Interesting thing is that while we cannot know everything, there is (arguably) nothing in particular that we could not know.↪Banno You're right, we can perhaps know some things completely. But we cannot know everything. so 'everything' should have been there instead of "anything completely". — Janus
What do we do with numbers like pi that go on forever? I can't deny that I live in a world where there are such shenanigans: numbers that can't be completed.
It's definitely not an aspect of counting, because I can't count to pi. I could say it's just a matter of arithmetic, but but what about that endless thing going on? — frank
Only if you relegate madness as a domain of God... — DifferentiatingEgg
How did that happen? If it's based on counting, how did it give rise to things that can't be counted? — frank
I can't see an alternative to saying that the numbers are based on counting (apart from some platonic story about how they always already exist, though not in this world).How did that happen? If it's based on counting, how did it give rise to things that can't be counted? — frank
How did we get zero? How did we get negative numbers from natural numbers? How did we get rational numbers from integers? How did we get real numbers from rational numbers? How did we get complex numbers from real numbers? Humans invented them. — T Clark
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