. . . "Two dimensional objects have a fundamental problem which demonstrates that space cannot actually be represented in this way . . . We see a very similar problem in the relation between zero dimensional figures (points) . . . Then we can see that it is only when we apply numbers to our dimensional concepts of space, that these problems occur. . . None of these numbers systems has resolved the problem because the problem lies within the way that we model space. . . . The problem though is that introducing real numbers does not actually solve the problem, it just offers a way of dealing with the problem."Human beings may have gotten over this, but they did not resolve the problem — Metaphysician Undercover
But perhaps someone reading this took a course in groups, rings, and fields but forgot this beautiful construction, which we can sum up in one equation: — fishfry
I always thought this was an abstraction of basic 17th century calculus, where higher powers of infinitesimals can be ignored. — fishfry
I know that in constructive math, all functions are computably continuous or something like that. Makes some of the problems go away. — fishfry
I've considered it. It uses a complex variable for time. That is unlike any time I'm familiar with. So I do not think it reflects the universe we live in. — Devans99
We now know that the moon is demonstrably not there when nobody looks. — Boojums All the Way Through - N. David Mermin
I don't really believe in multiple universes, but if they do exist, then which of the following is more likely:
1. They are all made of completely different stuff and evolve in completely different ways
2. They are all made of similar stuff and evolve in similar ways
I think the 2nd is much more likely, leading to the conclusion that most or all such universes support life; a conclusion that fatally undermines the so called strong anthropic principle. — Devans99
Blatant contradiction is not the real problem though, rather ambiguity and vagueness, such as the difference between "continuum" and "continuity", the definitions of "object" and "infinite" are the real problem. — Metaphysician Undercover
Each of those countless universes is made of the same stuff and evolve in the same way, so they all support life — Devans99
And maybe he's reformed his ways and is now writing articles of actual substance. — fishfry
well we can argue what x consists of all year but x is still x — Mac
Time is not a thing, so dividing it is rather arbitrary — Gregory
we have gotten new insights on mathematics in history and our understanding of math has greatly changed from what it was during Ancient times and what it is now. Hence what is preposterous is then to think that a) no new insights will be made in mathematics in the future and b) these new insights won't change our understanding from the one we currently have. — ssu
Therefore you can make a universe out of a pebble — Gregory
The conclusion is that the limits of calculus go out the window!
I've merely had the courage to take what Metaphysician Undercover is saying to it's logical conclusion — Gregory
At the same time, the university seems to be hellbent on getting first-year freshmen to "study" gender studies, . . . — alcontali
The main point is that this is how you define cardinal numbers these days. They're no longer equivalence classes of sets that themselves aren't sets. That was a problem so it got fixed at the expense of needing to do some technical work. — fishfry
That is why majors in almost any subject will graduate with close to zero understanding of that subject. The only ones who understand the subject are people who have been confronted with solving practical problems in that subject. Everybody else invariably sounds like an idiot. — alcontali
I understand that this is generally necessary for university students as they simply don’t have time to read through anything themselves. — I like sushi
where a field is by definition a mathematical object which has a value everywhere, so "field" is almost a synonym for "plenum" — Pfhorrest
By this I mean that you should avoid this the first time around and come to your own conclusions about the text written by the philosopher before being spoon fed someone else’s interpretation. All philosophers are basically working from others anyway so why bother to distance yourself fro the text by seeing it through the lens of another? I understand that this is generally necessary for university student — I like sushi
Zenos paradox shows the infinity within the finitude of objects. The fact we can break a candy bar in two shows this applies to our world. That is enough for banach tarski. You can take infinity out of infinity. The extra cantor stuff well extra — Gregory
There are only two classes of people who need to carefully make this distinction: mathematicians, who are trained on this topic in their undergrad years; and philosophers, — fishfry
The axiom of choice results from the infinite divisibility of objects — Gregory
I don't see why Zeno's paradox is not a paradox but Banach-Tarski is. The latter flows directly from the former, and there is no BT without Zeno — Gregory
