The first video (I didn't watch the second video) is stupid nonsense and disinformation.
In this context, infinite summation is defined only for converging sequences. If the rules of definition are violated, then, of course, contradictions may be derived. There is no mystery or even problem about that.
The person at the blackboard says, "The problem with infinity is all sorts of weird things happen when you're dealing with infinity". First, that doesn't even mean anything. Second, instead of explaining that the fallacy is in using an undefined notion (infinite summation on a sequence that does not converge), the person at the blackboard doesn't even suggest how we may investigate further to see that there is not an actual conundrum.
The video is yet another example of Internet ignorance and disinformation. That person seems to be teaching a classroom. He should be told by the school administrators to clean up his act: If he wants to present mathematical challenges, then he should provide his students with the benefit of techniques and information for solving the challenges rather than obfuscate with "weird things happen". — TonesInDeepFreeze
The first video (I didn't watch the second video) is stupid nonsense and disinformation. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You can play a variety of chess with new rules that the queen can move only two squares in any direction and there are no pawns. But you can't do any kind of arithmetic by stipulating that 3 + 5 does not equal 8. That's because queens and pawns are our constructions and a queen is and does whatever we say and without us there is no such thing as a queen. But there were two atoms of hydrogen to one of oxygen in water before we came along. If there hadn't been we couldn't have evolved to learn to count them. — Cuthbert
In this context, infinite summation is defined only for converging sequences — TonesInDeepFreeze
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.