
Originally Posted by
desiresjab
Only mathematics is not one of these useful fictions in my view, which is why I keep bringing it up. The Ptolemaic, Newtonian clock, big bang, space-time and multi-verse models are all fictions to me, wonderful fictions that advance our research and our journey. In the future their will be many more cosmic models, some will gain ascendancy for a while. I believe it is an infinite process. The most precious answers will always remain in question form.
Then again, Poincare among others considered Cantor's transfinite set theory to be a fiction. Whether this fiction has ever shown a useful or practical side, I am not sure. Cantor and others do show how transcendental numbers can be constructed. That is as close to a practical application as I know of. Modular arithmetic became the language of digital computer encryption. I think transfinite set theory is still only the language of itself, but I would not be shocked to learn I was wrong, either, because each difficult endeavor requires major effort to penetrate, and I haven't given enough to that argument.
Anyway, once we come to terms that mathematics is not one of these fictions, we are able to make a necessary separation. Mathematicians themselves proceed creatively, but the end result is the discovery of the obvious, the discovery of the only way things could ever have been with regard to the numbers.
The numbers can cause scientific theories to bloom or fade. An equals sign means eqaul cardinality, in the end. Whenever, finally, the numbers do not work out, the theory does not work out either, and goes away. String theory may be in the process of doing this.
Science without numbers cannot be precise. A pinch, a nubbin and a nip are not consistent unless they are standardized, as gram, milligram and microgram are.
Up to a point somtimes quite deep mathematics will support wonderful fictions then suddenly leave off its protection, exposing the fiction as a false route out of the maze. Euler once devised a formula that explicitly produced someting like the first forty-some-odd primes but thereafter could no longer be trusted.
Personally, I feel that if we knew everything about the nature and behavior of prime numbers, such knowledge would somehow provide ultimate answers to just about everything. That is why it is exciting to see the Reimann conjecture at the very front of mathematical research, since ultimately it is a conjecture about prime numbers. Prime numbers have always been a hot topic in mathematics, but it is good to see them clearly at the forefront and so much talent now concentrated on them. This can only lead to great things. Of course these coming answers will have big echoes in science and philsosophy.