The examples above suggest non-numerical comparisons and in these instances, I think, qualitative infinity can be found. — TheMadFool
Do they? The comparison suggests they can be measured so the infinity is quantitative. — BlueBanana
Do they? The comparison suggests they can be measured so the infinity is quantitative. — BlueBanana
Do any of you know of qualitative infinity? A non-numerical infinity? Does this even make sense? — TheMadFool
To see a World in a Grain of Sand
And a Heaven in a Wild Flower
Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand
And Eternity in an hour — William Blake
I wasn't claiming that, to take your example, people can simply be pegged to a spot on some approval scale. I was saying that part of classifying their qualitative judgments as "approve" or "disapprove", say, is that we can count them -- four approve, six disapprove — Srap Tasmaner
You are not even looking at the variable of interest any more. — Jeremiah
The notion of infinity is inseparable from numbers (quantity) — TheMadFool
The qualifying infinite may be used in various ways.
Give me something to drink.
Give me a chair to sit.
It was a sight to see.
This is a thing to admire.
2) to qualify a verb like an adverb
I came to see you.
We are going to play the match.
It is going to rain.
3) to qualify an adjective like an adverb
The book is nice to read.
This picture is beautiful to look at.
4) to qualify a sentence
To tell the truth, you are a fool.
To be frank, I don’t like him.
Gradations of your personal and subjective "likes" is not quantitative, as it is not an intersubjectively verifiable numerical measurement with meaningful units. — Jeremiah
Any number can be defined as a categorical (aka qualitative) term, even infinity. — Jeremiah
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