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UC Berkeley Mathematician Edward Frenkel on the Transcendent World of Math
Evolution News and Views ^ | December 19, 2013 | David Klinghoffer

Posted on 12/19/2013 2:16:52 PM PST by Heartlander

UC Berkeley Mathematician Edward Frenkel on the Transcendent World of Math

David Klinghoffer December 19, 2013 1:17 PM | Permalink

Frenkel-photo.jpg

Congratulations to UC Berkeley mathematician Edward Frenkel whose book Love and Math: The Heart of Hidden Reality is in the top five science books for the year at Amazon! I wrote about Frenkel in a different context recently when he participated in the expression of some dangerous reservations about Darwinian theory in, of all places, the New York Times Book Review ("Someone at the New York Times Wasn't Being Sufficiently Vigilant About Stealth 'Creationism' When This One Got Through").

The philosophical issues raised by Dr. Frenkel in his book are not only fascinating but very relevant to subjects we touch on often here. Math, he argues, is not only beautiful and worthy of our love. It also gives access to another, ultimate reality that transcends our own.

He says it briefly and eloquently in an interview in The Economist.

Does maths exist without human beings to observe it, like gravity? Or have we made it up in order to understand the physical world?

I argue, as others have done before me, that mathematical concepts and ideas exist objectively, outside of the physical world and outside of the world of consciousness. We mathematicians discover them and are able to connect to this hidden reality through our consciousness. If Leo Tolstoy had not lived we would never have known Anna Karenina. There is no reason to believe that another author would have written that same novel. However, if Pythagoras had not lived, someone else would have discovered exactly the same Pythagoras theorem. Moreover, that theorem means the same to us today as it meant to Pythagoras 2,500 years ago.

So it's not subject to culture?

This is the special quality of mathematics. It means the same today as it will a thousand years from now. Our perception of the physical world can be distorted. We can disagree on many different things, but mathematics is something we all agree on.

The only reason the theory means the same is that it describes the reality of the physical world, so mathematics must need the physical world.

Not always. Euclidian geometry deals with flat spaces, such as the three-dimensional flat space. For millennia people thought we inhabited a flat, three-dimensional world. It was only after Einstein that we realised we lived in a curved space and that light doesn't travel in a straight line but bends around a star. Pythagoras' theorem is about geometric shapes in an idealised space, a flat Euclidian plane which, in fact, is not found in the real world. The real world is curved. When Pythagoras discovered his theorem there were, of course, inferences from physical reality, and a lot of mathematics is drawn from our experience in the physical world, but our imagination is limited and a lot of mathematics is actually discovered within the narrative of a hidden mathematical world. If you look at recent discoveries, they have no a priori bearing in physical reality at all.

The naïve interpretation that mathematics comes from physical reality just doesn't work. The other interpretation that mathematics is a product of the human mind also has serious issues, because it seems clear that some of these concepts transcend any specific individual.

Math isn't something we imagine or make for ourselves, it's something we discover. It points to a realm of objective reality beyond ours. Our reality is also objective but it is distorted, in our perception, by subjectivity. Not so with math.

I love the point he makes about Tolstoy versus Pythagoras. Tolstoy had he never lived or had he died young would never have revealed Anna Karenina. What if Pythagoras never lived? Pythagoras' theorem, just differently named, would have been revealed in any event.

It would be interesting to apply the same test to Darwin. (Michael Flannery has considered the question here.)

The Russian-born Frenkel is not just a brilliant mathematician -- he's also an infectiously effervescent personality. Go here and look for the charming interview he did with our friend Dennis Prager.


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1 posted on 12/19/2013 2:16:52 PM PST by Heartlander
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To: Heartlander

Well, that puts a curve in the works.


2 posted on 12/19/2013 2:21:58 PM PST by DannyTN
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To: Heartlander

Well, that puts a curve in the works.


3 posted on 12/19/2013 2:21:59 PM PST by DannyTN
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To: Heartlander

Mathematics is the study of scaling. How to get from one to infinity, and all that that implies.

Numbers can’t be numbered.


4 posted on 12/19/2013 2:22:16 PM PST by Steely Tom (If the Constitution can be a living document, I guess a corporation can be a person.)
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To: Heartlander

These aren’t new arguments. He is making what is generally referred to as the transcendentalist apologetic argument for the existence of God. Generally, the rules of logic are used rather than math but either will work because fundamentally the two are the same thing. A deep, but very interesting, subject to jump into. I’ve heard more than a few atheists get chewed up by taking on the transcendentalist argument in radio shows.


5 posted on 12/19/2013 2:24:33 PM PST by circlecity
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To: Heartlander
It wasn't that long ago that academically, mathematics was a sub-set of Philosophy
6 posted on 12/19/2013 2:25:09 PM PST by llevrok (Obama 2008 : "If you vote for me, you can keep your country")
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To: Heartlander

Mathematics is the foundation of science, the one thing that binds all branches of it.


