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Article

On Something Like an Operational Virtuality

Institute of Research and Innovation, 75004 Paris, France
Submission received: 29 October 2020 / Revised: 24 December 2020 / Accepted: 6 January 2021 / Published: 9 February 2021
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Posthumanism, Virtuality, and the Arts)

Abstract

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We outline here a certain history of ideas concerning the relation between intuitions and their external verification and consider its potential for detrivializing the concept of virtuality. From Descartes and Leibniz onward to 19th-century geometry and the concept of “invariant” that it shares with 19th-century psychology, we follow the thread of what might be informally called an “operational” conception of the virtual, an intuition progressively developed in the 20th century from of group theoretical thinking into “functorial” thinking (in the context of category theory), and eventually intuitions for the concept of “univalence” (homotopy type theory) and its implications for the meaning of equality and identity. At each turn, skeptical arguments haunt this history’s modes of exteriorization, proof, and verification; we consider the later Wittgenstein’s worries concerning rule following and the apparent unbridgeable gap between formal theory and informal practice. We show how the development of mathematical intuitions and formalisms in the last century and the discovery of deep connection between intuitionistic logic and computation have begun to respond to some of these concerns and favour a conception of virtuality that is operational, constructive, pragmatic, and hospitible to scientific detrivialization.

1. (Re-)Naturalizing the Virtual

John Duns Scotus employed the concept of virtuality in the context of natural theology. It was here a tool for discussing the nature of God through the rational engagements of the intellect, without recourse to divine revelation or dogma. “Is it possible by natural means for man’s intellect in the present life to have a simple concept in which concept God is grasped?” (Scotus 1987, p. 17) An affirmative response to this question necessitated a bridge between the created and the uncreated, between existence and essence, such that being in each case could soundly be discussed using the same basic concepts, and that we might therefore begin to tame the transcendental. In Duns Scotus, virtuality was this means to bridge the transcendental gaps between categories, and part of a strategy for naturalizing the divine, for it would allow us to rigorously consider the concept of infinite being as equivalent, virtually, to the perfections of God. To be is to have attributes, and attributes always come attached to entities. There can be no discussion of si esse, without a discussion quid est—for, if a thing exists, it will automatically have properties and some descriptions will automatically be appropriate to it. Thus, for Duns Scotus, all existing things virtually contain their properties and attributes, and any eventual knowledge of such things is always already virtually included in the thing in question. Indeed, the virtual was not here wielded against naturalism but was actually part of a method for naturalizing the divine. The virtual was what ensured the correspondence between what is and what is said of what is, or between the intuition and the entity’s external manifestation as a real existent. To exist at all is to virtually contain proofs of existence. Each thing in the world, if it exists, thereby contains all the virtues by which we may come to know it.
Later on, of course, with Bergson the virtual becomes the site of pure flux, difference, subjectivity, creativity, and indeterminacy, allied to the various heterogeneities and continuities that he championed against the rules, equations, and discretizations of modern science. The intellect only divides and separates these fluxes into actualities, driven as it is by the biological necessities of survival that limit memory only to what is practically attainable, whereas it is intuition, instinct, and affect that actually harbor the truth of life: that there are no true individuals, only flux and genesis, pure inexhaustible difference implying that each model, each measurement, each calculation or equation is immediately falsified, immediately made obsolete by the constant modifications of time as pure becoming.
Whereas the virtual was an instrument of naturalization for Duns Scotus, Bergson will have retooled the concept, weaponized it against what he perceived were the excesses of modern naturalization. We need only recall his fateful attack on Einstein’s “spatialization of time”, in Duration and Simultaneity, where he patrols and defends a border between the real and the model, between the experience and its scientific extrapolation (Bergson [1911] 1944). The subtle doctor might have turned in his grave. Was there not something disingenuous in this fortification of the virtual as the last bastion of the spirit, the last desperate line of defense against the lifeless structures and mathematical symbols of science? It is a question that forcefully returns to relevance today, in the age of COVID-19, as various esoteric voices question vaccines and sanitary measures, or link the virus to 5G telecommunications. There is warranted concern about possible subterranean connections between such vitalistic spiritualisms and fascist ideologies, as we also see Neo-Nazi’s and white supremacists marching side by side with hippies, new-agers, and conspiracy theory peddling “shamans”. For indeed, what is the fear of science—of its overturning of instincts and intuitions, its falsification of doxa—if not a very subtle kind of prejudice? It is a refusal to accept the expressions of reality over soul-comforting folk illusions about nature, and thus a kind of empirical bigotry. It might even imply that all forms of prejudice are in fact subspecies of this original form: a great recoil from the evidence. Bergson accuses science of being metaphysical, and claims his position is the most natural, obvious, and unburdened by unfounded speculation, a strategy typical of the esoteric’s critique of science as “just another religion”, or the creationist’s accusation that evolution is a matter of belief. Thus, despite his attacks on science’s discretizations and negations, Bergson’s oeuvre is itself a great negation, a complex apparatus for denying the Copernican decentering of the human spirit as highest and most developed form of élan vital. This is all obviously inseparable from the question of posthumanism. The overcoming of humanism implies affirming the event, overcoming our hostility to it, finding the courage of a hospitality toward the scientific detrivialization of our deepest assumptions. This is perhaps why Deleuze found it necessary, in Difference and Repetition, to confront Bergson to Nietzsche’s trials with affirmation (Deleuze [1968] 1994). Nevertheless, Deleuze did little to dispel the anti-scientistic overtones of virtuality after Bergson.
These questions, these worries, unfortunately vastly beyond the scope of the present article, at least warrant that we relax any hardline assumptions that virtuality is necessarily opposed to geometry and spatialization, measurement and categorization, or even mechanistic exteriorization and computation. What if Duns Scotus’s less contrived, more neutral notion of virtuality, unburdened with the extra responsibility of defending qualia from the encroachment of eliminative naturalization, was in fact the more fruitful and pragmatic notion? Let us return to the “dictionary definition” of the virtual: that famous entry into the Dictionary of Philosophy and Psychology authored by C. S. Peirce, where the virtual is defined simply as something that is not X that nevertheless has the efficiency of X (Baldwin 1901, p. 763). Something that serves the same purpose as the actual thing, or that can be considered a proxy for it. The virtual is a “stand in”, something that is taken “as if” it were X. If posthumanism implies demilitarizing this terrain between virtuality on one side, and empirical science and mathematical formalism on the other, it may also imply returning to an understanding of virtuality as that by which one thing is taken for another, such that an object’s existence is equivalent, virtually, to the collection of its attributes.
In the following sections, I sketch out a certain history of ideas meant to support a speculative conception of what might tentatively be called an operational virtuality. In Descartes, Leibniz, Hume, and Kant, a dialectics of intuition and exteriorization leaves us in an uncomfortable situation: either the virtual link between concepts and percepts, intuitions and exteriorizations, is nothing more than wishful thinking, or the as-if traps us within a finitude wherein intelligibility is tautologically disarmed by solipsistic worries. In the later Wittgenstein’s investigations and remarks, the chasm between the two perspectives is recast as a problem of rule-following, falling through the gap between saying and doing, theory and practice, deontic and ontic. We pick up the thread of Cassirer’s highlighting of parallel developments in 19th and early 20th century mathematics, physics and psychology, which since have been extended beyond group theory into category theory and eventually, through a convergence with intuitionistic logic and computability theory, to the notion of univalence. In a way reminiscent of how the medieval arguments for univocity tried to bridge the worlds of the created and uncreated, these latest mathematical trials of equality and equivalence have begun to build a very subtle bridge between rule and execution, theory and practice, through a progressive illumination of the ever more delicate structures that span these oppositions from behind the scenes. Perhaps the perceived impasse was the effect of an overly naive conception of identity, that of Leibniz’s identity of indiscernibles: the gap between being and that which is said of being could only be bridged by detrivializing identity and difference, such that the textures and fibrations behind their bare opposition could begin to be mapped out, showing a way beyond the facile and unpragmatic judgment that “it is what it is”.

