Here it means "keep going like this..." — Banno
Regardless of whether or not they understand the process, unless they "keep going like this" they cannot be said to have done the task. — Metaphysician Undercover
Your answer is not a sum. — Metaphysician Undercover
...you're trying to avoid doing the task by giving some answer which amounts to "it can't be done". — Metaphysician Undercover
The sum! — Metaphysician Undercover
But "the sum diverges to infinity" is not "it can't be done"! — Banno
Take the other example - 1-½+⅓-¼...
It converges to two.
You disagree? — Banno
We have all been taught a technique of counting in arabic numerals. We have all of us learned to count-we have learned to construct one numeral after another. Now how many numerals have you learned to write down?
Turing: Well, if I were not here, I should say N(0)
Wittgenstein: I entirely agree, but that answer shows something. There might be many answers to my question. For instance, someone might answer, " The number of numerals I have in fact written down." Or a finitist might say that one cannot learn to write down more numerals than one does in fact write down, and so might reply, "the number of numerals which I will ever write down". Or of course, one could reply "N(0)" as Turing did. Now should we say, "How wonderful-to learn N(0), numerals, and in so short a time! How clever we are!"?-Well, let us ask, "How did we learn to write N(0) numerals?" And in order to answer this, it is illuminating to ask, "What would it be like to learn only 100,000 numerals?"
Well, it might be that whenever numerals of more than five figures cropped up in our calculations, they were thrown away and disregarded. Or that only the last five figures were counted as relevant and the rest thrown away.-The point is that the technique of learning N(0),numerals is different from the technique of learning 100,000 numerals. Take the biggest numeral which has ever been mentioned. What is the difference between learning a technique of counting numerals up to that numeral and learning a technique which did not end at that numeral?
Well, it might have been that one's teachers said, "This series has no end." But how did you know what that meant? They might have said that and then when one reached the numeral six billion, they might say, "Well, now we have got here, I need hardly say . . ." and shrug their shoulders with a slight laugh.-So how did you know what they meant? Simply from the way in which the series was treated. I did not ask, "How many numerals are there?" This is immensely important. I asked a question about a human being, namely, "How many numerals did you learn to write down?" Turing answered "N(0)" and I agreed. In agreeing, I meant that that is the way in which the number N(0), is used. It does not mean that Turing has learned to write down an enormous number. N(0) is not an enormous number. The number of numerals Turing has written down is probably enormous. But that is irrelevant; the question I asked is quite different. To say that one has written down an enormous number of numerals is perfectly sensible, but to say that one has written down N(0), numerals is nonsense.
As I said, ellipsis means unfinished. So using the ellipsis and claiming "it's done" is a false claim. — Metaphysician Undercover
A believe in infinite past time is therefore akin to a belief it is possible to count 'all the numbers'. — Devans99
I did not ask, "How many numerals are there?" This is immensely important. I asked a question about a human being, namely, "How many numerals did you learn to write down?"
Consider also that proofs are finite objects. — softwhere
This makes mathematics a prototypically 'normal' discourse, and perhaps explains the mixed feelings that metaphysicians have toward it. As I see it, the old dream of metaphysics is to do 'spiritual math' about matters of ultimate concern. Proofs of god, etc. But non-mathematical language seems caught up in time to a much greater degree. 'History is a nightmare from which I'm trying to awake.' — softwhere
The cardinality of a set depends on the notion of bijection — softwhere
Hence the measure of an uncountable union of points... — softwhere
1/0 undefined. Suggest you move on to another topic. "infinite sum" is OK amongst professional mathematicians. — John Gill
Let's consider a proof by mathematical induction.
@ is a mathematical property. If it is known that @ (1) and it is known that [n] : @[n]. --> .@[n + l], then [n] . @[n].
It's misleading because it's not known how
[n] : @[n]. --> .@[n+ 1] is proved.
In other words you're never done. — Metaphysician Undercover
Wow. This goes on forever, doesn't it? — John Gill
Say, ∑n∈Nf(n)∑n∈Nf(n) is not a process like going shopping and returning home, it's a mathematical expression.
Convergence and divergence has concise technical definitions using the likes of ∀∀ and ∃∃.
I challenge you find and understand them. ;) At this point you might be in a position to launch critique.
By the way, you should know that this stuff has practical applications used every day by engineers, physicists and others. — jorndoe
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