7 posted on 12/19/2013 2:30:43 PM PST by Telepathic Intruder (The only thing the Left has learned from the failures of socialism is not to call it that)
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To: llevrok
Not really.

The Philosophy described in the ancient use also included the natural sciences, but meant nothing more than the original Greek: "love of wisdom." It was not philosophy as we know it today, and the mathematical arguments used in that time were not rigorous, neither -- for most of the period -- were the natural sciences really science.

8 posted on 12/19/2013 2:31:31 PM PST by FredZarguna (Harry Angel: 'Cause you know what today is? Today is Wednesday. It's anything can happen day.)
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To: circlecity

They’re actually about as old as philosophy itself. In one form or another virtually all mathematicians are platonists.


9 posted on 12/19/2013 2:34:08 PM PST by FredZarguna (Harry Angel: 'Cause you know what today is? Today is Wednesday. It's anything can happen day.)
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To: Heartlander
Euclidian geometry deals with flat spaces, such as the three-dimensional flat space. For millennia people thought we inhabited a flat, three-dimensional world. It was only after Einstein that we realised we lived in a curved space and that light doesn't travel in a straight line but bends around a star.

Wow, what a coincidence! Just this past Monday night me and my homies were in a bar watching the Lions on Monday night football and discussing this very subject........

10 posted on 12/19/2013 2:36:43 PM PST by Hot Tabasco (Miss Muffit suffered from arachnophobia.....)
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To: FredZarguna
"In one form or another virtually all mathematicians are platonists."

Certainly the transcendent nature of math and logic provide a real world foundation for Plato's dualistic "forms vs. receptacles" approach.

11 posted on 12/19/2013 2:41:56 PM PST by circlecity
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To: Heartlander

12 posted on 12/19/2013 2:43:55 PM PST by HangnJudge
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To: circlecity
Transcendent is an interesting and provocative description. I would say, as neither a mathematician or philosopher (although my BS was in math) that mathematics transcends materiality but is still part of contingent reality.

That is, the Law of The Excluded Middle (being one of the most basic axioms but just one concrete example) exists because that is the way the mind of God works. But as a principle it did not exist "before" or even in parallel with His existence. I do not believe it would be true if He thought Truth existed in some other way. The axioms all seem "natural" to us, because being in His image we think as much like Him as we are able in our most lucid moments.

13 posted on 12/19/2013 2:52:51 PM PST by FredZarguna (Harry Angel: 'Cause you know what today is? Today is Wednesday. It's anything can happen day.)
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To: Heartlander

Dennis Prager interviewed him on his radio program within the last couple of weeks and it was a quite interesting piece. The book is on my Amazon wish list for later purchase!


14 posted on 12/19/2013 3:03:43 PM PST by SES1066 (Quality, Speed or Economical - Any 2 of 3 except in government - 1 at best but never #3!)
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To: HangnJudge

Wink, wink.

My favorite is this little ditty:

A most remarkable fact
Is that i to the i,
reciprocates
the square root
of e to the pi.

15 posted on 12/19/2013 3:08:49 PM PST by FredZarguna (Harry Angel: 'Cause you know what today is? Today is Wednesday. It's anything can happen day.)
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To: Heartlander

FReepin’ mathematics thread ping. (its been a while).


16 posted on 12/19/2013 3:10:11 PM PST by lefty-lie-spy (Stay metal. For the Horde \m/("_")\m/ - via iPhone from Tokyo.)
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To: HangnJudge

You troublemaker.

http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euler’s_identity


17 posted on 12/19/2013 3:16:03 PM PST by lefty-lie-spy (Stay metal. For the Horde \m/("_")\m/ - via iPhone from Tokyo.)
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To: lefty-lie-spy

Cewl Page!


18 posted on 12/19/2013 3:22:25 PM PST by HangnJudge
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To: FredZarguna
"I would say, as neither a mathematician or philosopher (although my BS was in math) that mathematics transcends materiality but is still part of contingent reality."

Ah, but that is the whole point. The "Enlightenment" empirical worldview holds that reality is defined empirically - if it can't be discerned by the senses it doesn't really exist. This is the Richard Dawkins or Christopher Hitchens position. Whether you call it "empiricist", "naturalist", "materialist" or "modernist", - this is the common foundation of each. If math, logic, and even morals are independent, objective aspects of reality which exist apart from (or "transcend") the material, "natural" universe then that worldview is blown apart. The box is now open and you're back to Plato.

19 posted on 12/19/2013 3:41:51 PM PST by circlecity
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To: FredZarguna

Don’t get me wrong on the Plato allusion. I definitely agree with you that these non material objective aspects of reality are a reflection of the mind of God. They couldn’t exist any other way.


20 posted on 12/19/2013 3:46:02 PM PST by circlecity
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