Answer this question: given that we agree that analog computers can do computations, what are numbers "made of" in analog systems?Numbers are MADE of logic states, and this is axiomatically, positively correct at the ontological level for a digital system.
You're pointing to digital computers and saying, "See! Numbers are logic states!" But if numbers are logic states, then how do analog computations work? <-- This fact needs to be addressed by your ontology.
In my ontology, there are no numbers inside of either analog or digital computers. There are no trues or falses, either. Those things -- numbers, logic values -- are abstract concepts. To perform calculations, we devise formal systems and then build machines that map physical phenomena to the symbols of our formal systems. In every computation, the laws of physics does the manual labor and we interpret the resulting physical state as a value.
In your ontology, logic values somehow have physical extent (otherwise, how do machines use them?). Please explain where they live, how much they weigh, etc.
Stop. Just stop with "voltage that is on", as that is not at all what's physically happening. From the 10,000 ft view, you see a computer as a bunch of discrete states, but this is an ILLUSION. There is no such thing as a discrete voltage. Voltage is the potential between two points in the electric field. No matter where you measure it, there will ALWAYS be a voltage. And when we measure it, it's value is not a discrete state.The computer is working with voltage that is on (1 or T or "minimal presence").
So, on one hand you have this constantly varying quantity that can never be measured exactly, and on the other you have "true/false" logic states. These are EXTREMELY different things. It takes an enormous amount of effort to create a machine that pretends that they are the same. Yet, somehow you are claiming that ontologically they are the same. That's absurd.
"The voltage is using multiple instances of itself to manifest a number." Seriously?At the end, the voltage is using "multiple instances of itself" to manifest a number
What's the category, and how did I make an error?Category error, for you, again—a machine—is another way for you to get away with saying CONCEPT.
No "further abstractions"? What do you think "1 = universe" is? Besides being a misunderstanding of what Boole was trying to say, it's a certified, grade-A abstraction!Let 1 (voltage) = a UNIVERSE. What's the universe? More voltage in different areas?
Let 1 = DOG in space. (you can use let J3gjLF = DOG in space. In the end, those glyphs need to boil down to tons of unary voltages, or voltages that are contrasting for greater space efficiency).
Do you see what I'm getting at here yet? I'm looking at the voltage states as what's going on, not any further abstractions.