I am pleased to offer this article by James Nickel. As the biography on his website states, Mr. Nickel “has endeavored in God’s grace to take every thought captive to the obedience of Christ (II Corinthians 10:5) – especially in the area of mathematics and science.” The Christian Church is indebted to his work in these fields. I highly recommend visiting his website and studying the great articles that he has posted there. His book, Mathematics: Is God Silent? is an indispensable work on the history of math and science and their Christian foundations.
Counting, Infinity, and the Foundation of Knowledge
By James Nickel
Used with permission
The counting numbers are also known, in mathematics, as the set1 of natural numbers. Mathematicians have chosen to denote this set by the symbol ℕ. The rule for constructing this set is that we start with 1. We calculate the next number by adding 1 to 1 (we get 2). Next, we add 1 to 2 to get 3, continuing the process ad infinitum (a Latin phrase meaning “toward infinity or endlessly”).
ℕ = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, …} where = is the symbol for equals2, {} are the brackets symbol that encapsulate the members of the set, and … (called an ellipsis) means ad infinitum.
We cannot write the last number of this set3 because there is no last number; this sequence “goes on forever.” The set of all counting numbers, which continues indefinitely, is infinite.4 Numbers, remember, are basically abstract ideas in our minds. We can think of numbers, but we cannot think of them all. We cannot think of the largest number because all we need to do is add 1 to it and we will get a larger number.
At the very beginning of mathematical foundations, with simple counting numbers, we are introduced to a concept that transcends and perplexes human comprehension. We can conceive of the concept of infinity (through the counting numbers) only because we are made in the image of the infinite, eternal, and personal God of the Scripture.
The first truth that we must understand about the Biblical God is that He is transcendent. Transcendent means “surpassing, to rise above, to stand beyond, to overpass, to surpass, to exceed, to be exalted above” or “beyond human experience” or “a basic and inescapable premise that is prerequisite to the coherence of all human experience.” By eternal, we mean “without beginning or end.” God is not subject to time. He existed before time. Before time there was only eternity; nothing existed but the unbeginning, uncreated God. Think deeply about that. By infinite, we mean “without limitation.” God is not subject to any limitations. He is without boundary limitations. We see that in the set of natural numbers there is a dim reflection of the nature of this transcendent God. Although this set has a beginning (the number 1), it has no end. This set also has no limitation or boundaries; there is no largest number in this set. The set of natural numbers gives us a faint glimpse of what transcendence means.
The second truth that we must understand about the Biblical God is that He is imminent (means “within human comprehension”). By personal, we mean God communicates with man in an understandable way by revelation. God communicates with man in two ways: (1) implicitly (implied or understood but not directly expressed) through creation and (2) explicitly (fully or clearly expressed) through the Bible. Let’s look at the implicit communication first. Genesis 1:1 states, “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” God also created man in His image. God created the universe by His word, called logos5 which is centered in Jesus Christ (see John 1:1-14), and His word structures (or patterns) the creation. This external order reflects mathematical principles that can be discerned internally by the human mind that has also been structured by God to think mathematically (i.e., the ability to think mathematically can be called a “sixth sense”). It is only in the revelation of the Creator God that we not only have a sense of number (hence, able to count) but find coherence between our mathematical thoughts and the outside world.
Sadly, the entrance of sin (see Genesis 3) shattered (1) our understanding of how we are able to count and (2) our understanding of mathematical coherence between our minds and the external world. Take note of what the British philosopher and scientist John W. N. Sullivan (1886-1937) said in 1925, “Why the external should obey the laws of logic; why, in fact, science should be possible, is not at all an easy question to answer.”6 Note also the statement of American mathematics historian Morris Kline (1908- 1992):
Finally, a study of mathematics and its contributions to the sciences exposes a deep question. Mathematics is man-made. The concepts, the broad ideas, the logical standards and methods of reasoning, and the ideals which have been steadfastly pursued for over two thousand years were fashioned by human beings. Yet with this product of his fallible mind man has surveyed spaces too vast for his imagination to encompass; he has predicted and shown how to control radio waves which none of our senses can perceive; and he has discovered particles too small to be seen with the most powerful microscope. Cold symbols and formulas completely at the disposition of man have enabled him to secure a portentous grip on the universe. Some explanation of this marvelous power is called for.7
Both Sullivan and Kline said these things because they refused to submit to the Biblical doctrine of creation. For Kline, mathematics is purely and only man-made. For Sullivan, “We are the law-givers of the universe; it is even possible that we can experience nothing but what we have created and that the great- est of our mathematical creations is the material universe itself.”8
Because of the infectious nature of sin, men refuse to submit to the revelation of God implicit in creation (external and internal). In fact, they do everything in their power to suppress this knowledge (see Romans 1:18-32). Hence, man needs, in a profound sense, to know the redemptive action of God in the Lord Jesus Christ. The imminence of God means that He comes to sinful man and speaks to Him out from His mercy, grace, and love. This is where the explicit communication of God enters the scene. The written word, the Scriptures, testifies to God as both Creator and Redeemer. Creation, redemption, and Scripture give man a true epistemological9 (theory of knowledge) foundation for the study of mathematics.