2. Exteriorization and Proof

… may I not […] be deceived every time I add two and three or count the sides of a square, or perform an even simpler operation, if that can be imagined?
In his Meditations on First Philosophy, Descartes showed the ease with which we can doubt even our most basic assumptions. In everyday life, we trust our perceptions and concepts, we trust that 2 + 3 = 5; we trust that when we are performing the calculation some evil demon is not swooping in to change the list of numbers beneath our eyes. But what does this trust hold to?
Leibniz, like other thinkers of his time, saw the importance of finding ways of overcoming this skepticism. Is there any assurance that our thoughts somehow align, correspond, or represent things as they are? Leibniz’s attempt to escape skepticism turned on his deep appreciation for the fact that just because we can state the existence of something, does not mean it is realizable, or constructable. This is obvious in mathematics: we can say “2 + 3 = 6”, or “parallels intersect”, but just stating it does not make it true. There are specific ways the properties combine and compose that restricts their expression. Leibniz reckoned that truth could only be determined in the bottoming out of our lines of explanation, when the operational analysis halts, and where the intrinsic universal character of the substance expresses its pure distinction from other substances and aggregates.
Thus, for Leibniz, substances are revealed through acts of demonstration in extension. The concept resides in its potential exteriorization. In order to make sure the demon is not deceiving us, we have to exteriorize our thoughts—which for him are themselves made up of little perceptions, real substances—label them with symbols and classify the combinatorial rules that specify how they compose with other ones. Once this is done, calculemus, says Leibniz. We need to “shut up and calculate”, we need to prove statements in demonstration, through an iterative analytical process that may well exceed our capacities of intuition. We need to exteriorize the vague and indistinct concepts in our souls, actualize them in extension, and process them down to their indubitable proofs of existence. Thus, the universal characteristic, a language that encodes our concepts, must be combined with the calculus ratiocinator, the physical machine, external to our minds, that processes the universal language. He thought that by crunching the numbers on such a sophisticated machine, even the most subtle metaphysical questions could be distilled to their bare distinctions. The point of exteriorizing this process and not just calculating in your head, was that we needed to make sure we were not deceiving ourselves: in this way, we could check the proof, and locate any errors. Cassirer explains this important motivation in Leibniz’s thought:
...even where all the rules of thought are applied with formal correctness, there always remains a possibility that the contents of thought, instead of being repeated in identical distinctness, may change unbeknown to us. As we know, Descartes saw no epistemological but only a metaphysical way out of this labyrinth: his invocation of “God’s veracity” does not appease or resolve the doubt but simply strangles it. Yet here precisely lies the point of departure for Leibniz’ development of the technique and methodology of mathematical proof. It can be shown historically that Descartes’ skepticism about the certainty of the deductive method was the force that impelled Leibniz to his theory of proof. If a mathematical proof is to be truly stringent, if it is to embody real force of conviction, it must be detached from the sphere of mere anemic certainty and raised above it. The succession of steps of thought must be replaced by a pure simultaneity of synopsis.
Cassirer goes on to mention the echo of this idea in David Hilbert’s formalist program, which was indeed in the same spirit: the axiomatic method sought clear and distinct foundations for mathematics. But his note, at the end of the quote, that the successive operations of thought must be replaced by a “pure simultaneity of synopsis” is a rather Kantian reading of what Leibniz seems to have had in mind. Cassirer emphasizes the symbolic character of the formalization and proof, rather than the mechanical character, the characteristica rather than the ratiocinator. But Leibniz suggested that (at least) some of these proofs could not possibly be held within the intuition, and that, even when exteriorized, some aspects of the universe would remain indistinct: like incomputable, non-terminating programs, some series of operations would go on crunching forever, expressing indistinct analyses that “only God” could grasp in full distinction. It is Kant who believed that such an externalized process of calculation was insufficient for knowledge: concepts needed to be grasped in sensuous intuition—they could not be merely written down or materialized in a computer process, but needed to be intuited synoptically, in the mind’s eye.
Hume had taught Kant that all the earlier metaphysical attempts at binding the soul to the body, the inside to the outside, and of accounting for the real connection between percepts and concepts, were ultimately dogmatic and held to nothing but blind faith in the goodness of God. And Leibniz held no illusions about his strategy of exteriorized proof: despite the objective demonstrability of the exteriorized method, he knew it did not completely eliminate the doubt that there is any congruence between our indistinct notions and the distinct symbols we encode into the mechanical oracle. Ultimately, Leibniz entertained his own metaphysical argument, a nuanced version of the occasionalism—popular in his day—of Cartesians like Malebranche. But Leibniz pushes it out to its limit: God intervenes as little as possible, and with the exception of miracles, only truly acts once, at the beginning of time, when he chooses these substances rather than others. God, being of the highest good, was “forced” to choose the best possible world, insuring that at the very least knowledge and rational thought were possible. This explained, for Leibniz, why we are sometimes deceived, why there are criminals and wicked people in the world, and why horrible tragedies befall us, despite God’s ultimate intervention: God was himself constrained by rules, and even the best possible world is constrained by internal relations of compossibility, such that in order for the best to happen, some bad must also take place. Echoing Pascal’s probabilistic wager, Leibniz claims:
It is therefore infinitely more reasonable and more worthy of God to suppose that, from the beginning, he created the machinery of the world in such a way that, without at every moment violating the two great laws of nature, namely, those of force and direction, but rather, by following them exactly (except in the case of miracles)…
…we can easily judge that this hypothesis is the most probable, being the simplest, the most beautiful, and most intelligible, at once avoiding all difficulties…
Denying himself recourse to any such cosmological arguments, Kant found his way out of the labyrinth with the powerful concept of the synthetic a priori (Kant [1781] 1996). We replace the pre-critical theory of “pre-determined harmony” with a new fulcrum between sensations and ideas, a point from which the transcendental constraints on cognition are articulated, where their architectonics can be considered undogmatically. In order for a concept to take hold in the mind and distill experience into its universality, it needed to be supported by the a priori constitution of space and time, without which there would be no possibility of conceiving. This invariant background needed to be given full credence and priority. We had no access to things in themselves, and thus avoiding dogma meant rebuilding knowledge on the stable structure provided by such invariants of experience, these ultimate conditions of cognition. Knowledge needed to be held in the intuition. Concepts needed to be imported from Leibniz’s ratiocinator back into the mind. When they are outside, in the oracle, in the machine’s behavior, or just sitting latent in the symbols, they are not being understood. Thus, for Kant, irrational numbers are not concepts, as any iterative analytic sequence of operations that takes eternity to finish cannot be held within the finitude of the mind.
Already this series of philosophical gestures exposed the gap that would need to be fleshed out. Leibniz can only hope that God will ensure the connection between the concept and its external reconstruction, and Kant can only be certain of that which is immediately perceived within an internalized conceptual tautology, giving rise to subjective idealism and “correlationism”. We are left with an untenable choice between an unfounded Leibnizian optimism and a depressing Kantian claustrophobia.

