the number line between 0 and 1 has length 1
- to find out how many things fit on the line
- divide line length by the thing length
- a number has length 0
- so the number of number between 0 and 1 is 1/0=UNDEFINED
- if you let number have non-zero length then there is a finate number of numbers in the interval but a potential infinity as number length tends to zero — Devans99
I can’t believe you; we’ve been talking about this for ages and you have learned nothing. You are still not even using the proper language to discuss this is (actual/potential infinity). — Devans99
You need to realise that you were told the wrong things about infinity at school and free your mind of Cantor’s muddled dogma. — Devans99
Clearly, for any set of natural numbers, a proper subset is always smaller. That is always the case, and there is never an exception. — Metaphysician Undercover
However, completing an infinite process is not a matter of starting at a particular time that just happens to be infinitely far to the past and then stopping in the present. It’s to have always been doing something and then stopping. This point is illustrated by a possibly apocryphal story attributed to the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein. Imagine meeting a woman in the street who says, “Five, one, four, one, dot, three! Finally finished!” When we ask what is finished, she tells us that she just finished counting down the infinite digits of pi backward. When we ask when she started, she tells us that she never started, she has always been doing it. The point of the story seems to be that impossibility of completing such an infinite process is an illusion created by our insistence that every process has a beginning. — James Harrington
There is no logical or conceptual barrier to the notion of infinite past time.
In a lecture Wittgenstein told how he overheard a man saying '...5, 1, 4, 1, 3, finished'. He asked what the man had been doing.
'Reciting the digits of Pi backward' was the reply. 'When did you start?' Puzzled look. 'How could I start. That would mean beginning with the last digit, and there is no such digit. I never started. I've been counting down from all eternity'.
Strange, but not logically impossible. — Craig Skinner
Hilbert's Hotel and Shandy's Diary, for example, are peripherally related, known veridical paradoxes, and do not imply a contradiction, — jorndoe
This is what happens when you don't realize that Even numbers exist, are a proper subset of the naturals, and are provably the same size as the naturals.
0 - 0
1 - 2
2 - 4
3 - 6
If the even numbers (those on the right side) are smaller (as you say proper subsets "clearly are") then point out exactly when the even numbers fail to give a number to match to the naturals. If you can't do that (which you can't) then the only way you can continue is by ignoring the definitions used. So I'm just not bothering anymore. — MindForged
There is a set X having the property that ∅ is an element of X, and whenever x is an element of X, then x∪{x} is also an element of X.
This is a very precise formulation which one can show yields a set which is not finite (hence infinite):
As ∅ is in X, then ∅∪{∅}={∅} is an element of X.
As {∅} is in X, then {∅}∪{{∅}}={∅,{∅}} is in X.
As {∅,{∅}} is in X, then {∅,{∅}}∪{{∅,{∅}}}={∅,{∅},{∅,{∅}}} is in X.
...
You see that these elements of X get larger and larger without (finite) bound, and so it stands to reason that such an X must be infinite. — tim wood
'When did you start?' Puzzled look. 'How could I start. That would mean beginning with the last digit, and there is no such digit. I never started. I've been counting down from all eternity' — Craig Skinner
"contradiction, noun, a combination of statements, ideas, or features which are opposed to one another." — Devans99
A completely full hotel that canexcept infinityaccept infinitely many new guests is definitely contradictory. — Devans99
(Some basic mathematics required.) — jorndoe
The present is the last phenomenon that just occurred and if we use time by just relative to what happened that the present is the instaneous point where A just occurred. — BB100
Simple visual is A is the present and events after it are called A1, A2, A3 ... and so on. There can not be an infinite number of events after A because addition synthesis does not lead to infinity — BB100
as the passing of time is considered to be continuous — Metaphysician Undercover
I was wondering about that: If time is truly continuous then a 1 second interval is graduated as finely as a 1 hour interval (implicit from the definition of continuous). That seems contradictory by itself: suggests the short interval contains as many distinct states (therefore information) as the long interval... — Devans99
as the passing of time is considered to be continuous — Metaphysician Undercover
I was wondering about that: If time is truly continuous then a 1 second interval is graduated as finely as a 1 hour interval (implicit from the definition of continuous). That seems contradictory by itself: suggests the short interval contains as many distinct states (therefore information) as the long interval... — Devans99
The contradiction is in the assumption that the continuous is divisible. If you can really divide it, then it is not continuous, as per the divisions. If it is really continuous then you can't really divide it as that would make it discontinuous — Metaphysician Undercover
Mathematicians always say things only approach Infinity — SteveKlinko
That's how it is when someone has a Belief about something. None of us can truly comprehend Infinity with our limited Human Brains. Every time you really work out a problem or analyze a little Deeper it is always found that Infinity is a big problem.Mathematicians always say things only approach Infinity — SteveKlinko
Unfortunately this is far from universally the case; many mathematicians have made a substantial intellectual investment in Cantor's flavour of actual infinity and are quite hostile to anyone questioning set theory's approach. There are also Cosmologists with models based on actual infinity for time and/or space who are not very open minded when the existence of actual infinity is questioned. — Devans99
That's how it is when someone has a Belief about something — SteveKlinko
Every time you really work out a problem or analyze a little Deeper it is always found that Infinity is a big problem — SteveKlinko
But the continuous is by definition infinitely divisible: — Devans99
There can be two meanings of time, the measurement of events relative to others, and the description of each event in their order. — BB100
That's contradictory, isn't it? If it were divided, it would not be continuous — Metaphysician Undercover
but this is not how time appears to us, it appears to be continuous. — Metaphysician Undercover
What I mean is you can divide continuous time to an infinite degree, so it can represent an infinite number of states, which equates to infinite information content. — Devans99
If you imagine a system evolving through an infinite number of states over a finite period of time... — Devans99
The Continuum can be modelled by the real numbers between 0 and 1. — Devans99
The Continuum for 1 second of time is identical to the Continuum for 1 year of time in that they are both described by the reals between 0 and 1. So 1 second and 1 year have the same information content. Hence the contradiction. Hence time should be discrete. — Devans99
In contrast, a discrete second of time can be modelled with the natural numbers between 0 and some finite N. Then 1 second contains N possible states, but 1 year contains N*60*60*24*365 possible states; hence no contraction for discrete time. — Devans99
Metaphysician Undercover, that which you say passes means your comparing one event with another which is what a measurement is, to compare like with other like. — BB100
This means that any change is just a happening that when observed appears to be from this than there are points in between. But that would mean another event, not one that is part of this. — BB100
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