Assuming you don't concieve something that is logically false, not correct, then yes.Isn't it the case that, once you can conceive of numbers, then imaginary number systems become possible? This doesn't really contradict the idea of the reality of natural numbers, it is simply an observation about the operations of rational thought. — Wayfarer
But does that something refer to a finite amount? Basically I think it ( here the "infinity-infinity=?" question) is regarded in math as an indeterminate form or said to be undefined.Regarding the Hilbert's hotel illustration. It occurs to me that infinity - infinity = infinity. I say this because the Hindus define Brahman as that which is the same if you take something away from it, subtract it, it remains the same infinity. — Punshhh
Let's say there is an infinite amount of grains of green sand and there is also an infinite amount of grains of blue sand, both exist. We know that if we theoretically count them as one group infinity + infinity and that we will then have an infinite amount of grains of sand, which we know are green and blue, but which are still seperate, because we are only imagining them as grouped together. Now let's imagine we mix them up so that they are all randomly mixed in together, a set of an infinite amount of grains of sand, of undefined colours. Now we could theoretically sort through this set and put all the green ones in one place and all the blue in another until we are back were we started. So we have subtracted an infinite quantity from an infinite quantity. — Punshhh
So infinity is meaningless to you? Not something in any way used in ordinary math? Who said that infinity was now treated as a number now? Obviously infinity is incommensurable to any finite number, hence there isn't much "meaning". Yes, infinity is something that cannot be treated as finite.Infinity minus infinity has the same meaning as blue minus blue - ie no meaning. - There is no operation of subtraction, so to talk of it is meaningless. — andrewk
You mean here Cantorian set theory and cardinals and ordinals here.In transfinite arithmetic — andrewk
Nope, doesn't go like that. First, something that can be counted goes against what is infinity (hence it's even theoritically wrong), secondly, green infinite grains are as much as blue and green grains together, if they are infinite. Or much as there are green, blue, pink, purple and black and white infinite grains and so on are together... You are using finite logic here.We know that if we theoretically count them as one group infinity + infinity and that we will then have an infinite amount of grains of sand, which we know are green and blue, but which are still seperate, because we are only imagining them as grouped together. — Punshhh
If you can't find two literally infinite piles of sand of different colours, why not use the odd and even numbers instead?
I didn't say that. What made you think that I did?So infinity is meaningless to you? — ssu
Arithmetic with cardinals, not ordinals. See this wolfram page.You mean here Cantorian set theory and cardinals and ordinals here. — ssu
We have done something, and that something has to do with the folk notion of 'taking away'. But subtraction is a much more precise notion than the folk notion of taking away. To be able to subtract two things they must be members of a set that has a binary operation, which we can call 'addition', such that the elements of that set form an Abelian Group under that operation.So we have subtracted an infinite quantity from an infinite quantity. — Punshhh
I dont see a cardinality though in the grains of sand. Unless the set of all grains of sand (green and blue) has a higher cardinality than the set of green grains? — Punshhh
I think this is as far as I can go in abstract mathematics, my interest is more in the direction of maths in the real world or where it is to be found, or relevant in/to existence. — Punshhh
I'm all ears, what is infinite about reality?to scratch the surface. Reality takes place in the continuum, where denumerable infinity is not big enough
Who said it was finite? I am discussing a hypothetical situation, in which there is sufficient space.There is absolutely no way an infinite number of anything of any size can occupy a finite space.
Nice idea, but that is a mathematical form, we are talking about life and existence, where is this continuum? And how does it produce these finite things I see before me?Reality takes place in the continuum, which is Aleph1or 2^(Aleph0) if you have reason to reject the continuum hypothesis.
Who said it was finite? I am discussing a hypothetical situation, in which there is sufficient space. — Punshhh
Yes, but numbers are ideas, so susceptible to human frailty. An alien, or a monkey, can count the grains of sand and can only come to the same conclusion, because they are not ideas. — Punshhh
Nice idea, but that is a mathematical form, we are talking about life and existence, where is this continuum? And how does it produce these finite things I see before me? — Punshhh
Are you not able to discuss a simple hypothetical, such as the grains of sand I described? I know it is probably an impossibility in physical reality, but that is not the point. — Punshhh
I'm interested in these ideas about an existing continuum, is this in the field of mathematics, or astrophysics? — Punshhh
So you are suggesting that number, i.e. Integers are not fundamental. Does this mean that there are places where 1+1 doesn't equal 2? — Punshhh
numbers are ideas — Punshhh
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