Some future events, especially those which are more immediate, would have a probability approaching an infinite value — Metaphysician Undercover
It is a basic ontological mistake to extend a causal chain into the future, — Metaphysician Undercover
Everything, everywhere all at once.
Best picture winner last year. I have to say: meh. — Mikie
So there exists semantics for infinitesimals (and their reciprocals) that does not imply the existence of infinite time, space or information (which is the unfortunate result of misinterpreting such numbers as literally denoting limitless extensions) — sime
That's what I do, take everything to the most base level, and lay it out plain and simple. But the simple confuses many because at the most simple level things are complex. — Metaphysician Undercover
quick-witted — jgill
:lol: Come on. — Mikie
Philosophy should meet the same standard of clarity met by math — ucarr
There is no limitation as to what a first cause could be — Philosophim
It is limited to things uncaused, surely. — AmadeusD
I would assume that those who do not understand that this is a form of rounding off, and claim that the two expressions are actually the same, despite the glaring difference in meaning between them, are lost in self-deception. — Metaphysician Undercover
↪jgill
You kidding? The last presidential debate between the two was a disaster for Trump. He completely derailed the debate, talked over everyone, including the moderator, and kept devolving into outright raves. — Wayfarer
Wonder if this will continue forward, when it's Biden vs Trump: why even give the respect for the other candidate by debating him face to face? — ssu
Thank you, Mr Surge the Borders President — jgill
I'm wondering though, would this be sufficient to vote Clown?
From my spot, nope, but I'm no Denverite. — jorndoe
By the time you have reached the seventh or eighth article you should be looking at something to do with philosophy. — Sir2u
The topic remains an opposition between infinitism and foundationalism, with Philosophim taking a foundationalist position. The alternative is an acceptance of infinite complexity, — Banno
Blame the Democrats for running a corpse for President. — Hanover
:smile:Hence you can have people working in science who say they don't care at all about philosophy. — ssu
That we don't have any use for the larger infinities in physics, at least yet, makes it doubtful that the Cantorian idea of larger and larger infinities is valid. — ssu
The key point is this: we can conceive of an object being non-existent at one moment and existent the next – we do not need to even introduce the notion of “cause” into this thought experiment. — expos4ever
Yet if there's a Continuum Hypothesis, we clearly don't understand everything about infinity. — ssu
It's a two way street — Count Timothy von Icarus
What is the specific prior event that caused the decay of that atom at that time? — EricH
↪jgill
Maybe you can shed some light as to why massed randomness seems so ordered. — mentos987
But yes in the end everything becomes equally probable. — IP060903
The question is really about what caused the set of causality to be. If the universe has a finite chain of causality, what caused that to be? If the universe has an infinitely regressive chain of causality, what caused that to be? There is no prior cause in either case. It would be that set without prior explanation; it simply would be — Philosophim
One thing is infinity, that set theory takes just as an axiom — ssu
I have to say I find it pretty annoying, and even irresponsible. — Jamal
The implication being that, were there no law against it.... :yikes: — Wayfarer
The probability of measuring some part of a system can be computed from the wave function. I've not heard the result of that computation being referred to as a 'wave', but I'm sure it is somewhere — noAxioms
and now Russia but not for much longer! — Jamal
Lets envision an a thought experiment of an actual chain as a visual. — Philosophim
I tried to understand cases where numbers are physical entities, but I must admit that I couldn't possibly think of any case number that can be regarded as a physical object — Corvus
In physics, isn't time just clock-time? Kind of a practical use, rather than a discussion of what it is? — AmadeusD
Is there's a boil-down source to understand the concept? — AmadeusD
Though, maybe i'm missing a trick but it seems to be that your suggestion presupposes an 'actual' time, independent of objects passing, rather than time being a description, or set of relations between objects — AmadeusD