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by auggierose
4573 days ago
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Answer to the answer to my comment :-) : This is exactly the answer I expected. It was a little bit of a trap, I have to admit that. I didn't ask for any proof of the irrationality of square root 2. I asked specifically for the classic proof. Which I cannot do. So it is not classic mathematics as usual. An honest answer to this whole thread would have been: "No, you cannot do classical mathematics as you were used too. You have to give stuff up, but I think that you will gain other stuff in exchange, and in my opinion this other stuff is more valuable than the stuff you gave up." |
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What is meant by "even if it wasn't, it would still work" goes back to something he said earlier: type theory embeds an infinite hierarchy of axioms of choice and laws of excluded middles. If you want to do propositional-like reasoning in homotopy type theory, you can assume AC or LEM for homotopy (-1)-types, corresponding to propositional logic.
In type theory you are encouraged to drop the law of the excluded middle and the axiom of choice, because of the fact that doing so gives you potentially more expressive ways of doing things as we have said, but you have gotten the impression that you have to, which you don't.
Also, the claim in this thread was that the results from classical mathematics are provable using homotopy type theory, not that they are provable in the same way (though that holds as well, as I've said above; it's just that the mathematics might not look as clean as if you did it in a more idiomatic way). This kind of a value proposition is not exactly new: category theory loses certain axioms over set theory and mathematicians adapted to the point that category theory is now the language of modern algebra.
I want to point out that I suggested that you read the introduction to the book because it provides these same answers to the questions you are wondering about. I still suggest you do so, as it goes into more detail on what we have said here in a way that I am not able to quite as well.