Specifically the notion that you can divide a quantity up into infinite parts.
Problem: How big are those individual parts? — albie
The OP stipulates a infinitely divisible quantity. Number lines do not exist in Nature, but one can be imagined a priori, consisting of an arbitrary, progressively conceivable set of real numbers (the numerical totality of the set cannot be imagined). Because it’s an abstraction, the guy chopping off numbers one at a time is itself an abstraction, but sustains the conclusion he is not chopping off parts of zero size, because the number line must be conceived as getting shorter — Mww
Ahhh....that’s what you meant before by involving sets or elements of sets. OK, fine. I can dig chopping off sets of zero size; that’s just an empty set. And by association, the totality of the divisible quantity is undiminished, which seems to sustain the OP. — Mww
They have to be zero in size, hence you are no longer dealing with the quantity in question. — albie
I have a friend who is into physics and he claims because you can divide a quantity up for ever that means that any quantity is made up of infinite points. — albie
I have a friend who is into physics and he claims because you can divide a quantity up for ever that means that any quantity is made up of infinite points. — albie
Physically, there can never be an infinity of anything, because observing an infinity is impossible — Echarmion
Not that I'm arguing for extant infinities, but why would whether there's an infinity of anything hinge on observation? — Terrapin Station
The things that we have actually observed, in the loosest sense of the word, are a tiny (if not infinitesimal!) fraction of the things that we believe to exist. That goes equally for physical sciences and for everyday observations and beliefs. So are we all wrong in your opinion? Are you some kind of arch-empiricist who will not acknowledge anything that he has not observed? — SophistiCat
Define "in principle." If you were living on an island with no seafaring vessel, anything beyond the horizon would be unobservable in principle for you. Would you then be obliged to believe that the world ends just at the horizon? — SophistiCat
If we expand the possibilities implied by "in principle" to anything that is not strictly forbidden by relativistic physics, our horizon would expand to the size of the Hubble sphere centered around Earth. Does the world therefore end there? — SophistiCat
Any way you look at it, it seems that your epistemology puts a priori constraints on the world, in that it can only be such as to be "in principle" observable. It seems strange to make such egocentric demands of the world, which doesn't seem to care about you one wit. — SophistiCat
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