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topaz0 | 19 days ago
If you haven't read to the end of the post, you might be interested in the philosophical discussion it builds to. The idea there, which I ascribe to, is not quite the same as what you are saying, but related in a way, namely, that in the case that X models Y, the mathematician is only concerned with the structure that is isomorphic between them. But on the other hand, I think following "therefore X is Y" to its logical conclusion will lead you to commit to things you don't really believe.
klodolph|18 days ago
I would love to hear an example… but before you do, I’m going to clarify that my statement was expressing a notion of what “is” sometimes means to a mathematician, and caution that
1. This notion is contextual, that sometimes we use the word “is” differently, and
2. It requires an understanding of “forgetfulness”.
So if I say that “Cauchy sequences in Q is R” and “Dedekind cuts is R”, you have to forget the structure not implied by R. In a set-theoretic sense, the two constructions are unequal, because you use constructed different sets.
I think this weird notion of “is” is the only sane way to talk about math. YMMV.
topaz0|18 days ago
(Of course using "is" that way in informal discussion among mathematicians is fine -- in that case everyone is on the same page about what you mean by it usually)