3. Rules and Demonstration

Bernard Stiegler’s (see 1996, 1998, 2001) philosophy of technology, building on the work of Leroi-Gourhan, Derrida, and Husserl, highlights a related aporetic condition exposed in the question of technological exteriorization. Knowledge is only produced by exteriorizing our memories, by progressively outsourcing our faculties into external supports. We invent symbols and grammars, tools and machines, each exteriorization becoming an environmental effect and conditioning future experiences from the outside, from the past, skewing our desires and drives, modifying our priorities. We are retroactively conditioned by all of our exteriorizations. We count dashes in the sand, we draw lines between them, we cut the figure in half, each gesture looping back into our minds, reconfiguring our souls. In Plato’s Meno, Socrates demonstrates anamnesis as the consequence of such a diagramming of our intuitions in the sand. Anamnesis, true learning, is the product of exteriorization. Even here, a precursor of Descartes’ demon rears its head: Meno asks, how can one be sure to have discovered the new insight and have really learned something, if one did not know it beforehand? How does following these geometric rules reveal “new” knowledge, if it was all contained in the rules to begin with?
The late Wittgenstein (Philosophical Investigations ([1953] 2009) and Remarks on the Foundations of Mathematics ([1953] 1967)) circled this same issue. What is the “plus value” of the proof or of the demonstration? What does it give us? On the face of it, it only seems to provide a vague sense of assurance. The proof’s demonstration causes a change in dispositions, it relaxes something in us, such that “now I can go on”, a feeling of renewed confidence in how the rules are being applied. It updates our conceptual landscape: it is a point of articulation in our behaviors and our horizon of expectations, a cusp that sends us off into the flow of practice until we encounter the next hiccup. “The proof changes the grammar of our language, changes our concepts. It makes new connexions and it creates the concept of these connexions. (RFM III: §31)” Other than that, it is just a series of symbols or diagrams on a page, which we “follow” through a sequence of operations from one presentation to another. The proof is just a series of transformations, an expression of what the rules of construction allow. When we follow the demonstration to its conclusion, when the formulas wrap around to the beginning and provide us with an equal sign, the effect that these transformations have on our future actions, and the feeling that “now I can go on”, always remain outside the deductive demonstration.
Wittgenstein’s issues had to do with the gap between theory and practice, or between our models and rules and their supposed execution in real life. From a series of obscure observations on the gap between saying and doing, between the rules we declare we follow and the actual actions we perform, Wittgenstein disentangles a strange web of consequences. There is an echo of Meno’s paradox: “What do we learn when we see the new proof—apart from the proposition, which we already know anyhow? Do we learn something that cannot be expressed in a mathematical proposition?” (Wittgenstein [1956] 1967, §60). There is also an echo of Descartes’ Demon: in the moment of applying the rule of addition, how do I know I am not following some other rule, like that of “quaddition” (Kripke [1982] 2000)? And there is a reflection of Hume’s problem. When we teach a child how to multiply, we correct them whenever they make a mistake, and continue to do so until we feel they have grasped the rule. But even then, we never come to expect the student’s future application of the rule to be absolutely flawless. Even the best pupil will go on to make mistakes. So where is the cut-off point? At which point does the pupil’s frequency of error transition from being an indication of their ignorance of the rule, to an indication of their momentary misapplication of the rule? This formulation mimics Hume’s ([1748] 1921) skeptical arguments about causality, where just because we have always seen a certain stable array of actions causing reactions or effects does not mean that such stable behavior will always be observed in the future. The regularity of causality is not confirmed by experience, it can only be induced. Hume will deny that there is anything empirical that can ever confirm the existence of causation, yet will also wager that it is best to go along with it, to trust our implicit experience of causation and treat the world as-if causation holds.
Wittgenstein will suggest that the skeptical question itself is malformed, a corruption of language’s proper use in language games. For him, the problem of rule following implies a category error, a discontinuous leap into a new domain which does not carry forward the consequences of the first, or “preserve” the meaning of one in the other. Between the intuitive feeling of being confident about the rule, and its actual application, execution, or demonstration, Wittgenstein finds a seemingly unbridgeable chasm. “What one means by ‘intuition’”, Wittgenstein says, “is that one knows something immediately which others only know after long experience or after calculation.” (Wittgenstein et al. [1939] 1976, p. 30) But knowing by intuition tells us nothing. Our intuitions are constantly being empirically overturned, and indeed that is the whole point of mechanical proof in Leibniz, or of the scientific experiment’s capacity of falsification, in Popper. The empirical should be the final test. The problem is that, “What ever is going to seem right to me is right. And that only means that here we can’t talk about ‘right’.” (Wittgenstein [1953] 2009, p. 92). So even when the machine halts on a given yes or no response, I am still in the position of having a choice of assenting or dissenting from the result. Or as in the Duhem-Quine thesis, if the scientific experiment falsifies the theory, I am always free to choose which parts of the theory I modify in order to make it fit with the empirical evidence. It is as though the rules only exist in theory: they fall apart in their application, for their supposed enjoining of actions does not directly translate into the actions themselves, their consequences being beyond the purview of the deductive system.
Recall that the whole point of Leibniz’s plea for exteriorization (calculemus) is that since we cannot trust our intuitions, we should process them externally, we should construct the knowledge outside of ourselves where we can proof check every step. From Leibniz’s rational point of view, we needed to account for the proper exteriorization of our “internal” assumptions, while from the point of view of Kant, by then juggling with Hume’s incisive skepticism about causality and induction, the problem was that of accounting for their proper re-internalization into concepts that stood for themselves. Kant found the nexus somewhere in the middle, in the invariants of cognition. But the later Wittgenstein can be taken to say that even the relativized a priori never really overcomes the demon. The concepts held in intuition and their rules of construction and decomposition might be just as fleeting as bare empirical experiences, and our supposedly timeless “concrete universals” might actually be sensitive to time and context, for who knows whether the axioms are not being changed every time we conjure the mathematical object?
Paraphrasing Lotze, Cassirer warned that the practice of thought is “never satisfied to advance to the universal concept by neglecting the particular properties without retaining an equivalent for them” (Cassirer [1923] 2015, p. 21). Indeed, the problem of rule following is the problem of structure preservation, that is, of the tracking of equivalences through changes of context, as it pertains specifically to transitions between concepts and percepts, theory and practice, intuitions and exteriorizations.

