(From Chaitin's home page:
Sans les mathématiques on ne pénètre point au fond de la philosophie.
Sans la philosophie on ne pénètre point au fond des mathématiques.
Sans les deux on ne pénètre au fond de rien. — Leibniz
[Without mathematics we cannot penetrate deeply into philosophy.
Without philosophy we cannot penetrate deeply into mathematics.
Without both we cannot penetrate deeply into anything.]
)
What did "philosophie" mean in Leibniz's time? (For Newton, e.g., "natural philosophy" was the usual term for what we now call "physics".)
These are extracts from some Facebook comments I made recently. I don't think they're actually understandable as is—they're definitely not formal and there isn't an actual underlying formalism I'm referring to, just commonly held intuitions. Or at least intuitions commonly held by me. Ahem. But anyway I figure it's worth a shot.
A proposal to
rationalizederive magick and miracles from updateless-like decision theoretic assumptions:(On Google+ I list my occupation as "Theoretical Thaumaturgist". ;P )