Set Theory, Dynamism, and the Event: Reinjecting Time into the Foundations of Mathematics
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Modern and Postmodern Set Theories
2.1. Are Sets “Heaps of Things”?
2.2. On Extension and Intension in Set Theory
2.3. The Great Reversal of Set Theory
2.4. A New Set Theory?
2.5. A Philosophical Interlude: Death and Birth in the Set-Theoretic Universe
2.6. The Operational Edifice of Classical Though: A Philosophical Critique of Modern Set Theory
2.7. Being and Set-Hood
2.7.1. Being a Set
2.7.2. Being-a-Set
2.7.3. Thing or Object?
- (i)
- Entities are things concertized by non-subjective processes already at work in nature.
- (ii)
- A thing antedates an object. Things are formal roles (empty “containers” of onto-sense) partially fulfilled by objects and entities.
- (iii)
- Being leads to beings, beings become things, things metamorphesize into objects and entities.
- (iv)
- Being-a-set is the ontological structure combining both entities and objects.
2.8. The Doctrine of Part and the Whole: From Organic Being to Power Sets
- (i)
- Dynamic set-part-hood, then, is a matter of coordination or orchestration of what may otherwise appear at first sight as several unrelated ontological processes of genetic production. These are precisely the parallel giving-out subprocesses (Definition 2) by which different sets give rise to (or produce) their elements.
- (ii)
- Note further how the concept of part-hood is global, at least at the level of the sets considered: it is not enough that some elements produced by u turn out to be also produced by S; instead, it is absolutely essential that all elements ever produced by u happen to be also generated by S.
- (iii)
- However, not vice versa: it does not matter that some elements produced by S are never found to be produced by u. A sort of directionality is then always found to be present in part-relations; the relation ⊂ is asymmetric [27].
- (iv)
- We may infer then that the relations and ⊂ have something in common: the three are asymmetric. However, the relation ⊂, which is already more complex than ∈ and ∋, differs from the latter two in being global in character: the manner in which ∋ enters into the composition of ⊂ necessarily makes the latter an operator of totality (in logic this is called quantification over entire set [38]), where for carrying out part-relations processes like ⊂, the full or total body of a given set is traversed through inherently local relations like ∈ and ∋.
2.9. Objects and Elements
3. Geometry, Space, and Events
3.1. The General Concept of Dynamic Space
3.2. From Geometrical Space to Ontospace: A High-Level Overview
- (i)
- There are no points: As a matter of fact, geometry is not a theory of points. Therefore, the modern concept of the Figure is not set-theoretic. This may appear strange at first sight, but the progressive development of such proposition consumed the good part of more than twenty five centuries of intense work. Klein’s [180] and Lie’s [5] re-axiomatized the same subject. Eventually Klein and Lie lost to that new mathematical Idealism of the twentieth century built on the foundations of Hilbert and Poincaré [29,108]. Nowadays, Klein and Lie are remembered mainly for the least philosophical and radical part of their itineraries, that overlapping the ultra-modernistic obsession with algebrization and axiomatization: the theory of invariants [32,36].
- (ii)
- There are points: Georg Cantor, on the other hand, is the Father of the Theory of Points [77]. What does that mean? Certainly not that no one before Cantor had ever theorized about points. It only says that Cantor constructed the first and most abstract discourse on points [76]. His points, and it is precisely this what underlies our adjectival quantifier ‘abstract’, are non-geometrical, in other words, there is a theory founded on neither spatial intuition nor the latter’s intimate connection with vision, visualization, seeing, perceiving. Cantor’s points are so abstract to the degree one begins to suspect that—like Aristotle, Avicenna, and Leibniz before them—he was in fact doing ontology, rather than being engaged with an official piece of professional mathematics. In fact, this is exactly the case. The Cantorian theory of points is much more profound than what academic historians would later baptize as naive set theory. Cantor’s is a post-Leibnizian ontology of objects, not as fundamental as Heidegger’s and Russell’s (because it still presupposes a theoretical attitude toward objects), but at least it was certainly post-modernist, not modernist. To a large extent, the ZF axiomatic set theory of the early twentieth century [83,92,118] is better described as a setback than a presumed advance over Cantor’s so-called “naive set theory”, the latter term itself is nothing but a caricature of the ontological Theory of Points of the early years of 1870s and 1880s.
3.3. The Structure of Space According to Classical Thought: A Critique
3.4. A Critique of Category Theory
3.5. Affirming Events and Dynamism: Against Structuralism
4. Event Ontology: Concept and Mathematical Structures
4.1. Sets and Events
4.2. What Is Event Ontology?
- (i)
- Everything is a process. The event is a process.
- (ii)
- (iii)
- The event is a dynamic process of an arrested topological flow [107].
- (iv)
- It is not true that sometimes there are things, and sometimes events. No, there are events and only events.
- (v)
- The world’s events enter into nexuses of interactions. Interaction is what constitutes composition.
- (vi)
- Composition is the secret of being.
- (vii)
- Being and Becoming are the same.
- (viii)
- Becoming is becoming-other.
- (ix)
- Transformation. Change. Metamorphoses. The vicissitudes of appearing: Being remains.
- (x)
- (xi)
- The Real is the dynamic. The dynamic as perpetual otherness.
- (i)
- Composition is harmony. Harmony is anti-symmetry.
- (ii)
- Harmony is variance, not in-variance: against Identity.
- (iii)
- To harmonize is not the bringing of the different into unity. Harmony is about understanding, mutual intercourse leading to active building and constructive behavior.
- (iv)
- Harmony shall not be calculated on the basis of preset transcendental rules. Harmony is pure immanence.
- (v)
- That which belongs to time-in-itself is the event. Yet, Space, that is, onto-space, is produced by interacting events.
- (vi)
- The generative principle lying at the heart of the onto-production of Space and spaces is harmony.
- (i)
- Replace morphisms by processes.
- (ii)
- The event is a process.
- (iii)
- Make no exceptions to the above.
4.3. A Fragment of Mathematics for Event Ontology
4.3.1. Preliminary Considerations
4.3.2. Mathematics of the Event: First Construction
4.3.3. The Idea of t-Slices and Set Blocks of the Past
4.3.4. Events and Sets
4.4. The Internal Structure of Dynamism: First Forays into Propagating Being
5. Conclusions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Mikki, S. Set Theory, Dynamism, and the Event: Reinjecting Time into the Foundations of Mathematics. Axioms 2022, 11, 670. https://doi.org/10.3390/axioms11120670
Mikki S. Set Theory, Dynamism, and the Event: Reinjecting Time into the Foundations of Mathematics. Axioms. 2022; 11(12):670. https://doi.org/10.3390/axioms11120670
Chicago/Turabian StyleMikki, Said. 2022. "Set Theory, Dynamism, and the Event: Reinjecting Time into the Foundations of Mathematics" Axioms 11, no. 12: 670. https://doi.org/10.3390/axioms11120670