> But why think of any numbers as being "in nature"? And what does that really mean?
That there may be structures in nature that are 1-to-1 with any given (constructible) mathematical concept.
Anywhere there is conservation of quantity we get addition and subtraction. Anywhere quantity can be looked at from two directions we get reversibility, i.e. positive and negative perspectives of the quantity. Multiplication happens anywhere two scalar values operate on each other, or orthogonal quantities create a commutative space between each other.
We find reversibility, associativity, commutativity, and many more basic algebraic structures appearing with corresponding structures in physics. And more complex algebra where simpler structures interact.
Wherever there is a dependency between constraints applying, we have logical relationships.
So that is what I mean about mathematical structures appearing in nature. Numbers/quantities just being subset of those structures.
> Can you explain what it would mean to "find a constructible real in nature"? Maybe we just have different ideas about how this would be spelt out
My emphasis is really that we don't/won't find un-constructible reals.
I WEAKLY claim (given that reality increasingly looks likely to extend beyond our universe, and more conjecturally, may be infinite), that any given constructible math structure has a possibility of appearing somewhere. Perhaps all constructible math appears somewhere.
However, that is the weaker claim I would make.
I more STRONGLY claim that un-constructible mathematical structures are highly unlikely to have counterparts. Which includes un-constructible reals.
The un-constructible real invented by Cantor, was a value r, which has infinite decimal digits, but with no finite description. No algorithm to even generate.
It is an interesting concept, but an un-instantiatable (even in theory) one. Infinite information structures immediately present difficult problems just for abstract reasoning. How corresponding structures might exist and relate in a physical analogue isn't something anyone has even attempted, as far as I know.
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I don't think I am saying something controversial.
If there is anything surprising in what I am saying, it is that I am addressing the fact that reals got defined in a way that includes un-constructible reals.
The only implication most people know about that, is that the cardinality of reals is greater than the cardinality of integers.
But what might be very surprising for many, is that the cardinality of constructible reals, every possible scalar number we could ever calculate, measure or apply, is in fact the same as the integers. A distinction/insight that seems highly relevant and useful when dealing with instantiatable math, physics and computation.