4. Artificial Equivalences

When, in 1832, Évariste Galois frantically scribbled down his theory of symmetries on the final night of his short life, he inaugurated a new way of abstracting from identities. A thing’s existence could begin to be rigorously conceived as equivalent to the sum of operations or interventions that would leave the thing indiscernibly different. “The ‘nature’ or ‘essence’ of a figure is defined in terms of the operations which may be said to generate the figure.” (1944, p. 24) Cayley took an important step further. His work would be interpreted as showing (though not explicitly) that the group of symmetries allowing such “invariance under transformation” can again be generalized: what would become known as Cayley’s theorem says that a group is isomorphic to a subgroup of its symmetry group, allowing us to imagine that each identity, and the this-ness of a thing, is owed to a particular way of being embedded within higher-order symmetries, implying a hierarchy of abstractions.
By 1872, Klein ([1872] 2008) was motivated to apply this logic to the newly discovered non-Euclidean geometries. In what became known as the Erlangen program, Klein used group theory to unify these otherwise distinct geometries, and order them from Euclidean, to affine, to projective in terms of a hierarchy of generality. As Cassirer puts it, through the geometry of affine transformations, “we can no longer maintain the distinction between ‘circle’ and ‘ellipse’” and in projective geometry, “an ellipse can be transformed into a parabola or a hyperbola, such that, in the final analysis, there is but one single conic.” (Cassirer 1944, p. 9) So group theory allowed us to see all geometries as just axiomatically stipulated collections of permitted transformations, and in particular that Euclidean geometry was just a “special case” of affine geometry, itself but a special case of projective geometry, building an intuition for the idea that physical space itself could be warped such that things appear to be Euclidean at local scales while appearing curved at larger scales. This intuition would eventually contribute to the development of Einstein’s special theory of relativity.
This systematic application of group theoretical thinking, this practice of taking an object as the sum of operations that leave the object unchanged, enabled a new step in a progressive hollowing out of substances, continuing an ancient philosophical impetus: we abstract from appearances to get to the substances, which can only be grasped by identifying the subtle invariants that remain throughout its transitions. For instance, in Descartes’ famous example, the ball of wax has a certain shape and produces a certain sound when knocked, but these change when we hold it close to the fire. Thus, in order to really know the substance, we have to go beyond such accidental properties, and find the substance’s invariance under transformation, its true properties. But we then develop new capacities (intuitions, technology, experimental science) that allow us to make new kinds of interventions (constructions, exteriorizations) and realize that, again, what we now take to be invariant needs to be nuanced and displaced with subtler notions.
Cassirer knew to read the successful generalizations of group theory, and its enabling of a new kind of intuition about abstract geometrical entities, as having an implicit relation with similar revelations in psychology, and the curious tension that opposes the fleetingness of perception and empirical science with the apparent timelessness and universality of mathematical truths.
Perception is not a process of reflection or reproduction at all. It is a process of objectification, the characteristic nature and tendency of which finds expression in the formation of invariants.
He realized that the concept of invariant was also used in 19th-century psychology. The contents of the mind had hitherto vaguely been modeled in terms of an affection of the soul by the determinations of the real, an empirical inscription of the outside on the inside, mere “reaction to external stimulation”. The previous theories had “rested on the ‘constancy hypothesis,’ i.e., the hypothesis of immediate correspondence between ‘stimulus’ and ‘sensation’.” (Cassirer 1944, p. 12) In Hobbes, anticipating Newton, action and reaction were “related in no other way than strict equality”. But the main contribution of Helmholtz, Hering, Katz, and their generation, according to Cassirer, was to have slowly abandoned this assumption, and detrivialized the relation of equality between the object perceived and the act of perception. As Helmholtz had suggested, we do not see what is “really there”, but what deviates from our expectations, which we are constantly renormalizing, and which are in a sense artificial interventions. “It henceforth appears that it is dissimilarity rather than similarity to the objective stimulus which characterizes perceptual content.” (Cassirer 1944, p. 12) No longer could we conceive of a Leibnizian parallelism between extension and intension, between distinct and indistinct, because we now knew that we are perpetually “being deceived” by our senses, that our perceptions in every instant are themselves preselecting what they deliver to experience. “We do not merely “re-act” to the stimulus, but in a certain sense act “against” it.” (Cassirer 1944, p. 13)
This was clear from the discovery of perceptual color constancy: we see a sheet of paper as being of a constant white whether the room is brightly lit or darkened. We intervene in the scene, we lock some parameters, we artificially freeze part of the environment’s variability in order to be attentive to other changes. This active saturation of some parameters corresponds to a kind of selective coarse graining of the perceptual field, such that differences fainter than a certain threshold are clamped to the limit. A subject will identify the difference in shade in an experimental setting, and so we know the eye perceives it, but in everyday perception those same differences are constantly being selectively glossed over. As perception stabilizes the invariant, it is continually re-normalizing the scene, implying that variations beyond a certain threshold are being taken as equivalent, even though the eye sees their difference. Thus, the selection is happening before knowledge or understanding. But worse, it happens even before sensuous intuition, before even our indistinct experiences express themselves to the mind’s eye. It is the way perception itself is selectively synthesizing the scene, constantly reconstituting the invariant, distinguishing the foreground from the background, the action from the setting. In order for this to happen, perception is constantly identifying or equating discernibly different things, stretching Leibniz’s account of identity and difference; our perceptions are perpetually plucking out invariances by relaxing the precision of their analysis, tracking blobs of invariance “as” objects, long before we are ever conscious of it. The fact that the invariance of the sheet of paper’s color is stabilized in perception already implies a “dissociation” between what we take to be the actual color of the object and what we take to be just an effect of the lighting. In other words, there is a separation maintained within perception itself between the object’s primary and secondary qualities, and a division of essential and accidental, object and transformation, a realization that only deepens the post-critical epistemological conundrum as per subjectivity’s alienation from the real.

