Abraxas wrote:...Two is positive and entails evenness but evenness is not inherently positive. This seems to pose a problem for his second axiom.
It poses no problem for two reasons. Firstly, the number "two," all by itself, does not entail "evenness." "Divisibility by two" entails evenness. Secondly, the positive/negative status of a number is not even a "property" within the context of Godel's theorem.
Abraxas wrote:...as I said, we would then have to justify any property at all exists using his definition, something I consider to be extremely unlikely.
You're getting the cart before the horse here. If numbers exist, then certain "positive properties" (that is, "existence affirming" properties) are required. If one can show that any of those "positive properties" do not exist, then you have shown that numbers do not exist. The real question is, are we prepared to assert that anything at all exists? If so, then that "something" must have certain "positive" properties, or "existence-affirming" properties.
Abraxas wrote:...For numbers to have the range of usefulness we require for advanced systems using them, those things are all required, but the capacity to use the item is not inherent to the object itself. I don't think any of those things are necessary for numbers to exist, however, I would suppose they are necessary for mathematics, a form of categorical thinking and relation building to exist.
If numbers have no
inherent capacity for use, then in what sense is it meaningful to say that they exist? Numbers are not physical objects that can be examined under a microscope. If they have no
inherent capacity for use, how is that different from saying that numbers are irrelevant? How is that different from saying that humans make up numbers arbitrarily without any correlation to "how things really are"?
Abraxas wrote:...A number in and of itself is an instantiation of a value, it does not get is meaning from other numbers or from any given context or another...
Certainly we can say that 2 is not 3, and 3 is not 1. If we cannot define 2 as "exactly that number which lies between 1 and 3," then how do we define two in a matter that distinguishes it from 1 or 3?
Abraxas wrote:...logic only comes into play in the relationship between objects, as does order...
So are you admitting that "logic, relationality, and order" actually exist?
Abraxas wrote:...If a number is it's own meaning, I would grant significance, but only in the sense of "it is not nothing"...
If a number were its own meaning, apart from its relationality with other numbers and apart from its distinctiveness compared to any other number, then we could say that "2 is not nothing" in exactly the same way that "4 is not nothing." In such a case, 2 would be no different from 4 (and of course we usually want to deny that 2 and 4 are equivalent).
Abraxas wrote:...this again borders dangerously close to Kant's existence not being predicate, which I think is a flaw of trying to define properties in terms of prerequisites for something to exist. Is something a property if it is fundamental to even the possibility of something existing, or would the asserted property being an object in and of itself independent of that which exists only because of it? That is to say, if X (significance) must exist before Y (numbers) could even possibly exist, can X rightly be said to be a property of Y?
I think this gets back to the "cart before the horse" situation that we addressed previously. We do not say that "X" exists and therefore "Y" exists; rather, we say that
IF "X" exists,
THEN "Y" must necessarily apply. In the case of numbers, it might be possible to say that relationality can exist without numbers, but whether or not that is true, it is certainly the case that
IF numbers exist,
THEN Relationality must be applicable.
Beyond this, has Kant done anything to "prove" his own views? Is Kant using "existence" and "predicate" in a way that fits the context of what Godel is trying to do? Are you granting Kant a greater "expert status" than Godel? I don't know the answers to these questions, but I am throwing the questions out for consideration.
Abraxas wrote:...I would also then question whether this approach could ever leave Godlikeness as a positive property if we can only define such properties as that for which things are necessary to exist.
This appears to be a different matter than the definition of "positive" properties or "existence affirming" properties in terms of Godel's theorem. Shall we bring this matter up again after we have settled upon a definition for Godelian "positive properties"?