That it's the smallest measurable length is not that it's the smallest length. — Michael
I will quote several posts here but I will start with the only thing where I think Michael is wrong. Every other posts he writes is spot on.
The Planck length actually is the smallest possible length/size of anything in this universe. It is so much the smallest possible length, that the very moment universe came into existence, its size was exactly equal to Planck length.
I think that pretty much everyone with 5+ posts in this thread is correct about few things and incorrect about others. The main problem in my opinion is that everyone is talking about a different thing.
From your Wikipedia page Banno: "As n approaches infinity, sn tends to aproach 1." Does that means =1 to you? — Metaphysician Undercover
It actually does mean that, yes. It's exactly one. But this is surprisingly irrelevant in this case, because the problem doesn't seem to be mathematical at all.
The problem of the "paradox" is the way it's constructed.
You have it exactly backwards - the paradox only arises by insisting that space is made up of infinitely many points, and time is made up of infinitely many instants. When we recognize that both space and time are continuous, the paradox dissolves - there are no intermediate points that I have to "touch" while moving from defined point A to defined point B in a finite interval of time, just like I do not need to count any intermediate numbers in order to get from 1 to 2. — aletheist
You are of course correct that in real life we could just run and beat the turtle, but this trivial solution is not what drove all the philosophers/logicians to it for such a long time. Instead the most common interpretation of the paradox is that the runner MUST touch every point, as you worded it. So that's the version of the paradox that people try to discuss, including majority of posters in this thread. It is assumed that that's what Zeno was thinking.
Here is the problem in different words. Suppose Achilles is twice as fast as the turtle and turtle starts with 50m advantage. Achilles needs to "touch" the 50m point. At the moment of him touching the point, the turtle will be at 75m point. So the next point he needs to touch is the 75m. He always needs to touch the point where turtle is at the moment of him reaching the previous point. Since mathematically it's obvious that at 100m point Achilles will catch the turtle, we can just say "Screw the turtle, let's ask ourselves can Achilles actually reach 100m mark?" We can simplify the problem like this, because if he does reach 100m mark, then he had caught the turtle and if he doesn't, then turtle will always stay ahead of him. So that's where we get 1/2+1/4+...
Again, of course it's silly, but if we don't construct the problem this way, it becomes trivial and not worth a single keyboard press, let alone hundreds of books and articles written by some very smart people.
The sum of 1/3, 1/9, 1/27, 1/81...sequence is NOT 1. It is half(1/2).
You can try that with other fractions too. The sum doesn't equal 1.
Therefore the paradox remains unresolved as far as math is concerned. — TheMadFool
You misunderstand the problem and the reason why it's worded the way it is. Length of 1 is defined here at whatever point Achilles would mathematically catch the turtle. You want his first point to be at 1/3? No problem. So let's see... Turtle has 50m advantage and you want that to be 1/3 of the total length. Fine, so that means that turtle's speed is exactly 2/3 of Achille's speed. By the time Achilles reaches the 1/3 point, the turtle will be at 1/3 + 2/3*1/3 = 5/9, covering a distance of 2/9. Let's see the series:
1/3 + 2/9 + 4/27 + 8/81 + ... + 2^n / 3^(n+1) + ... = 1
There you go. Still 1. Let's move on.
Unfortunately if we want to look at the problem the way it was constructed such "mathematical" proof will not work. The rules made for Achilles are not fair. He can never catch the turtle, he will never reach the point 1. But since the construction itself assumes that he will never reach it, we don't have a paradox. It's all as expected.
Achilles is moving in steps. But he is moving in very special steps. If step n has length L, then step n+1 has length L/2. Again, not because of his choice, but because the rules are unfair. It's a fixed sport event. If I try to use a bit more mathematical language...
Edit: Initially made a terminology error, I am correcting this part.
The sequence 1/2, 1/4, 1/8, ... is a sequence with infinite number of terms. Each term corresponds to one step length. Let's make another sequence S, a sequence of partial sums:
S1 = 1/2
S2 = 3/4
S3 = 7/8
...
The reason why Achilles will never reach point 1 is because 1 is not a term of sequence S. 1 is the limit of the sequence, yes, but in order for Achilles to reach the 1, point 1 would actually have to one of the terms of the sequence.