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by ianmcgowan
458 days ago
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That doesn't explain why math is so amazingly effective at describing reality - all the pure mathematical results seem to eventually end up being useful at describing some new aspect of the world (to the chagrin of the pure mathematician). Maybe it's the other way around? Our minds work this way because that's the rules and we're just emergent from that reality. It's hard to argue that symmetry is not a mathematical ideal first, and a biological approximation to that ideal second. |
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Biological symmetry in particular likely emerged as a way to half the data needed to encode life, needing less resources and therefore more likely to reproduce.
But anyway, for all purposes, I do agree. Math obviously exists in nature and it's our best tool at predicting things. I just find it interesting to think that math itself is an emergent property of some other thing. Otherwise, why does anything exist at all? If it was simply maths, then why did anything first pop into existence?