SerScot wrote:Avatar,
I do see your point. I simply hope otherwise. I see the the purity of mathematical concepts and ideas as God's fingerprints. It's an encouraging idea for me. That said by belief is not without skepticism.
The funny thing is, Plato was pretty much just hoping, too. He just plain didn't like uncertainty/change.
It's interesting
why you want the math to be so, though.
For me, Math isn't that way...it's not a higher/purer/absolute truth. It's just the lowest common denominator of a particular field. I think I have a way to say it finally that's both easy and accurate:
IF you were God-like, at least in the aspect of knowledge, and knew/understood ALL of this universe's reality, one of the things [among many others] you would know/understand would be all of mathematics.
IF, however, you had the same all-encompassing intelligence but "existed" in the "math world" you would know only the math, nothing else, because nothing in the math world, as an inherent property, provides for, describes, or even implies, the universe of forces and matter. [even some of the math you couldn't know because you would have no basis to examine them: from
what do the equations that describe pendulums or orbital mechanics arise in a place where neither is even theoretically possible?...Listen: no examination of pure number yields the concept of a clock ticking.]
I'm actually, little by little, coming to think that
all metaphysical fields/beliefs/structures/philosophies/what-have-you, are really lowest-common-denominator things. Even morality, even souls.