Sorry I should of said:
- A point has zero length according to maths definition
- But according to my intuition, a point must have non-zero length — Devans99
Do you suppose there's a reason why points are zero-dimensional? — TheMadFool
How would we define distance? The beginning/end of one point to the beginning/end of another point? Why not just consider the beginning/end as zero-dimensional points? — TheMadFool
Well the concept of 'measure', as alluded to above by softwhere, seems to be math's answer. But measure theory does not seem (from my very limited knowledge of it - ?) to provide a justification for treating a point as dimensionless (or that there are infinite points on a line segment). — Devans99
I find the concept of a dimensionless object difficult - it has no extents so it cannot have any existence - how can any sound reasoning performed with a non-existent object - assuming its existence (in order to reason with it) leads straight to a contradiction? — Devans99
To me the past is a deducible concept without referencing external realities — Devans99
- I have thoughts, these thoughts from a causal chain. The present exists, there are thoughts that I am no longer having, so the past exists. There are thoughts that I will be having so the future exists. I can label each thought with an integer. Assuming a past eternity, then the number of thoughts would be equal to the highest number. But there is no highest number, so a past eternity is impossible? — Devans99
Yes, the realist thinks of "past eternity" metaphorically in geometric terms, as an infinitely long line beginning at, say, zero and ending at positive infinity at the "the present", which obviously cannot be constructed — sime
So we cannot make an immediate identification of appearances, memories, thoughts or numbers with points on a physical-history timeline. — sime
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