And as a compromise solution: AFAIK, but I might be missing something, in such cases you could delete the accounts of OP of question, preserving whatever of the content might be perceived as valuable but keeping the danger from such accounts (in particular as soon as they have some points) under control.
]]>In full it says:
The standard natural numbers do not form a set. Why is that?
IMO, this is not unrelated.
I really wished standards regarding "foundational question" were somewhat more in line with those of the rest of the site.
]]>Regarding trb456's question, I'm not closely in touch with pedagogical practice nowadays, but my impression is that there are very few if any people "officially" trying to indoctrinate the next generation with finitist philosophical presuppositions. What I see happening is similar to what trb456 mentioned: the influence of computer science has caused increasing numbers of people to develop a feeling that reality is finite and discrete and anything else is just so much metaphysical nonsense. People with this kind of attitude may not consciously try to promote it as an agenda, but it has a tendency to spill out whether they intend to or not.
In some ways, I prefer the zealots who are open about their agenda to the "silent majority" who don't state their assumptions explicitly, because the former tend to have thought through their position more carefully and are less likely to exude pure prejudice.
]]>An annoying side effect of this particular shift is, of course, that cranks have quickly caught up to it because it is quite visible (even MO had its share of legit constructivism discussions already) and everybody, except probably mathematicians, seems to believe he is perfectly capable of understanding any issue on mathematical logic. The latter reason seems to be the prevalent one -- I've seen a lot of logic cranks without any finitist/constructivist agenda. (Cantor is still the most popular subject: http://scientopia.org/blogs/goodmath/tag/cantor-crank/ . And this one works just as well in constructive logic, even if "uncountable" isn't the same as "bigger than countable" there.)
]]>Questions that have an ideological axe to grind, so to say, would also generally be viewed askance.
Speaking only for myself, calls to restrict exploration into acquiring knowledge is profoundly anti-scientific and anti-mathematical.
Maybe I'm not understanding what trb456 has in mind here, but I can safely say that many, probably most professionals who pursue predicative mathematics, constructive mathematics, etc. do not do so because of some ingrained philosophical prejudice, but for pragmatic reasons, and such pursuits are inevitably all about expansion of knowledge, not suppression. In the case of intuitionist or constructive mathematics, a major point is that by weakening the logic, one can dramatically expand the worlds or semantics in which the mathematics will still be valid -- quite a powerful tool. For example, categorical logicians are frequently interested in intuitionist mathematics because the results therein are valid in toposes much more general than the category of sets. Another case study is intensional dependent type theory, which is exceedingly active these days.
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