5. Functorial Intuitions

In ordinary life we have all sorts of criteria for equality. ...equal weight, equal color, equal number, etc. Aren’t there very different criteria for equality in all these cases?
Since its inception in the 1940s with Eilenberg and MacLane’s (1945) introduction of the concepts of functor, category, and natural transformation in the context of algebraic topology, it is category theory that eventually demonstrated the extensive power of this operational perspective on identity. Notably, they introduced category theory as an extension of Klein’s Erlangen program, “in the sense that a geometrical space with its group of transformations is generalized to a category with its algebra of mappings.” (Eilenberg and MacLane 1945, p. 237) Category theory stays closer to the “looseness” with which identities and equivalences are treated in everyday practice. Category theory makes rigorous the idea that “for our present purposes” we need only track the thing in question up to a certain degree of fidelity that respects our current requirements.
If I just want to count the three sheep in the field, for such purpose I might only need to hold up three fingers: the structure of their number will be “preserved” in my finger gesture. We will say, with Frege, that there is a one-to-one correspondence between each individual finger and each individual sheep, such that the numbers are equal. If I want to communicate a richer idea, say that one sheep is mother to the other two, I might draw three dots in the sand and add two arrows out from one of the dots to the other two. We will agree that there is a correspondence, again, between the number of dots and the number of sheep, but now also between the internal parent–child relationships of this little family of sheep and the composition of my little diagram. This is essentially what a functor is: a structure-preserving map. A functor maps both the objects and the morphisms (relations, transformations, functions) between these objects from one category (or context) to another, preserving an intended structure or order of composition. The functor is between the sheep and my diagram: we can reveal it by drawing two new set of arrows, first from each sheep to each dot, and then from each “relation of motherhood” to the two original arrows I drew. We begin to see that each taking of one thing for another, each consideration of a thing as if it were another thing, each act of substitution, is intrinsically functorial. Note that this procedure is “substrate independent”—my diagram in the sand does not see the sheep, but captures only the information I intended to communicate—it need only preserve their composition, under the assumption that “up to a unique isomorphism” defining the invertible transformations between the two contexts, the representation will have the same effect, or can be used as a proxy for the real thing.
In functional programming, which incorporates the ideas of category theory, the metaphor of the assembly line is sometimes used to think about functors: the production line goes from beginning to end through several steps where materials are transformed and assembled. If we make changes to the factory, if we bring in new machines, or decide to group some steps together or break them into smaller ones, or if we reorganize which steps happen in series and which happen in parallel, the constraints on these operational changes will be functorial: we will want the same materials to be transformed into the same end-products, and thus, for the new factory to be equivalent, for all intents and purposes, to the old factory. Interestingly, Pierre Lévy describes the process of virtualization using a similar example:
“Let’s look at the very contemporary example of the virtualization of a company. The conventional organization gathers its employees in one building or a group of buildings. Each employee occupies a precisely defined physical position, and his schedule indicates the hours he will work. A virtual corporation, on the other hand, makes extensive use of telecommuting. In place of the physical presence of its employees in a single location, it substitutes their participation in an electronic communications network and the use of software resources that promote cooperation.”
Echoing Bergson, Lèvy maintains that the virtual “tends” toward actualization, so that the production of a virtuality from an actuality is, in a sense, where the real work happens, where the actual is problematized. This may be a leftover of Bergson’s insistence on the two tendencies of matter and life. Russell noted that for Bergson, “The whole universe is the clash and conflict of two opposite motions: life, which climbs upward, and matter, which falls downward.” (Russell 1912 22) The question is whether this apparent asymmetry between the powers of matter and of life, and these putative tendencies of actualization and of virtualization are fundamental or whether they are contingent effects of the types of cognizers humans happen to be, being that we are thermodynamically (antientropically) oriented within a material cosmos. For Bergson, of course, this polarity is fundamental. But, be that as it may, we do not need the notion of tendency or force if we think of the “transformations” between the virtual and actual as functors. Levy’s “virtual” company, by going online, has maintained something of the structure of the previous “non-virtual” company. Functors are the structure preserving maps between such unproblematic or trivial actualities, and the non-trivial structures, patterns, and functional relations they can be unfolded into.
Category theory can be thought of as a means of making practical acts of taking one thing for another rigorous. It is the mathematics of squinting and seeing “family resemblances” between otherwise disparate things. This functorial thinking, where what something is can be rigorously considered in terms of the thing’s isomorphic relationships with other things, makes mathematically meaningful the idea that when we consider something, we are always already pulling it out from one context and presenting it in another, and thus from this point of view, the thing in question (its identity) might as well be considered as being equivalent to the isomorphisms that allow us to change the object into something else and recover it later on to varying degrees of fidelity. As Wittgenstein said, “the meaning of words lies in their use” and it is important to note how taking identities as collections of isomorphisms is sometimes called “abuse of notation”, which is common practice among working mathematicians, even if strictly speaking it is not allowed by standard set theoretic foundations. Just getting off the ground when Wittgenstein was concerned about mathematical foundations, there is a sense in which category theory will have begun to respond to some of his worries, through decades of eventual development.
