See? You don't even know what you're discussing!The physical properties of the paint being incompatible with an infinite horn, was already rejected as not the subject of this discussion. If we were discussing whether the molecules of paint could fit down inside an infinitely small tube, we might just as well reject the infinitely small tube as a nonsensical proposition in the first place. — Metaphysician Undercover
Andrewk does not provide a solution. The inside of the horn has a non-zero diameter with infinite extension. This means that there is an infinite surface area on the inside of that horn, to be covered with paint, just like there is on the outside. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't see how this is relevant. Are you forgetting that it's infinitely long? — Metaphysician Undercover
That is what we're discussing. You made a claim that there's some number, you call it "whatever the layer is", that you multiply by infinity. The problem is, there's only a finite portion of the horn that can fit "whatever the layer is", and there's an infinite portion of the horn too thin to have "whatever the layer is" be the thickness of "whatever the layer is". Because of this, you cannot multiply "whatever the layer is" by infinity and get anything meaningful.so whatever the layer is, it will be multiplied by infinity, — Metaphysician Undercover
The problem is, there's only a finite portion of the horn that can fit "whatever the layer is", and there's an infinite portion of the horn too thin to have "whatever the layer is" be the thickness of "whatever the layer is". Because of this, you cannot multiply "whatever the layer is" by infinity and get anything meaningful. — InPitzotl
You're kind of mixing two things in here. Imagine a mathematical bag; inside the bag, we'll put all finite numbers. All of them, mind you, but only the finite ones. There are an infinite number of numbers in this bag, but infinity isn't in the bag. So if we admit that the horn is infinitely long, we're not necessarily admitting that there's an infinity-point on the horn (a point where there's an infinitely small diameter).Obviously, if we can assume that the horn is infinitely long, with an infinitely small diameter, we can also assume that the paint can go infinitely thin. — Metaphysician Undercover
...because now you're talking about an infinitely tiny quantity multiplied by infinity. And that's still not meaningful.so whatever the layer is, it will be multiplied by infinity, — Metaphysician Undercover
I already discussed that here.Do you agree that if the horn is allowed to go infinitely thin, then the paint must play by the same rules, and be allowed to go infinitely thin as well? — Metaphysician Undercover
I already discussed that here. — InPitzotl
At that point you're basically just mapping points to points, and there are plenty enough points in a tiny droplet of paint to map to the infinite surface area of the horn. — InPitzotl
Wrong. You're only confusing yourself here. I haven't specified any rules for paint at all, much less different rules for the inside and outside. Rather, I've talked about three things:In other words you want the paint to follow different rules for the inside of the horn, than for the outside of the horn, allowing a finite volume of paint to cover an infinite surface area on the inside, but not the outside. — Metaphysician Undercover
Gabriel's horn has infinite surface area, but holds a finite volume. — InPitzotl
Wrong. The video used limits (and integrals, which are built off of limits). Limits don't round off to zero.The volume of the horn is only determined as finite when the infinite radius is rounded off to zero at some determinable length, as is demonstrated by the YouTube video. — Metaphysician Undercover
...is just uninformed non-sense.Clearly you are using a different calculation than the one in the video then. If you know of a method to figure out the volume of that horn, which avoids rounding off the infinitely small dimeter to zero, then maybe you should present it for us. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you know of a method to figure out the volume of that horn, — Metaphysician Undercover
At this point, it's just denial, and you're unqualified to continue this discussion with. Hardly surprising, given this is the same exact thing you failed to grasp in the other thread.Sure chief, one over infinity is zero, and that's not a matter of rounding off. — Metaphysician Undercover
It's right there under your nose and you can't see it. You read:Saying that 1/infinity equals zero is obviously an instance of rounding off. — Metaphysician Undercover
Okay, so there's nothing wrong with rounding off. And okay, we do it all of the time. So what? It's cute and all that you're trying to "counsel" me so that I can "cope" with rounding off, but your projection of some imagined psychological trauma is a red herring. Limits still aren't rounding off.There's nothing wrong with rounding off. We do it all the time with pi, square roots, etc. That's how we get the job done by rounding off. If we couldn't round off, we couldn't get the job done in many instances. So you shouldn't be embarrassed by it. — Metaphysician Undercover
