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by godelski
408 days ago
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Honestly I don't think his point even stands. We were using English to communicate and English doesn't have the strict rules of mathematics. That's literally why we created math (which I'll gladly call "a class of languages"). He's right, "is" maps to "equivalent" but he's also wrong because "is" also maps to "subset" and several other things. "Is" is a surjection. The problem here all comes down to seadan83 acting in bad faith and using an intentional misinterpretation of my words in order to fit them to their conclusion. I'm not going to entertain them more because I won't play such a pointless game. The ambiguity of written and spoken language always allows for such abuse. So either they are a bad faith actor "having fun" (trolling) finding intentional misinterpretations to frustrate those who wish to act in good faith or they are dumb. Personally, I don't think they're dumb. |
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Agree.
> He's right, "is" maps to "equivalent" but he's also wrong because "is" also maps to "subset" and several other things. "Is" is a surjection.
I agree. So, why can't either interpretation be valid? Perhaps, because one is obviously not true? Yet, it seemed like there was a clarification that the obviously not true relationship was the intended one!!!
Godelski previously wrote: "Coding IS math. Not "coding uses math".
I interpreted that clarification to mean you intended "is" to be a strict "is". Particularly given the other context and discussion of "is a" in other threads. I suspect now you were perhaps emphasizing "uses a" vs "is a", rather than "uses a" vs "is". Not a satisfying conclusion here. It would be a lot more interesting if the precision could have been there and had we been able to instead talk about whether all coding languages form an abstract algebra or not. Or perhaps use that line of reasoning to explain why all coding is a form of math. That would have been far more interesting..