What you don't realize is that it's your description which stops the car from moving. That's Zeno's paradox. Motion is impossible if time is just a collection of instants. My description allows the car to move — Ryan O'Connor
I believe that's a false equality. — Ryan O'Connor
The correct statement is "the potentially infinite process defined by 0.333... converges to the number 1/3" not "the number 0.333... equals the number 1/3". — Ryan O'Connor
Decimal notation is flawed in that it cannot be used to precisely represent some rational numbers, like 1/3. If we want a number system which can give a precise notation for any rational number, we should use Stern-Brocot strings, where 1/3 = LL. — Ryan O'Connor
If photographs can't capture motion but videos can, why not conclude that motion happens in the videos? The reason why we are reluctant to come to this conclusion is because we reject the notion of videos being fundamental. — Ryan O'Connor
We want points (photographs) — Ryan O'Connor
to be fundamental and continua (videos) to be composite and as long as we hold this view we will not find a satisfactory resolution to Zeno's paradoxes. — Ryan O'Connor
If you flip things upside down and see continua as fundamental and points as emergent, then everything makes perfect sense. There's no problem with pausing a video to produce a static image. — Ryan O'Connor
It is clear that you appreciate the profoundness of Zeno's Paradox. Zeno presented these paradoxes in response to the criticisms from the 'one from many' camp calling his views ridiculous. Why not consider the 'many from one' view that he supported? He was wayyy ahead of his time so his view did seem to have problems of their own...but in light of modern advancements in physics his view no longer seems crazy. — Ryan O'Connor
Don't stop here, you may just be on your way to becoming a crank! With this admission you have placed yourself on a slippery slope. Instantaneous velocity is no different from the tangent of a function at a point. Do you accept that the derivative corresponds to a limiting process of secants rather than the output of a completed infinite process (i.e. tangent at a point)? — Ryan O'Connor
Only if you consider 0/0 a valid velocity. — Ryan O'Connor
Imagine a dark room and a quantum sensor — Ryan O'Connor
Why does a segment with a length of finite digits change into a length multiplied by pi (pi×2×r) when the segment is made into a circle? The circumference will have digits going to infinity while as a segment it did not? This must be readily explained in mathematics but I don't remember ever seeing an explanation on it — Gregory
That's why velocity is always an average, requiring at least two temporal points. Duration is derived, just like distance is. To infer an instantaneous velocity requires a second derivation. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't agree with this claim so I'd like to see your evidence that supports it. What is fundamental in quantum physics is the wave function, a continuum. Definite states (like points) only emerge when a measurement is made. — Ryan O'Connor
Assume that there exists a wave function of the universe that spans all of time. This is the fundamental object of our universe and it is a continuum. And until the wave function is measured it is meaningless to talk about who lived when and where because a wave function does not describe what is, it describes what could be. It is only when you make a measurement that all of the potential states collapse into a single actual state. When I say that points are emergent, I mean that they only emerge when we make a measurement. We cannot say things like 'there are infinite points on this line' because we have not actually placed infinite points on the paper...what we placed on the paper was a line. — Ryan O'Connor
Put it this way: a computer program that calculates 2+2 is what I mean by 'process' and such a program can be studied (even if the program is never executed). — Ryan O'Connor
A moving body has an instantaneous velocity,../quote]
Yes, because that is the convention, use some math, and figure out the "instantaneous velocity", just like the convention is to place a zero limit on the example of the op. But what these conventions really represent may not be what one would expect from the terms of usage. — fishfry
Yes, because that is the convention, use some math, and figure out the "instantaneous velocity", just like the convention is to place a zero limit on the example of the op. But what these conventions really represent may not be what one would expect from the terms of usage. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think applying numbers to geometry is how we apply Godel's numbering to physics — Gregory
After all we don't know the ultimate nature of reality so who's to say if the notion of instantaneous velocity really makes sense. — fishfry
A car going at constant speed passes point A at stopwatch time=0, then passes point B, one mile further at stopwatch time=one minute. You ask, "What was the speed of the car back there at point A?" Your answer, "It was moving at 60 mph at point A". — jgill
Yes. Goes back a hundred years if my memory serves. Sometimes it's very easy. For example, here is a linear fractional transformation written in terms of fixed points and multiplier.(I'm working on a theorem right now involving this). I think a more general case was dealt with in the discipline of functional equations. Can't recall the work offhand. — jgill
A worthy goal. I am not going to ask you what truth is or what you think it is. But I am going to ask you to write something - anything - that is true. I suspect you will not be able to express anything (as) true that will also meet your criterium for truth. Because - aside from problems with truth itself - I'm thinking, from your many posts, that your own critical stances are themselves too variously destructive to allow you make such an expression. Or another way, when the AAF confronts himself, the result must be total destruction, as with matter, anti-matter.I'm not looking for people to buy in, I'm looking for truth. — Metaphysician Undercover
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