Clearly it's not rounding off, though. Clearly, you just don't understand what a limit is. And that's okay, MU. Not understanding something isn't the end of the world. It's nothing to be embarrassed about; there's a lot of knowledge in the world and not everyone knows everything. There's nothing to be embarrassed about by admitting that you don't know something. But you should be embarrassed by insisting that you understand when, clearly, you don't.You should be embarrassed by insisting that it's not an instance of rounding off, when it clearly is, though. — Metaphysician Undercover
He says "well one over infinity that's zero, so you get nothing from that". — Metaphysician Undercover
t's right there under your nose and you can't see it. You read:
limx→∞1x=0limx→∞1x=0
...as "saying 1/infinity equals 0". But that's not what it says, and it's not what it means. I told you what it means, and showed you a link. — InPitzotl
Limits still aren't rounding off. — InPitzotl
Rounding off implies that there's a stated answer a, and a real answer b, and that a is not b but is "close enough" to it. — InPitzotl
So the limit here is met by the value 0 exactly. — InPitzotl
But you didn't understand it.I saw it, ... he distinctly says "well one over infinity that's zero, so you get nothing from that". — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, but the method is integration.And, you said: your method is the same as the one on the video. — Metaphysician Undercover
But that is not the method; that is just a shortcut. The method is to apply a limit.You can insist, as fishfry stated, that this is the convention in such procedures, to take one divided by infinity as zero. — Metaphysician Undercover
Sure. But remember the bag I was talking about earlier? That bag has all of the finite numbers in it, but no infinite numbers. This is the situation here. The bag has real numbers in it; there's no such thing as an infinite real number though. Nevertheless, "unlimited" describes the extent of such numbers on the number line in the positive direction. And that ∞ symbol when used in the limit is used to represent just that... that's not a number, it's just shorthand for representing the infinite extent of the numbers in my bag."Infinite" means unlimited. — Metaphysician Undercover
Nonsense. You just made that up.When you apply limits to the unlimited, you are either contradicting or rounding off. — Metaphysician Undercover
Those things don't follow, there isn't a paradox here in the first place, and anyone trying to play the if-you're-wrong-that-means-I'm-right card should have their philosophy license revoked.If you will not accept the fact that you are rounding off, then the paradox arises due to the contradiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you don't understand the method, you're unqualified to critique it.that describes exactly what is the case with the volume of Gabriel's horn — Metaphysician Undercover
Wrong. The real issue is very simple... areas aren't volumes. "Paint" tricks you into thinking they are. It is very interesting to note that you never actually tried to address this explanation, just as you never commented on the extruded Koch snowflake with a bottom having the same "issue". It's no wonder you're trying to play the if-you're-wrong-that-means-I'm-right card.The "real answer" is — Metaphysician Undercover
That sounds like a confused equivocation. A 1x1x1 cube by definition is 1 cubic units of volume, but it has an infinite number of points. It's not a contradiction to say that it has an unlimited number of points but a limited volume. Gabriel's horn has an unlimited extent into the x axis in the positive direction; that means it is unlimited... in extent... along the x axis. And that's it. It doesn't mean that the horn surrounds an infinite volume, as your equivocation is apparently meant to imply, any more than the fact that the 1x1x1 cube contains an infinite number of points suggests it should have an infinite volume.To impose a limit on the infinite is to contradict. — Metaphysician Undercover
The method is to apply a limit. — InPitzotl
That bag has all of the finite numbers in it, but no infinite numbers. — InPitzotl
For example, a lower limit of 1 and an upper limit of 2 refers to "all of the numbers in the bag that are greater than or equal to 1, and less than or equal to 2". By contrast, a lower limit of 1 and an upper limit of ∞ simply means: "all of the numbers in the bag that are greater than or equal to 1". — InPitzotl
Wrong. The real issue is very simple... areas aren't volumes. "Paint" tricks you into thinking they are. It is very interesting to note that you never actually tried to address this explanation, just as you never commented on the extruded Koch snowflake with a bottom having the same "issue". It's no wonder you're trying to play the if-you're-wrong-that-means-I'm-right card. — InPitzotl
That sounds like a confused equivocation. A 1x1x1 cube by definition is 1 cubic units of volume, but it has an infinite number of points. — InPitzotl
V = pi * (r approaching zero) * (r approaching zero) * (h approaching infinity) , (r approaching zero) * (h approaching infinity) = 1 — TheMadFool
If infinity = z then, — TheMadFool
Suppose r=1/n and h=n^2. Then V -> pi. You are not describing Gabriel's Horn. — jgill
I can see that you're equivocating. You're confusing "limit" as a method with "limit" as a point beyond which you don't go.Yes, apply a limit to what is stipulated by the premise, as without limit. That is the mistake. Can't you see that it is stipulated that there is no limit to the length of the horn, therefore to apply a limit is to contradict the premise? — Metaphysician Undercover
