I don't see why I should accept that the mathematical problem of infinite divisibility should prevent movement from starting. — Luke
But counting is not required for motion (is it?), so it doesn't matter if the counting is impossible. It doesn't make the movement impossible. — Luke
If I needed to say or count every distance that I moved (as I moved), then I agree that motion would be impossible. But I don't need to. — Luke
Only if you accept Zeno's assumption that counting is identifiable with motion. — Luke
then how can you ever make the first division in order to prove the impossibility of motion? — Luke
Imagine if we had taken a video-recording of the object's motion in order to establish a per-frame analysis of the object's positions over time. No per-frame analysis will tell us about the object's motion, since for that we need to look at inter-frame differences which is a feature not present in individual frames. This is again, analagous to the uncertainty principle in that motion and position are estimated, or rather constructed, with respect to incompatible features. — sime
The uncertainty principle is derived from the Fourier transform which involves the problem of "the start" (or however you want to call it), in the sense of a time period, which is similar to what Michael is arguing. A time period is defined by frequency, but the shorter the time period, the less accurate is the determination of frequency. The problem is reciprocal, if the time period is too short we can't determine the frequency, if we can't determine the frequency the time period is indefinite. "The start" is the first time period, and the shorter that time period is, the more indefinite any determination made from it is. This is very similar to the problem of acceleration. If a thing is at rest at one moment, then accelerating at the next moment, there must be a time of infinite acceleration. — Metaphysician Undercover
It would appear that in order to move from A to B, one would need to arrive at 1/2 the distance between them, and so on and so on — frank
Isn't the mistake in interpreting 4. to mean that a finite size of X feet, since it is infinitely divisible, is also infinitely long if each part of the distance is increasingly infinitely small? — Walter Pound
I don't know what you mean by this. — Michael
What it depends on is having completed a sequential series of events with no first event – which doesn't make any sense. — Michael
Halving distances is required for Zeno's argument, yet it is apparently an impossible act. Therefore, either mathematical tasks are not necessarily physical acts or else halving distances is impossible. — Luke
Then it doesn't depend on it.
Maths is just language. We can choose any description we want for movement. You choose descriptions that do not work, and conclude that what we see is impossible. It's wrong-headed. — Banno
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