Defending a position in the tradition of Cassirer, Andrei Rodin (2014) recently argues that thinking of category theory as a mere extension of the Erlangen program, and a subsequent step into formal abstraction, misses the point. Rodin wants to defend the importance of the intuition from the pure formalism of Hilbert and the structuralism of Dieudonné and the Bourbaki authors.1 “The switch from the structuralist thinking in terms of invariance to the new categorical thinking in terms of covariance and contravariance (i.e., functoriality) signifies a decisive brake with the structuralist viewpoint… (Rodin 2014, p. 255)” He argues that category theory is not just another, yet more subtle, kind of structuralism, and that its true innovation comes with Lawvere’s work on “functorial semantics” and his development of a new categorical “foundation” for mathematics (Lawvere 1963). I put “foundation” in scare quotes here, because the intuition changes from a theory that is “founded” or “grounded” in bags of dots and their one-to-one correspondences, to a top-down “aerial” perspective on mathematics. Category theory “overcomes” set theory; mathematics effectively swallows up its abstract set-theoretical foundations, and gains a bird’s-eye view on them. Overcoming set-theoretical foundations means overcoming our usual recourse to thinking in terms of ultimate atomic entities (or substances) where existence bottoms out, because doing so once we reach this level of generality would restrict us to the category of “small categories”, those where all arrows and objects form sets. Analogously, type theoretical foundations would restrict us to Cartesian closed categories. Rather, we have to work from the top down, and imagine a
hypothetical category CAT of all categories as an intended model of [elementary theory] ET and then add to ET new axioms which distinguish CAT between other categories; then pick up from CAT an arbitrary object A (i.e., an arbitrary category) and finally specify A as a category by internal means of CAT (stipulating additional properties of CAT when needed).
Rodin argues that this overcoming of set theory, which the Bourbaki authors had hoped to achieve through the structuralist program, was actually only achieved through a non-structural modification of our intuitions. He stresses that it was the taking of equalities for isomorphisms, rather than the taking of isomorphisms for equalities, that really allowed for Lawvere’s big leap into the top-down view offered by the category of categories. For it allows us to make sense of some of the “similarity” we informally observe between different domains of mathematics, and indeed between mathematics and the empirical world or the psychological domain. Indeed, with Cassirer, Rodin wants to conceive of mathematics as a “part of physics”, somewhere on the spectrum between the purely ideal and the empirical. Categories are not structures, he claims, they do not deal with invariances. Functors and their “natural equivalences” (transformations between functors that have a “dual”, in the reverse direction) are not “invariants” in the old sense. The tendency to view functoriality as a generalization of invariance, for Rodin, is symptomatic of a “conceptual inertia” possibly preventing us from doing full justice to the discovery of functoriality, and its adjustment of intuition. The new epistemic criterion introduced in functorial thinking does not in his view reduce to the Platonic or structuralist criterion according to which only invariant features are epistemically significant, while all the variable features are accidental and irrelevant. Rather than just tracking invariances, the functor tracks ways in which things can be taken for other things, it maps out different modalities of the as-if, it develops a diagrammatical logic for modeling ways of selecting, indicating, and picking out, or grouping, fusing and gluing things together, and thus of “moving” from one universe of discourse or thought or practice to another. The “hollowing out of substances” is replaced with an intuition for something like a cartography of worlding, a mapping out of virtual transitions between contexts, between worlds, between subjective experiences or objective constructions. It seems to detrivialize the opposition between Leibniz’s wishful realism and Kant’s claustrophobic finitude: it provides conceptual, formal, and geometric tools that allow a finer analysis, as it were, of what is really going on in the transition between theory and practice, or between perception and cognition, than ever could the comparably much blunter metaphysical tools of process, time, and becoming. The functors are not trivial tansitions from one context to the other: they divide into covariant and contravariant, such that their adjunctions do not recover what we had hitherto come to conceive as strict identities. Passing from the left to the right and back again, does not necessarily ensure that we have recoverend the original entity, as is the case with the one-to-one correspondence. Rather, as in a game of chinese whisperers, each passage through the circuit changes the message. It suggests, furthermore, that there are no ultimate invariants at the bottom of the real, but rather axiomatizes the inherent incompletion and relativity of both substance and structure. It is, in this way, more “honest” about cognition: it takes as a given that whatever is right for me is right, that identities and equalities are always pragmatic articulations rather that pure ontological entities. Thus, Rodin argues that category theory’s real intuitive leap beyond set theory actually makes it more concrete. Far from being “abstract nonsense”, as it sometimes is accused, we might more accurately say that category theory is concrete nonsense: it makes the “nonsense” between regimes of intelligibility concrete. It is not that we can always treat isomorphisms as equalities, but rather that all equalities are always already only equivalent “up to isomorphism”.

