Also, Im not arguing for or against free will. We can discuss that if you want but its not what Im getting at. — DingoJones
Lol, ok. So an answer to my question? — DingoJones
a clear question (a few actually) was asked, in simple english — DingoJones
That is the answer it will give and it does not disprove omniscience. I fail to see your argument with that point. Is it that because infinity is a concept and not a number, it can't be an amount of anything? Or is the argument that that is an example of limit of omniscience, and comparable of O having a finite maximum amount of information? — BlueBanana
Off topic, But here's a question. Actually more than one question. Maybe resolvable in one answer. Hmm, How to ask it? The square root of two (for example) is uniquely identifiable (sez I because I think I just did it). But it is not expressible, because in no system of units can it be written down (or so I believe). Do I correctly understand your proposition to mean that there are numbers that cannot be uniquely identified (as opposed to expressible) in any system of language - given that language permits for itself creative efficiencies? If yes, then a consequence would seem to be that all of the combined powers of all possible languages, in however many ways conceived, suffice to identify only a quantity of numbers that is itself arbitrarily close to zero wrt all the numbers themselves. Yes?Hence, there are real numbers that exist but cannot be expressed in language. — alcontali
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