Episode #488 from 2:28:03

Mathematical multiverse

And we should mention, maybe this is a good place to even give a bigger picture. One of your more controversial ideas in mathematics, as laid out in the paper, "The Set-Theoretic Multiverse," you describe that there may not be one true mathematics, but rather multiple mathematical universes, and forcing is one of the techniques that gets you from one to the other, so... Can you explain the whole shebang? The whole... Yeah, sure, let's get into it. So the lesson of Cohen's result and Gödel's result and so on, these producing these alternative set theoretic universes. We've observed that the continuum hypothesis is independent and the axiom of choice is independent of the other axioms, but it's not just those two. We have thousands of independence results. Practically every non-trivial statement of infinite combinatorics is independent of ZFC. I mean, this is the fact. It's not universally true. There are some extremely difficult prominent results where people proved things in ZFC, but for the most part, if you ask a non-trivial question about infinite cardinalities, then it's very likely to be independent of ZFC.

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And we should mention, maybe this is a good place to even give a bigger picture. One of your more controversial ideas in mathematics, as laid out in the paper, "The Set-Theoretic Multiverse," you describe that there may not be one true mathematics, but rather multiple mathematical universes, and forcing is one of the techniques that gets you from one to the other, so... Can you explain the whole shebang? The whole... Yeah, sure, let's get into it. So the lesson of Cohen's result and Gödel's result and so on, these producing these alternative set theoretic universes. We've observed that the continuum hypothesis is independent and the axiom of choice is independent of the other axioms, but it's not just those two. We have thousands of independence results. Practically every non-trivial statement of infinite combinatorics is independent of ZFC. I mean, this is the fact. It's not universally true. There are some extremely difficult prominent results where people proved things in ZFC, but for the most part, if you ask a non-trivial question about infinite cardinalities, then it's very likely to be independent of ZFC.

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Mathematical multiverse chapter timestamp | Infinity, Paradoxes that Broke Mathematics, Gödel Incompleteness & the Multiverse - Joel David Hamkins | EpisodeIndex