6. Isomorphism and Computability

[For Duns Scotus] the understanding … objectively apprehends actually distinct forms which yet, as such, together make up a single identical subject. ... Formal distinction is definitely a real distinction, expressing as it does the different layers of reality that form or constitute a being. … Real and yet not numerical, such is the status of formal distinction.
This history of ideas has been launched into new territories by the late Vladimir Voevodsky, and his influential introduction of univalent foundations. Voevodsky’s project imports a category theoretic intuition, an influence he gained in his early reading of Grothendieck’s (1997) Esquisse d’un programme… (which was written in 1984 and circulated in the mathematical community long before its publication), but also combines it with a very Leibnizian quest for the mechanical verifiability of mathematical proofs.
Loosely, the proposed univalence axiom, (A = B) ≅ (A ≅ B), stipulates that identity is equivalent to equivalence (or isomorphic to isomorphism). It comes packaged as the centerpiece of a new program for mathematical foundations that axiomatizes the idea that mathematical objects derive their identity deferentially from higher level isomorphic (in this case homotopic) equivalences. Voevodsky’s homotopy type theory builds a bridge between logic (computer science, dependent type systems) and geometry (topology), such that each logical type is equivalent up to unique isomorphism to a corresponding path in homotopic space, and is related to other types through nested cascades of type dependencies, described geometrically as a hierarchy of homotopic fibrations from one path to another. The gesture here can be thought of as “taming” the wild jungles of category theory and establishing a coded hierarchical order of inclusion more suitable for launching complex mathematical research programs, where it is necessary to keep track of the underlying logic and the higher-order symmetries at each step of the construction. If category theory swallowed up its set-theoretical foundations, where all mathematics were built up from the empty set, univalent foundations now spits them out again as higher-dimensional groupoids (“special case” categories, where every morphism is an isomorphism), and mathematics is then “built down” from a hierarchy of dependent types corresponding to more or less complex paths in homotopy space. Thus, in homotopy type theory, truth becomes a special case of logic, logic a special case of set theory, set theory a special case of category theory, category theory a special case of higher categories, and so on into the firmament.
Type theory first emerged as a somewhat ad hoc correction of arithmetic foundations to avoid the Russell Paradox, which Russell famously discovered in Frege’s set-theoretic approach. After Church and Turing, where the paradox reappears as non-terminating programs and algorithms that do not halt on a specific result, it became obvious that a special “typed” form of computational logic was needed, a calculus designed to avoid these paradoxical, non-sensical, non-terminating programs. There is an aura around this historical development, which Voevodsky himself tried to dispel, that naturally demotes computability theory in comparison to “pure mathematics”. For the intuition after Turing is that the oracular exteriorization Leibniz had imagined has been proven impossible. Avoiding uncomputable programs seemed to imply compromising the full power of mathematics, thus priming the intuition to think of computability as being more of an engineering problem than one of pure mathematics. From the point of view habituated to imagining all of mathematics as being reducible to ZFC and to vague intuitions about how sets of sets behave, it looks as though incompleteness implies that we can avoid non-terminating programs only by restricting ourselves to a small region of “computable” mathematics, an impure mathematics.
This computable, applied, subset of pure mathematics has been found to have a deep connection with intuitionistic logic. In intuitionistic logic (originating in the work of Brouwer, Heyting, and Kolmogorov), a proposition can be true, in which case its truth can be presented in the form of a proof, or absurd, which just means it is “empty” of proofs, it has no terms. Truth is just the condition of having proofs, the idea being that a thing is the collection of ways it can be constructed or presented, and a thing that does not exist, cannot be presented. The Curry–Howard correspondence formalizes how this idea applies to both logic (computer science) and mathematics. Propositions are types. Computable programs are proofs. As Brouwer argued, contra Hilbert, the truth of a proposition is not ensured by showing that its being false would lead to a contradiction: we must be able to construct a positive proof, we must realize it, make it manifest, rather than appeal to its absurd “opposite”. Thus, an arrow is drawn from the absurd to the unit type. An asymmetry is written into the logic of computability such that the entire apparatus descends from an original insistence that the paths compose and that the functions terminate, that the constructions be realized, or actualized. It is this idea that homotopy type theory expands on: in addition to having this dual interpretation of types in terms of a family of programs in computer science or formal proofs in mathematics, it provides a third, geometric interpretation. Each “computable function” can be modeled topologically as a continuous path in space. We have hence returned here to Duns Scotus’s use of the concept of virtuality. Si esse depends on quid est: a thing exists, or is “true”, if and only if it has demonstrable properties, or exemplifying attributes. Univocity was always a question of the structural correspondences between types, terms, and instances, and the virtual was a primitive notion of structure preserving map between objects and their attributes, subjects and their predicates, potential operations and their provisional actualizations.
Recall that part of Wittgenstein’s unease had to do with that curious gap between formal theory and the real-world practice or application. In what way do the rules of the deductive system relate to a possible real-world event, quantity, quality, or behavior? There is no “equal sign” between the material goings-on (say, the machine’s gears crunching along) and the symbolic formalization of an operational rule. Voevodsky is concerned with a similar gap. In first-order logic, all the special characters are ultimately forced into a relation with some natural language equivalent, which we are supposed to intuitively grasp. We say that ∀ means “for all”. We say that ∃ means “there exists”. But the meaning of “means” in these cases is outside of the deductive system in question. The problem is that this invisible equal sign between theory and practice seems to only exist in practice, since no theoretical proxy ever measures up to the empirical.2 As Wittgenstein notes, the sentence “‘We can construct a pentagon’ is a proposition of physics. It is not a mathematical proposition but an experiential one.” (Wittgenstein et al. [1939] 1976, p. 49) Voevodsky reasons similarly. In a documented discussion following his 2010 IAS lecture “What if Current Foundations of Mathematics are Inconsistent?”, Voevodsky admits to sharing this conviction: “There can be no inconsistency in experimental science. There can only be the result of an experiment… I definitely consider material reality as the absolute judge of truth…” (Voevodsky 2010) A scientific experiment always gives a result, a yes or a no response, as John Wheeler (1999) put it.
Hence Voevodsky’s move. What if instead of assuming that mathematics is incomplete in virtue of the fact that we just know that it is consistent, we rather submitted ourselves to the possibility that it is our current intuitive understanding of foundations that is inconsistent? Perhaps we do not “just know” that first-order arithmetic is consistent, perhaps we do not “just know” how infinite hierarchies of sets behave. Instead, let us replace this assumption with the functorial intuition, the intuition of what it means to take something for another, to consider something “for our current purposes”, or “up to isomorphism”. In order to transform what appears to be just a restricted computable subset of mathematics (the proof-checkable part) into a foundation for all of mathematics, thereby bringing pure math closer to applied math, Voevodsky jettisons the distinction between strict equality and weak equivalence. Univalence means that isomorphic structures can be formally identified, not just “in practice” or by “abuse of notation”. Univalence “is about expanding the notion of identity so as to coincide with the (unchanged) notion of equivalence.” (The Univalent Foundations Program 2013, p. 5) Turning mathematical foundations inside out in this way means admitting within mathematics the relativity of even the most clear and distinct logical deduction.