The phrase "all the finite numbers" is itself such a bag.You cannot put all the finite numbers in a bag, because there is an infinite quantity of them. — Metaphysician Undercover
Of course it's relevant. The 1/∞ that you're whining about is the 1/∞ in the video at 6:20. Right? That 1/∞ is 1/x with ∞ substituted in it. That 1/x is the 1/x from . And that is from . And that is a Riemann integral; it's applied over the range where we want to take this volume. For Gabriel's horn, the lower limit here is 1, and there is no upper limit. To simply plug in infinity here as if it's a number is to say something different than what you yourself said in the prior post... that "infinite" simply means unlimited.This example provides nothing of relevance. — Metaphysician Undercover
If there's no lower limit, then what's up with this big giant yellow arrow pointing to the lower limit during the segment where Gabriel's horn is defined?:It is stipulated in the Gabriel's horn example, that there is no lower limit. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, you didn't address this, because if this were indeed the case... if you could paint infinitely thin, then you can paint an infinite area with a finite amount of paint. And if you can do that, then there's no paradox. And you can do that, and there is no real paradox. But such infinitely thin paint simply becomes an empty metaphor... it's equivalent to what I was saying here. But you replied to that post saying that it wasn't the "real answer", and as recently as here you were peddling this one:I did addressed this. If the horn can go infinitely thin, then so can the paint. They must play by the same rules. — Metaphysician Undercover
But your proposed "real answer" doesn't address the extruded Koch snowflake, because that isn't infinitely long. The thing you're proposing isn't the real answer does address the Koch snowflake, because the infinite area on its perimeter is not a volume.The "real answer" is that the horn is, stipulated by the stated premise, as infinitely long — Metaphysician Undercover
You're reasoning by equivocation; "the extent is infinite, therefore the volume is infinite" simply doesn't follow.Again, we're not talking about an infinite number of points within a confined space...This seems to be where your misunderstanding lies. You want to make this into an issue of a confined, "limited" space, but it is clearly stipulated that the horn is infinitely long, therefore there is no such confined space. — Metaphysician Undercover
The phrase "all the finite numbers" is itself such a bag. — InPitzotl
No, you didn't address this, because if this were indeed the case... if you could paint infinitely thin, then you can paint an infinite area with a finite amount of paint. — InPitzotl
But your proposed "real answer" doesn't address the extruded Koch snowflake, because that isn't infinitely long. The thing you're proposing isn't the real answer does address the Koch snowflake, because the infinite area on its perimeter is not a volume. — InPitzotl
You're reasoning by equivocation; "the extent is infinite, therefore the volume is infinite" simply doesn't follow. — InPitzotl
Yes.A phrase is a bag? — Metaphysician Undercover
But the subject is the paradox of Gabriel's horn; it's literally the title of this thread. Gabriel's horn is an object defined using algebraic geometry. Algebraic geometry defines points in a space using coordinates using number lines. Number lines are defined with real numbers.Come on Pitzotl, you're reaching for straws. Get back to the subject. — Metaphysician Undercover
These are non-issues. In the paradox that is the subject of this thread, we're concerned primarily with the quantities not the length of the tasks. These are mathematical spaces; in the span of 30 seconds we define the entire infinite horn in an algebraic geometry space... doing infinite things is certainly not a problem here. Your imagined alleged problem has a lot more problems than you're letting on... the 3.1 gallons not going to the bottom is child's play. How are you upturning the horn in a gravitational field, and where do you put the planet? How does that planet manage to exert a field on the top of the horn anyway? But the biggest and most relevant question of all here is... do these really sound like mathematical questions?You cannot paint an infinite area regardless of how much paint you have, because no matter how much painting you do there is always more to be painted. ... Suppose you conclude it's 3.1 gallons,. You pour that in, but you haven't filled the horn because it hasn't reached the bottom. — Metaphysician Undercover
We're discussing the presumed paradox of Gabriel's horn. The presumptions that appear to introduce the conflicts is the point of the thread. Those presumptions are based on the fact that the quantity of the surface are "on the outside" is infinite while the quantity of volume "on the inside" is finite... the "outside-ness" of the surface of which is really an irrelevant detail that is part of the intuitive distraction of using paint to compare areas to volume. You are presuming that the paradox is solved by questioning the volume, but you haven't even shown a good reason to doubt the volume much less the flaw in the presumptions leading to the paradox.We're discussing Gabriel's horn not snowflakes. How my answer relates to a snowflake is irrelevant. — Metaphysician Undercover
