A Stochastic Model of Mathematics and Science

IF 1.2 3区 物理与天体物理 Q3 PHYSICS, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
David H. Wolpert, David B. Kinney
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Abstract

We introduce a framework that can be used to model both mathematics and human reasoning about mathematics. This framework involves stochastic mathematical systems (SMSs), which are stochastic processes that generate pairs of questions and associated answers (with no explicit referents). We use the SMS framework to define normative conditions for mathematical reasoning, by defining a “calibration” relation between a pair of SMSs. The first SMS is the human reasoner, and the second is an “oracle” SMS that can be interpreted as deciding whether the question–answer pairs of the reasoner SMS are valid. To ground thinking, we understand the answers to questions given by this oracle to be the answers that would be given by an SMS representing the entire mathematical community in the infinite long run of the process of asking and answering questions. We then introduce a slight extension of SMSs to allow us to model both the physical universe and human reasoning about the physical universe. We then define a slightly different calibration relation appropriate for the case of scientific reasoning. In this case the first SMS represents a human scientist predicting the outcome of future experiments, while the second SMS represents the physical universe in which the scientist is embedded, with the question–answer pairs of that SMS being specifications of the experiments that will occur and the outcome of those experiments, respectively. Next we derive conditions justifying two important patterns of inference in both mathematical and scientific reasoning: (i) the practice of increasing one’s degree of belief in a claim as one observes increasingly many lines of evidence for that claim, and (ii) abduction, the practice of inferring a claim’s probability of being correct from its explanatory power with respect to some other claim that is already taken to hold for independent reasons.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

数学与科学的随机模型
我们介绍了一个可用于数学建模和人类数学推理的框架。该框架涉及随机数学系统(SMS),即产生成对问题和相关答案(无明确参照物)的随机过程。通过定义一对 SMS 之间的 "校准 "关系,我们利用 SMS 框架来定义数学推理的规范条件。第一个 SMS 是人类推理者,第二个 SMS 是 "甲骨文 "SMS,可解释为决定推理者 SMS 的问题-答案对是否有效。为了使思维有据可依,我们把这个神谕给出的问题答案理解为代表整个数学界的 SMS 在无限长的提问和回答过程中给出的答案。然后,我们对 SMS 稍作扩展,使我们既能模拟物理宇宙,也能模拟人类对物理宇宙的推理。然后,我们定义了与科学推理略有不同的校准关系。在这种情况下,第一个 SMS 代表人类科学家对未来实验结果的预测,而第二个 SMS 代表科学家所处的物理宇宙,该 SMS 的问答对分别是对将要发生的实验和实验结果的描述。接下来,我们将推导出数学推理和科学推理中两种重要推理模式的合理条件:(i) 当一个人观察到某一主张的证据越来越多时,就会增加对该主张的相信程度;(ii) 归纳法,即从某一主张对其他主张的解释力来推断该主张正确的概率,而其他主张由于独立的原因已被认为是成立的。
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来源期刊
Foundations of Physics
Foundations of Physics 物理-物理:综合
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
6.70%
发文量
104
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The conceptual foundations of physics have been under constant revision from the outset, and remain so today. Discussion of foundational issues has always been a major source of progress in science, on a par with empirical knowledge and mathematics. Examples include the debates on the nature of space and time involving Newton and later Einstein; on the nature of heat and of energy; on irreversibility and probability due to Boltzmann; on the nature of matter and observation measurement during the early days of quantum theory; on the meaning of renormalisation, and many others. Today, insightful reflection on the conceptual structure utilised in our efforts to understand the physical world is of particular value, given the serious unsolved problems that are likely to demand, once again, modifications of the grammar of our scientific description of the physical world. The quantum properties of gravity, the nature of measurement in quantum mechanics, the primary source of irreversibility, the role of information in physics – all these are examples of questions about which science is still confused and whose solution may well demand more than skilled mathematics and new experiments. Foundations of Physics is a privileged forum for discussing such foundational issues, open to physicists, cosmologists, philosophers and mathematicians. It is devoted to the conceptual bases of the fundamental theories of physics and cosmology, to their logical, methodological, and philosophical premises. The journal welcomes papers on issues such as the foundations of special and general relativity, quantum theory, classical and quantum field theory, quantum gravity, unified theories, thermodynamics, statistical mechanics, cosmology, and similar.
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