7. Operational Virtuality

If mathematics must ultimately be confronted to the real, to empirical becoming, if it must make a difference in this world rather than in some other possible world, does this not imply that the so called “universal truths” of mathematics are just as temporary as the flow of experience? This Voevodsky tacitly admits:
Mathematics has been historically kind of static. If something has been proved it has been proved forever. One can speculate about the possibility of a kind of “dynamic” mathematics in that sense. It is very hard to imagine at this point…
The admission that math may be just as impermanent as experimental truth evokes an openness to a kind of dialectical materialism, no doubt part of Voevodsky’s education. But it could equally be said to echo American pragmatism, where, in William James’ infamous formulation, truth is understood as the “cash value” of a proposition: something is true if it can effectively be cashed in and make a real practical difference. For Bergson, of course, the progressive geometrization of reality could only serve to mask the truth of becoming.
This natural mathematics is only the rigid unconscious skeleton beneath our conscious supple habit of linking the same causes to the same effects; and the usual object of this habit is to guide actions inspired by intentions, or, what comes to the same, to direct movements combined with a view to reproducing a pattern.
Logical and geometric concepts only created an illusory “intelligible world”, Bergson thought. They “are not, indeed, the perception itself of things, but the representation of the act by which the intellect is fixed on them.” (Bergson [1911] 1944, p. 177) The task of the philosopher, he thought, in the face of the geomtrization of the world, was to uphold the distinction between “real and symbolic” (Bergson [1922] 1965, p. 153). So Bergson ends up defending a form of equivocity: the virtual is here a means to protect an absolute difference between the created and the uncreated, the real and the imaginary, the real physicist making a measurement and the hypothetical observer in an imagined spatio-temporal frame of reference. But indeed, if Einstein’s view of time won out over Bergson’s, it is only because it could be cashed in for real effects and predictions, it virtually included pragmatic constructions, it “made a difference”. It established, in other words, a virtual link between the model and its external verification in practice. Practice, and its deferential character—its Heideggerian character, let’s say, the preorder of tool-being, where each task delivers itself to the next through an endless chain—is the only possible site for virtuality: all things derive their identity from potential operations, through a hierarchy of transcendental constraints. Virtuality in this way is the yet unactualized future of realizable practice, ensuring that each actualization is an expression of the virtual, that each subjective experience is an element of the transcendental constraints on cognition, and that things are nothing more nor less than the virtual operations that allow their constructions. Univalence echoes univocity: if something exists, it virtually contains all the ways we may come to know it. A thing is equivalent to the operations required for actualizing it. Thus, if a thing is realized, or actualized, it unfolds a proof of existence from an equivalence class of virtual operations.
It is tempting to speculate that with such gestures, such admissions, mathematics comes close to appeasing some of Wittgenstein’s worries, and perhaps even some of Bergson’s objections. The synthetic process in mathematics and logic in the last century has begun to build a very subtle bridge between the world of intuitions and the world of exteriorized mechanical provability, and between the worlds of formal theory and practice. This bridge, it seems to me, is achieved through a most interesting compromise. Math has admitted into its formalism the kind of relativism with which equivalences are trafficked in everyday practice, and written this relativity into law, as a fundamental rule. It is by admitting that whenever we pick something out from the rest, whenever we select or point to something, there is always already something like an invisible equal sign, between the thing we are talking about and our action of presenting it, between our intuitions and our hypomnemonic exteriorizations. There is a kind of honesty in this, an admission that what is right for me is right, and that truth or identity or equality is always a matter of context. But the upshot is that we learn that this does not necessarily mean, as Wittgenstein thought, that “here we can’t talk about ‘right’”. For indeed, this admission is precisely what allows us to recuperate rigorous ways of addressing validity: we can legitimately “talk about right” up to isomorphism.
Would Bergson, for his part, have acquiesced to such an operational account of virtuality? Or would he have fought it on the grounds that it was too bound up with methods of effective realization, thereby immediately, in his view, cutting us off from an irreducible essence and blinding us to the truth of becoming? Will we not have begun, however, to recover something of his vision? Cassirer rightly notes that even in Bergson, “a spatial intuition and schema seem to have slipped unnoticed into his analysis of time” (Cassirer [1923] 1985 189). His cones, shells, and sheaves now reappear as fibrations, functors, natural transformations, and ever more rigorous diagrammatic tools for modeling functional relationships between perceptions and conceptions of the world at different scales and levels of description. Time, process, and becoming are detrivialized geometrically through a rigorous demystification of the cone, and the rules of logic and mathematics are here no longer some rigid grid the intellect imposes on reality, so much as continual compromises between the virtual and the actual, between the intuition and the exteriorization. But contra Bergson, this progress was achieved not by defending an absolute difference in kind between the map and the territory, or the relations and the relata, but by dropping this equivocal criterion altogether. It is achieved not simply by dogmatically rejecting the dualist essentialism, but through a careful, patient, and always explicitly provisional “asymptotic” monism, a unificatory and conciliatory attitude, rather than a reactionary empirical prejudice. We see now that the opposition of continuity was nothing more than the preservation of structure through transformation, and that it is therefore not opposed to logical ratiocination. Life is not the ancient enemy of matter. The virtual is not opposed to mechanism. And the contraction of experience is a structure-preserving operation, quite possibly owing to an evolutionarily conditioned propensity to link the before and the after, to find a terminus for our actions, and to respect the rules of perpetual composability.
Ex nihilo nihil fit: the same gesture that establishes intelligibility and coherence, also prohibits the summoning of the void. And continuity is the preservation of structure from the initial to the terminal state, which is precisely why a computable function is executable. The non-terminating program, for its part, is the site of a catastrophe, where the coherence is broken, the continuity is cut, and Ex falso quodlibet, an inevitable leap from absurdity to fixity, as a new paradigm or category or world is reified. Continuity is (re)established, it is a struggle that can only take the form of a demand for perpetual composability, consequence of our submission to the frictions of the real. Each new expression comes ready built with its deferral to the next. There is no continuity, no coherence, no common sense, without this process of turning the intuitions inside out through exteriorization, subjecting the doxa to the trials of the empirical. The drama of the actual and virtual could just be a by-product, a side effect of the most general constraints biology imposes on living things: the paths must compose, the structures must be preserved, all actions must result in a change, and make a difference in practice. All this in the absence of certitude: we do not know what our bodies can do, what our systems are capable of, the world always only appearing in hindsight. Matter and causality, objective stability and intelligibility are indeed grasped through desperate constructions, contingent and ad hoc defaults to provisional actualities. But the real itself is unfinished. It perhaps exists only in the making, that is, in whatever survives the transition between actualities, between models of objectivity, between scientific paradigms, but also, importantly, between individual prejudices or biased perspectives.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

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Data Availability Statement

Not applicable.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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1
His argument also applies to more recent structuralisms like James Ladyman’s Ontic Structural Realism, which denies the existence of objects, and develops a rather compelling realist theory of structure, where there are only relations, no relata (Ladyman, Ross, Spurrett, Collier 2009). Be that as it may, I do believe OSR is compatible with the operational notion of virtuality.
2
Voevodsky supposes that any foundation for mathematics should have the following three components: first, a formal deduction system; second, an informal aspect that provides a natural language equivalent that is “intuitively comprehensible to humans”; and third, in the reverse direction, a “structure that enables humans to encode mathematical ideas” into this framework (Voevodsky 2014). In ZFC, the first component is built on top of predicate logic, supplemented with a layer of patchwork axiomatics. Its second component, according to Voevodsky, is an implicit assumption that humans have the “ability to intuitively comprehend hierarchies”. Its third component, its main advantage, is that it provides an intuitive way of encoding mathematical objects as sets.
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Wilson, A. On Something Like an Operational Virtuality. Humanities 2021, 10, 29. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/h10010029

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Wilson A. On Something Like an Operational Virtuality. Humanities. 2021; 10(1):29. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/h10010029

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Wilson, Alexander. 2021. "On Something Like an Operational Virtuality" Humanities 10, no. 1: 29. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/h10010029

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