[quote name='way2lazy2care' timestamp='1296596097' post='4768141']
I'd say something whose definition exists only when physical observations or properties are included. Something like gravity is defined entirely because we have observed it to be that way. 1=1 will always be true regardless of how we observe it.
I am of course ignoring that things like numbers and equivalence have been defined by man and man is physical therefor they could be considered physical. The concepts of equality or numbers do not require a physical world to hold definition.
I think this is a decent definition, but I feel that even something like 1=1 has the hidden assumption that two things can share the same identity in some sense. I couldn't tell you what a reality would be like where that wasn't true, but I can imagine defining a mathematical system where two things can only ever be approximately equal, and thus 1=1 is never true under that system. Admittedly, I'm seriously pushing the limits of what "physical" means.
What I really want to get at is the idea that even something as simple as 1=1 relies on an axiom (usually S(x) = S(y) => x = y under Peano) and that this axiom appears to be inspired by the reality we live in, where objects can be reliably compared and classified. One of my professors told a great story about a visiting IBM researcher who talked about how the design of one of their original cryptographic co-processors had been formally verified by a proof checker. It was hacked within days of its release because people figured out how to mess with the power input to the chips and get them into undefined states. The moral of the story was: logic depends crucially on external factors; the process of abstraction does not remove those factors, it merely assumes they are within tolerable ranges.
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I like such stories. To me, they reinforce the notion that mathematics has nothing to do with the real world. The mistake that was made is not that there was an incorrect assumption in the mathematics, but that a mistake was made in translating a mathematical statement into a statement about the real world. In that sense, I think this is not a good example to illustrate your point about axioms. (*) It is a very good example though to stress the fact that too great a belief in mathematics, and only mathematics, can be a problem.
(*) I do see your point about axioms, but I don't think it's possible to really explain it well, and give examples, without becoming very technical.