Logical Dependence of Physical Determinism on Set-theoretic Metatheory

Justin Clarke-Doane

公開日: 2025/8/15

Abstract

Baroque questions of set-theoretic foundations are widely assumed to be irrelevant to physics. In this article, I challenge this assumption. I argue that even the fundamental physical question of whether a theory is deterministic - whether it fixes a unique future given the present - can depend on choice of set-theoretic axiom candidates over which there is deep disagreement. Suppose, as is customary, that a deterministic theory is one whose mathematical formulation yields a unique solution to its governing equations. Then the question of whether a theory is deterministic is the question of whether there exists a unique solution to its mathematical model. I argue that competing axiom candidates extending standard mathematics can diverge on all dimensions of determinism. First, they may disagree about whether a given physical system is well-posed, and so whether a solution exists. Second, even when they agree that a solution exists, they can differ on whether that solution is unique. Finally, even when they agree that a system has a solution, and agree that this solution is unique, they may still dispute what that solution is. Whether a theory is deterministic - and even which outcome it predicts - can depend on choice of set-theoretic metatheory. I indicate how the conclusions extend to discrete systems and suggest directions for future research. One upshot of the discussion is that either physical theories must be relativized to set-theoretic metatheories, in which case physics itself becomes relative, or, as Quine controversially argued, the search for new axioms to settle undecidables may admit of empirical input.

Logical Dependence of Physical Determinism on Set-theoretic Metatheory | SummarXiv | SummarXiv