Re: Math and the mysterious
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
3) Above and beyond the issue of mathematics, I think there is an underlying implication in Wigner's statement that it is not a priori obvious that the world had to behave in such a regular, systematic way that could yield to human explanation at all. (I didn't read the article, perhaps he makes this explicit.) And as far as I know, there is no rational explanation for that.
[/ QUOTE ]
I invoke the anthropic principle again. If the world were not orderly, life could not develop. Any kind of self-replicating system needs a consistent set of rules to follow for the process to be repeatable, a prerequisite of life. If the world were not orderly, we wouldn't be here to worry about it. So the fact that the world is orderly is not profound at all.
[/ QUOTE ]
Accepting this as true, arguendo, it doesn't explain why the "sytem" of sytematic nature of the universe is the same "sytem" as the sytematic nature of mathematics.
|