That applies for all n belonging to the natural numbers. But the proof is about what happens at the point of actual infinity, which is not a natural number. The proof is all about showing that actual infinity is impossible. — Devans99
What about space? Is space finite? What is there outside of space? Nothing/something. The former is space and the latter requires space. — TheMadFool
Infinite also means non-stop (endless). Even before the addition and division which you mention, the collections must have been constantly progressing in size and, possibly, in as many progressions as is possible e.g. arithmetic, geometric, logarithmic, exponential, etc. — BrianW
That means, infinity is a concept, whether actual, potential or other. — BrianW
I think we need to look at where infinity comes from. It is simply a product of a kind of human thinking. — Punshhh
What about non-standard analysis? Mathematics applies to the world, which is why engineering and physics work — Gregory
We change it in one respect (whether it includes this particular individual member), but it is not changed in another respect (its cardinality as an infinite set). Not a contradiction. — aletheist
The only basis for claiming that the two infinite sequences are "identical" initially is that they allegedly consist of "identical" bananas in "identical" order. Accordingly, adding another "identical" banana to the beginning of one of them is not really a change, since the new "first" banana is indistinguishable from any other.So both the sequence itself and the cardinality remain unchanged despite us adding one banana. — Devans99
Again, we have changed it in one respect but not in another - no contradiction.So we have changed the sequence and it has not changed - contradiction. — Devans99
We are discussing hypothetical infinity, not actual infinity. We do not have an actually infinite sequence of actually identical bananas, let alone two such sequences.I think you are trying to defend the indefensible; actual infinity is a logical impossibility. — Devans99
Again, we have changed it in one respect but not in another - no contradiction. — aletheist
We are discussing hypothetical infinity, not actual infinity. We do not have an actually infinite sequence of actually identical bananas, let alone two such sequences. — aletheist
Not when all the bananas are stipulated as identical.If I add one banana to the sequence, I should get back something that is someway different from the original sequence. — Devans99
It is possible to change something in one respect without changing it in another respect. If I peel a banana, it is still the same banana, even though I have changed it in one respect.You seem to be saying it is possible logically and/or in reality to change something and it does not change. — Devans99
I honestly do not see what there is to explain. Do you not know the difference between the hypothetical and the actual?Can you explain the difference between hypothetical and actual infinity? — Devans99
Not when all the bananas are stipulated as identical. — aletheist
It is possible to change something in one respect without changing it in another respect. If I peel a banana, it is still the same banana, even though I have changed it in one respect. — aletheist
I honestly do not see what there is to explain. Do you not know the difference between the hypothetical and the actual? — aletheist
A sequence has no mass, since it is a mathematical concept, not anything physical. An actual collection of bananas would have mass, but it would necessarily be finite, such that adding a banana would indeed add mass.But the mass of the sequence must have changed. — Devans99
You have made it clear that you reject the established mathematics of (hypothetical) infinite collections, but please stop pretending that there is no such mathematics, or that it cannot be different from the more familiar mathematics of (actual) finite collections.But the maths says the sequence is identical so it has the same mass. So its a contradiction. — Devans99
It is no longer identical in one respect--whether it is peeled--but it is still identical in others. For example, it is still a banana, and most people would even say that it is still the same banana.A peeled banana is no longer identical to a non-peeled banana. — Devans99
"Imaginary structure of actual infinity"? Now that is a contradiction.I assume by hypothetical you mean the imaginary structure of actual infinity in our minds? — Devans99
Hypothetical means logically possible, not necessarily true or even metaphysically possible. A hypothetically infinite collection or sequence is logically possible, while an actually infinite collection or sequence is metaphysically impossible.But hypothetical means it might or might not be true. — Devans99
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