Gabriel's horn is an object defined using algebraic geometry. Algebraic geometry defines points in a space using coordinates using number lines. Number lines are defined with real numbers. — InPitzotl
What do you mean this has nothing to do with algebraic geometry?:This has nothing to do with algebraic geometry. — jgill
Gabriel's horn is the algebraic variety defined by the polynomial z^2+y^2=(1/x)^2 starting at x=1.Algebraic geometry is the study of geometries that come from algebra, in particular, from rings. In classical algebraic geometry, the algebra is the ring of polynomials, and the geometry is the set of zeros of polynomials, called an algebraic variety. For instance, the unit circle is the set of zeros of and is an algebraic variety, as are all of the conic sections. — Wolfram
Sure, you use calculus to analyze the surface area of and volume surrounded by this object, as they did in the video. But that doesn't preclude the fact that you're studying geometric properties of an algebraic variety.G's Horn is elementary calculus. — jgill
These are non-issues. In the paradox that is the subject of this thread, we're concerned primarily with the quantities not the length of the tasks. — InPitzotl
Those presumptions are based on the fact that the quantity of the surface are "on the outside" is infinite while the quantity of volume "on the inside" is finite. — InPitzotl
You are presuming that the paradox is solved by questioning the volume, but you haven't even shown a good reason to doubt the volume much less the flaw in the presumptions leading to the paradox. — InPitzotl
Nothing you described justifies a concern about the length of tasks.This is where your mistaken. — Metaphysician Undercover
The spatial form is given by Cartesian coordinates with three axes at right angles; that defines a space where the set of all points are (x, y, z) coordinates with x, y, z being reals.The paradox assumes a spatial form, created from mathematical principles, and names this form Gabriel's horn. — Metaphysician Undercover
It's not a presumption; it's the result of a calculation. The fundamental issue here is that you're critiquing the methods without understanding what they are or why they are employed. Take your critique of Tom at 6:20 in the video for example. There, Tom is calculating the results of an integral. Tom has an improper integral, and this describes the method for its evaluation:This is your false presumption, which is misleading you, that "the quantity of volume 'on the inside' is finite". If you would approach the problem with an open mind, rather than with what I see as a false presumption, we could probably make better progress in this discussion. — Metaphysician Undercover
When Tom says: "Well one over infinity, that's zero", that's okay, so long as we know it's a shortcut for:— Paul's online notes
That does not follow.I see that the spatial form which we are talking about, Gabriel's horn, is infinitely long. Therefore it is impossible, in theory, to precisely figure its volume. — Metaphysician Undercover
That was already shown, and you're mischaracterizing the problem. The most fundamental problem here is that you're objecting to the efficacy of these methods without understanding what the methods are being employed or why they are employed. The other big problem is the obvious bias portrayed in objecting to the efficacy of the method before understanding these things.Will you justify your presumption that the volume is finite? — Metaphysician Undercover
That does not follow.A spatial form which has an unlimited (infinite) extension in one of its dimensions, will have an unlimited (infinite) volume accordingly — Metaphysician Undercover
It's not a presumption; it's the result of a calculation. The fundamental issue here is that you're critiquing the methods without understanding what they are or why they are employed. Take your critique of Tom at 6:20 in the video for example. There, Tom is calculating the results of an integral. Tom has an improper integral, and this describes the method for its evaluation:
1. If limtaf(x)dx exists for every t>a then∫∞af(x)dx=limt→∞∫taf(x)dxprovided the limit exists and is finite.1. If limatf(x)dx exists for every t>a then∫a∞f(x)dx=limt→∞∫atf(x)dxprovided the limit exists and is finite.
— Paul's online notes
When Tom says: "Well one over infinity, that's zero", that's okay, so long as we know it's a shortcut for:
limx→∞1xlimx→∞1x
...which is exactly 0, as shown previously by definition of that limit. You have confused this with saying that 1/infinity=0. That's baseless; infinity is not a real number; the domain of the integral is the same domain as the x axis, and infinity isn't even in that domain. The method isn't "plug in infinity", and there's a reason it isn't. — InPitzotl
What do you mean this has nothing to do with algebraic geometry? — InPitzotl
That does not follow. — InPitzotl
I see that we have a fundamental difference of opinion concerning the logic of spatial areas. I think that it is illogical to believe that a 3d spatial form with an infinite extension in one dimension could have a finite volume. — Metaphysician Undercover
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