Yes, I noticed it as well! I haven't watched it either. I wanted to review this post first:
viewtopic.php?p=24770#p24770
Yes, I noticed it as well! I haven't watched it either. I wanted to review this post first:
Ludwig Wittgenstein once said: ‘I want to show the colourfulness of mathematics.’ In that spirit, I placed mathematics at the centre of my project because, in my view, mathematics searches along more of these many paths than any other intellectual discipline. It is connected on a deep level both with the natural sciences and the humanities. It bridges the gulf between them, and it does so by putting certain metaphysical and epistemological dogmas into question
The best mediator of a conciliatory view that avoids the mistake of the naive realist and the naive idealist is mathematics. Mathematics gives us shining proof that understanding some aspect of the world does not always come down to uncovering some intricate causal web, not even in principle. Determination is not explanation. And mathematics, rightly understood, demonstrates this in a manner that lets us clearly see the mutual dependency of mind and nature.
For mathematical explanations are structural, not causal.
Kant’s transcendental idealism doesn’t only suffer from the fact that Euclidean geometry turned out to be not quite as constitutive as he thought. More severely, his conception of empirical knowledge, as an act of understanding through which conceptually formed ‘judgments’ miraculously emerge from mere ‘sensations’, remains completely obscure, as even well-meaning readers of the Critique must admit. But we can attribute at least one fundamental insight to Kant: mind and world are no separate spheres that must first be connected, so that the question arises as to how exactly this might be achieved.
Mathematics highlights the limits of natural scientific explanation. This becomes even clearer when we consider how the idea of an all-explanatory physical theory or ‘world formula’ came about in the first place. In other words, how did scientists come to believe, or at least hope, that a mathematical description of nature on the most fundamental level exists, with which every worldly phenomenon is explainable in the sense that its entire causal history can be derived from basic laws, at least in principle?