Will we actually turn ourselves into Venus? — Xtrix
That would require a lot of neoliberals having absolute power to push industries not complying with climate goals. — Christoffer
Universal cooperation is a pipe dream. Also the idea that we can quickly de-carbonize is a fantasy it seems. The "political" part of the problem is the promulgation of impossible targets, — Janus
There is no point at infinity in the complex plane. That point is by definition outside the plane. To allow it in is to break the rules of the structure. There is no north pole in the Reimann sphere — Metaphysician Undercover
This is why zero, like infinity, has no place within ordinal numbers, and must be excluded. — Metaphysician Undercover
If all I see is symbols, the me that is trying to learn, screams and runs away. Does that make sense? I would like to break through that barrier and be able to understand the language of symbols. — Athena
Climatologists do speak with such confidence, just not in their scientific papers. https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.nytimes.com/2016/09/04/science/flooding-of-coast-caused-by-global-warming-has-already-begun.amp.html — Benkei
↪jgill
It is mind-blowing if you're into that stuff, but I'd say it's not at all surprising — Metaphysician Undercover
T is countable, infinite, bounded above and below.
This one is confusing me a bit, as I don’t see how it is bounded above. — Bob Ross
a line segment from the interval [0, 3] inclusive would be a bounded finite — Bob Ross
the problem would be that any “unbounded” f(n) one could provide is bounded to the, in toto, concept of that two-dimensional spatial graph. — Bob Ross
This does not sound like MAYAEL — L'éléphant
New MathOh dear! What can you tell me about the 1960s-1970s math education failure? — Athena
Most mathematicians seem to just take zero for granted, with zero understanding of what "zero" means. — Metaphysician Undercover
Perhaps I didn't read far enough, but the person mentioned that believed negatives were greater than infinity was John Wallis, who actually did accept them, but thought so because dividing by 0 gives infinity, and going smaller would have to mean going past infinity. Strange indeed. — Jerry
It seems we accept negative numbers now on a similar footing as whole numbers, but complex numbers are still pretty hotly debated as to whether we should consider them as real as the real numbers. — Jerry
Is there no insight to be gained by understanding why the idea of a negative eluded such minds for so long? — Jerry
Euler, in the latter half of the 18th century still believed negative numbers were greater than infinity. — jgill
Can I ask you where you got this from? — Real Gone Cat
The first culture to do math with negative numbers was the Chinese and they didn't have the concept of 0. I wonder what their definition of negative numbers was — Agent Smith
Inflation isn't important and isn't a problem. — Xtrix
The terminology (i.e., potential and actual) are misleading (as a potential infinite is not merely potentially limitless in content) and, therefore, this distinction shall be hereon depicted as “bounded” vs “unbounded” infinity.
Superposition by definition means that the two states measurably interfere with each other . . . — noAxioms
Do you want to provide some of those categories on the chance of conceiving me? — Athena
My dear lady, that was done long ago. Regardless of categories. :cool: — jgill
OH come on. I was looking forward to a better answer. — Athena
My favorite math professor loves math and he gets so excited when he talks about it. He makes comments such as "cry for the joy" of the math principle he is talking about. I don't think he needs anything else in life other than his joy of math and sharing it — Athena
If you have an infinite number of universes in continuous space that are the size of our observable universe, that means that inflation will inevitably end up creating indiscernible copies of our exact universe — Count Timothy von Icarus
Do you want to provide some of those categories on the chance of conceiving me? — Athena
I'm of the opinion that magick should be taught in public schools. — Bret Bernhoft
I've avoided Castaneda because I've read that the books were largely shown to be fictitious — Noble Dust
What should I live for or how should I live? — rossii
So what are your thoughts here when one direction looks to track the "deep maths" of Nature and the other choice may be just unphysical pattern spinning? What do we learn if this is the case? — apokrisis
But am I right that you argue the complex plane has lessons in terms of the physics of chaos - patterns of convergence~divergence? — apokrisis
what would happen if physics were re-written in the language of intuitionistic mathematics? Would time become “real” again?
But Gisin points out that intuitionistic mathematics could offer a natural way out of the deterministic lockup.
Zoom in on your complex plane with its pattern of curl, and do you start to lose any sense of whether some infinitesimal part is diverging or converging? — apokrisis
One can ask again whether maths made the right pragmatic choice even if Peirce is the metaphysically correct choice? — apokrisis
. . . almost everyone has a problem with your views of infinity. Now we may all be wrong, and you may be correct. But is it necessary at this time to focus on the infinite as such, or can this be shelved or stated another way that allows your readers to focus on the first premise they can readily accept? — Philosophim
In India, it seems religion and math went hand in hand. — Athena
↪jgill
I put a lot of effort into these posts. If you don't have anything substantive to add, please go to a different thread. — T Clark
. . . exemplifies a confusion which lies at the heart of philosophy — hypericin
The mystical and math go very well together and I think the Western mind is biased and this bias is like blinders that limit the consciousness of the Western mind. — Athena