But as you say, this is problematic as it suggests that infinity is an object, such as a mountain or a table, which can be thought about. — RussellA
I don't say that.
I say that 'infinity', applied to set theory, is not advisable, because in set theory there is no object called 'infinity', especially one that has different cardinalities. It's not a matter of can be thought about, but rather that there are many infinite sets, not just one called 'infinity'.
within mathematics is the infinity symbol ∞ — RussellA
The lemniscate is usually used to indicate a point of infinity on a number line, which is very different from the context of the cardinalities of infinite sets. Such a point of infinity is some designated (or sometimes, less formally, unspecified) object along with a set, such as the set of real numbers, and an ordering is stipulated. If the treatment is fully set theoretical, then the object itself can be infinite or not.
So what does the word "infinity" refer to, if not a noun inferring an object? — RussellA
I am not saying that one should not use 'infinity' as a noun. It is a noun. And people can use it for many things. But it is an invitation to confusion to use 'infinity' regarding set theory or mathematics in a context such as discussing infinite cardinalities. Set theory does not define an object named 'infinity' in this context. Rather, it defines a property 'is infinite'. Keeping that distinction in mind goes a long way to avoiding confusions.
As the Wikipedia article on Infinity writes: Infinity is a mathematical concept, and infinite mathematical objects can be studied, manipulated, and used just like any other mathematical object. — RussellA
(1) There are better sources than Wikipedia.
(2) The quote does not say that mathematics refers to some set that is named 'infinity'.
(3) The quote then defers to 'infinite', the adjective, which is correct.
(4) The article is almost all about 'infinity' not applied to infinite sets and cardinalities. And the small part of the article that is concerned with infinite sets and cardinalites correctly, when talking about sets, uses 'is infinite', the adjective for the property of being infinite, not 'infinity' to name a set.
Infinity in math has been improvised to explain and describe continuous motion — Corvus
Also, more simply, there are infinite sets of numbers, such as the set of naturals, the set of rationals, and the set of reals. With ordinary classical logic, for even just simple first order PA to have a set over which the quantifier ranges requires an infinite set.
Sets can have different sizes etc. It is OK to keep on saying that in math forums, and it sounds correct because that is what the textbook says. — Corvus
Not just because it's what a book says. Rather, textbooks provide proofs of theorems from axioms (including definitional axioms) with inference rules. One doesn't have to accept those axioms and inference rules, but if one is criticizing set theory then it is irresponsible to not recognize that the axioms and inference rules do provide formal proofs of the theorems. Moreover, intellectual responsibility requires not misrepresenting the mathematics as if the mathematics says that the theorems claim simpliciter such things as that there are infinite sets of physical objects or even that there are infinite sets in certain other metaphysical senses of 'infinite'.
the whole picture was based on the fabricated concepts, which are not very useful or practical in the real world. — Corvus
Fabricated in the sense of being abstract. And it is patently false that classical infinitistic mathematics is not useful or practical. Reliance on even just ordinary calculus is vast in the science and technology we all depend on.