So which discussion is not finite in that case? Does any discussion under the sun goes on forever? it doesn't make sense. — Corvus
What? No.Wasn't he saying clearly mathematician's infinite are finite? — Corvus
My ground involves reading what Wittgenstein says: "mathematician's discussions of the infinite are clearly finite discussions. By which I mean, they come to an end." He is not saying that infinity is finite, but that the discussions of mathematicians are finite.Yup, that was my interpretation of Wittgenstein. What is your ground for saying it error? — Corvus
Describe "infinity" in clear and actual way in understandable language, and I will tell you about your modus operandi. — Corvus
...one should proceed with extreme scepticism.When one definition simultaneously addresses every possible objection... — PL Olcott
You said, "Problem with Set Theory is that their concept "infinite" means "finite""
What set theory textbook, or any reference in set theory or mathematics, says that 'infinite' means 'finite'? — TonesInDeepFreeze
No, Tones took up what you said, asking you to justify it. You are in error, both in claiming "Problem with Set Theory is that their concept "infinite" means "finite" and in attributing anything like that to Wittgenstein.You misunderstood. — Corvus
It is indistinguishable from the locutionary act. — NOS4A2
Your response is no act of mine. — NOS4A2
You spoke them or wrote them. No others acts have occurred or are apparent or can be measured. — NOS4A2
Speech act theory is embedded in social discourse, implicitly and explicitly addressing the place of utterances in social activity. Perlocutions include the acts of the listener....the theory ought to be reworked to include “listening acts”, the acts of a listener. — NOS4A2
I have already quoted from Wittgenstein from his writings "infinite" in math means "finite", — Corvus
Which is very far from what you attribute to him here."Let us not forget: mathematician's discussions of the infinite are clearly finite discussions. By which I mean, they come to an end." - Philosophical grammar, p483. Wittgenstein. — Corvus
Your reasoning (or Vilenkin's) seems to beg the question. — Michael
I think the difference you are trying to draw is between a voluntary and an involuntary construct. — Lionino
...invisible acts... — NOS4A2
Here you made some marks on the screen - a physical act.Any advice? — NOS4A2
my problem is that speech act theory proposes multiple phenomena where only one is apparent. — NOS4A2
Time, inclination and patience permitting, I hope to get caught up at some time to responding to the recent various misconceptions, non sequiturs, strawmen, etc. posted in this thread. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Drop the requirement of proof and take it as a "hinge" proposition, not to be subject to doubt....since it cannot be proven to not be the case, I cannot be absolutely certain. — Janus
Yep. It's not as if, that the description is only as it appears to ordinary humans implies that the description is wrong... But that seems to be what some folk think.That's all I want, and since it seems incoherent to want something unimaginable, you might also say it's all I could want. — Janus
I don't recall anyone I've read taking up the question of "how many acts is it?" — Count Timothy von Icarus
It pays to remember that scientific theories, and science generally, only tell us how to make sense of how things appear to be to ordinary humans. — Janus
I think its impossible to view the world outside of some particular perspective and so in that sense I would say that our notion of objective truth is an idealization. — Apustimelogist
Your point isn’t clear from the letters you put on the screen. — NOS4A2
In the case that I think there is no world, it follows that I believe that everything around me is merely a projection of my mind (or simply is my mind). If I also believe that I am here discussing for a purpose, it could very well be that I believe that I am interacting with the very contents of my mind — Lionino
That still does not defeat solipsism — Lionino
But it's a faith, not something supported by empirical evidence. — Michael
And it's always the case that the probability that I am a Boltzmann brain is greater than the probability that I am not a Boltzmann brain. — Michael
There's plenty of insuperable philosophical issues, and it's easy to make up even more. — Banno
1. There are far more long-lived Boltzmann brains than long-lived humans — Michael
t only follows that the probability that I am a Boltzmann brain gets smaller as the time increases. — Michael
it is always the case that the probability that I am a Boltzmann brain is greater than the probability that I am not a Boltzmann brain. — Michael
Solipsism is the denial that the human mind has any valid ground for believing in the existence of anything but itself, anything but itself is the (outside) world. — Lionino
Your argument is that because most red balls have no green stripe then if my ball has a green stripe then it is most likely not a red ball. That is wrong. If my ball has a green stripe then it is most likely a red ball. — Michael
Most Boltzmann brains are short-lived, but most long-lived brains are Boltzmann brains. — Michael
