[edit: sorry, the formatting of links and italics in this is all screwy. I've tried editing both the rich-text and the HTML and either way it looks ok while i'm editing it but the formatted terms either come out with no surrounding spaces or two surrounding spaces]
In the latest Rationality Quotes thread, CronoDAS quoted Paul Graham:
It would not be a bad definition of math to call it the study of terms that have precise meanings.
If statement A can be converted into statement B and statement B pays rent, then statement A pays rent.
Your original definition:
Is a terrible one for most purposes, because for them, no matter how big you make a finite number, it won't serve the purpose.
Also, meaning is not immediate. Your sense that a word means something may arise with no perceptible delay, but meaning takes time. To use the point you raised, meaning pays rent and rent takes time to pay. Anticipated sensory experiences are scheduled occur in the future, i.e. after a delay. The immediate sense that a word means something is not, itself, the meaning, but only a reliable intuition that the word means something. If you study the mathematics of infinity, then you will likewise develop the intuition that infinity means something.
The epsilon delta definition is meaningful because of the infinite divisibility of the reals.
Unlike your original definition, this is a good definition (at least, once it's been appropriately cleaned up and made precise).
Only if the mathematical operation is performed by pure logically entailment, which - if a meaningless definition of infinity is used and that definition is scrapped in the final statement - it would not be. We will just go on about what constitutes a mathematical operation and such, but all I am saying is that if there is a formal manipulation rule t... (read more)