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rob05c  ·  3563 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: Beyond true and false

    we simply took value of to be a relation, not a function

I'd be interested to see how his perspective changes after being introduced to Lamba Calculus. Everything can be represented with functions. Everything.

Which says something about the nature of many things: sets, relations, computability. Verbs, actions.

If everything is (or can be) a function (a transformation, a verb, an action), does that imply anything about philosophy or reality? Does that give us something resembling Mahayana Buddhism, or lend credence to it?

What if we view energy as a function and matter as a state? Mass–energy equivalence tells us energy can be converted to matter. Then, what if we view matter as a function which returns a state? For example, the C function

  int fortytwo() {return 42;}
acts as a state, to anyone calling it. But it is most definitely a function. What if matter is the same way: a function (energy) which has been configured to appear as state?

    The constructions I have described show how to make precise mathematical sense of the Buddhist views. This does not, of course, show that they are true.