way than what we had before!"
"2 + 2 = 4" literally means "If you take a basket that contains two apples and add to it two apples, you will end up having four apples".
You can
empirically verify that claim. You can take a basket with two apples, add to it two more apples and then count how many apples there are in it. In fact, you can do the whole experiment in your head.
But you don't have to do any of that because there is an easier way ( for people who know how to think, that is. )
This easier way consists in analyzing the relationships between the concepts involved.
Whoever said "2 + 2 = 4" meant something by "2", "+", "=" and "4". In other words, he attached certain concepts to these symbols. He also worked with a set of rules that determine how combining different symbols determines the meaning of the resulting compound symbol. All of these are stored somewhere in his mind. Therefore, they are physical entities.
But of course, you don't have to open his brain and look for these physical entities yourself. If you know that he used a standard language, you can simply look into the dictionary of that language. If you know that he didn't use a standard language, but a language of his own, perhaps a variation of some standard language, you can look into his own dictionary ( assuming he wrote one. ) And there are many other ways to
indirectly perceive the meaning of statements. You don't have to directly perceive concepts in order to perceive them.