Abraxas wrote:...explain the difference between 1 and -1, as your designation would require 1 x -1, which would be a circular definition, thus empty.
The attribute of "evenness" depends on something being disivible by two (without remainder). The numerical attribution of "negativeness" or "positiveness" depends on whether the number in question is less than or greater than zero.
Thus, -2 or + 4 or -8 or +2 are all divisible by 2 without remainder, so their evenness follows from that alone, rather than from their having some
conglomerate status of "negativeness
and divisibility by two." Similarly, -1 or +1 are attributed as less than or greater than 0, which alone determines their "negativeness" or "positiveness," independently of whether (or not) they happen to be divisible by 2.
Abraxas wrote:...Greater than or less than zero is not a property of a number? That makes certain sets rather hard to work with...
Here is where your equivocation comes in. The word "property" can have different meanings in different contexts. "Negative" or "positive" may be a "property" of a number in certain contexts, but Godel's axioms clearly show that these are not the sort of "properties" his theorem is concerned with.
Abraxas wrote:...How does that matter? Something can't have a negative length either, and yet size is an attribute.
All you're saying here is that length or size of physical objects, to the extent they can't be negated, are not properties within the context of Godel's theorem. So we are making some progress, it seems, in that we have thus far ruled out duration, length, size, etc. as falling within the parameters of Godel's "properties." We need to look elsewhere if we are to find the sort of "properties" that we need if we're going to get anywhere with Godel's theorem.
Abraxas wrote:...Which drags us back to my objections to Axiom 1, both in defining it and then determining if any such can properties exist at all. In particular, if there is no moral aesthetic sense independent from the accidental structure of the world, there can be no such thing as positive properties as he defines them.
Well, you have said that numbers actually exist. But what is a number, any number, taken in isolation? The number "2" is only significant in relation to other numbers, such as "1" and "3." So I would say that if numbers exist (as you claim they do) then
relationality must be a "positive" property in Godel's usage, where as "isolation" or "acontextuality" would be the negation of "relationality."
Perhaps we should try to come up with a list of "positive properties" (along with their negations) that meet the criteria of a Godelian "property." Once we have found examples of such "properties" that fit within the context that Godel has laid out, then we can work on a definition of those properties.
For example, (
relationality vs. isolation) might be one set of "positive" vs. "negative" properties. Another example might be (
logic vs. absurdity) given that numbers have no use or function or value apart from the logic of mathematics--that is, the meaning of 2 + 2 would be empty or inane unless this addition logically compels a result that can be nothing other than 4.
Perhaps we could flesh this out further by saying that (
significance vs. inanity) is another set of positive vs. negative Godelian properties.
So far we have the following possibilities for sets of positive vs. negative "properties" within the framework of Godel's theorem:
1.
Relationality vs. isolation
2.
Contextuality vs. acontextuality
3.
Logic vs. absurdity
4.
Significance vs. inanity
5.
Order vs. chaos
I submit that without the above positive properties, numbers could not "exist." Do you agree?