▲ | alexey-salmin 2 days ago | |||||||
I'm not a finitist myself but my understanding is that it has to do as much with physics as does ZFC, which is very little. The math used in physics works on practice and did work long before the question of foundations even came up. The problem that bothers some mathematicians is that despite working well math still lacks a solid foundation. Furthermore it's basically proven that these foundations can't even exist, or at least for the mainstream version of math. This is where non-mainstream versions pop up. The denial of uncountable sets does help you resolve some of the paradoxes. Not all unfortunately, even the countable sets already lead to things like incompleteness theorems. Well, one can dream. | ||||||||
▲ | griffzhowl 12 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
> Furthermore it's basically proven that these foundations can't even exist, What are you referring to? The current working foundation is ZFC but there are equivalent type theoretical foundations like what Lean and other proof-checking software uses. I guess you know that, but that's why I don't know what you mean by saying this | ||||||||
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