Psalm 36:9 states, “In Thy light, we see light.” Light stands for knowledge, understanding, and wisdom. Man can truly know only in the light of God’s knowledge. Job 32:8 states, “But there is a spirit in man, and the breath of the Almighty give him understanding” (see also Psalm 94:10-12). God is the ultimate teacher of knowledge. What man thinks he “creates” or “invents” God has known already from eternity to eternity. Without God’s knowledge (light) as a foundation, man’s knowledge is cloaked in darkness. This is why Sullivan and Kline are baffled by the coherence between mathematics and the physical world. And, this is why the unbelieving mathematician cannot truly account for man’s ability to count.
Proverbs 1:7 states, “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge.” A proper respect of the Biblical God is the foundation (the superstructure, the starting point) of knowledge. Fools despise wisdom and knowledge in their disrespect of the Biblical God. According to Romans 1:22, “Professing to be wise, they become fools.”
How then does the unbeliever, one who rejects the revelation of God in creation and Scripture, know anything? According to American theologian and educator Rousas J. Rushdoony (1916-2001):
The unbeliever is thus able to think and work only on the basis of a practical reason which presupposes the Christian frame of things…. On his own premises, he can know nothing; on borrowed premises, he is able to think and work, but for all his results, he remains in the paradoxical position of the cattle rustler…. He has no knowledge on the basis of his own principles, he has valid knowledge only as a thief possesses stolen goods.10
In other words, the unbeliever can count without being able to account for counting. Unbelievers can count but they cannot offer a philosophy that accounts for their practice of counting. Only the believer, redeemed by grace through Christ and in subjection to God’s written word, can truly account for the ability to count.
Copyright © 2009, by James D. Nickel
www.biblicalchristianworldview.net
1 A set is a group or collection of objects that generally have something in common or follow some pattern (some unifying principle that ties their diversity together). In this example, the objects are the counting numbers. A synonym for set is class (derived from classification). For example, the 6th grade in Windsor School is a class containing 16 objects or students.
2 The equals sign (=) is basic to all of mathematics. This sign sets two quantities or ideas (one of the left-hand side of the equals sign and the other on the right-hand side of the equals sign) as equal in magnitude (value) or meaning. In our example, ℕ = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, …} defines the meaning of the set of natural numbers (symbolized by the letter ℕ). Most commonly, the equal sign is used in mathematical equations like 2 + 3 = 5.
3 The set of natural number is also called a sequence because these numbers follow a prescribed order. In specific, this set is an arithmetic sequence because there is a common difference (i.e., 1) between every term in the set.
4 The mathematical symbol for infinity is ∞. The English mathematician John Wallis (1616-1703) first introduced this symbol in 1655.
5 Logos (λογος) is Greek for word; the concepts of lawfulness, wisdom, reason, interconnectedness, communication, and logic are nuances of its meaning.
6 John W. N. Sullivan, “Mathematics as an Art,” The World ofMathematics, ed. James R. Newman (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1956), 3:2020.
7 Morris Kline, Mathematics and the Physical World (New York: Dover Publications, [1959 [1980), p. ix.
8 Sullivan, 3:2021.
9 Epistémé is Greek for knowledge or understanding. It literally means “to cause to stand.”
10 Rousas J. Rushdoony, By What Standard? (Tyler, TX: Thoburn Press, [1958] 1983), pp. 61-62.
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Good article & a great, simple example of how mathematics is full of spiritual concepts. Even the most basic math taps into profound truths, though it is still practical and useful for many things.
It’s silly to say man created mathematics. Maybe mathematicians think this because they consider math to consist mainly of just definitions that men concocted, but it seems quite obvious that mathematical truths have been discovered over the centuries!
To pretend otherwise is just silly. Considering how long it took just to come up with the concept of zero is a good example.
Yes, James Nickel has done excellent work in showing the Biblical foundations of mathematics. Only the believer can truly “account for his counting.” Thanks for visiting the site and commenting.
Oh for alleged hypothetical supreme being’s sake grow up! Nonbelievers can count, and account for, infinite sets by simply following the logic. Peano axioms require an unending sequence to remain contradiction free. As for the Platonic aspect of mathematics even great philosophers screw up. There are no compelling arguments for a platonic or spiritual mathematic world and no amount of pseudo mathematical drivel will provide one. As rather stupid short-lived animals we will never exhaust the consequences of any infinite mathematical theory no matter how well trod upon.
Thanks for commenting. I think a more fundamental question is why can we describe things we seen in the physical universe in terms of mathematics? Why is there this apparent “coherence”? What we are really trying to get it are the metaphysical and epistemelogical issues. How can an unbelieving worldview account for the coherence between math and the universe? This is discussed somewhat here:
http://takingeverythoughtcaptive.com/bible-and-science/
I would like to discuss this more with you if you are interested.