Then what term would you use to describe having to pass the 0.5m mark before the 1m mark, the 0.25m mark before the 0.5m mark, the 0.2m mark before the 0.25m mark, and so on? — Michael
'Series', like 'sequence' is a technical mathematical term. Usually it is used to describe the sequence of partial sums of a sequence, although sometimes it is used just as a synonym for 'sequence'. Either way, as we observed above that since the set of events S is not a sequence, under the natural order, neither is it a series.It’s a series of events with no start and so cannot be started. — Michael
Yes, if 'journey' is used to refer only to the passings of waypoints in S, rather than the usual meaning of the whole path Y, that is central to where Zeno goes wrong.the usual notion that a journey must have a beginning (the journey presumably being the sequence of distances travelled in their usual ordering) is not in play. — fdrake
I think this has even more problems than (1). The term 'task' is dragged up out of nowhere, with no clear meaning or relation to the problem. Nor is any support provided for the claim that we cannot do an infinite task - a claim that seems very unintuitive to me.Do you think your response also addresses the case where we replace (1) with (2):
(2) The number of distances travelled is infinite, and we cannot do an infinite task. — fdrake
But if motion is continuous then there isn't a first position. — Michael
If space (or the number line) is continuous, and motion is analogously continuous, then there shouldn't be a first position. — Luke
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