See how delta-t becomes zero? So your average is a division by zero. — Banno
But that's not right; mathematicians, even those in primary school, do apprehend infinity in their considerations. — Banno
And i think that is an end to this discussion. — Banno
What? Delta-t doesn't become zero. It "approaches zero". — Metaphysician Undercover
Right, so the question that follows is: what happened so that we generally rejected constructivism? — frank
And what are the philosophical costs of having done so? — frank
Have I got this wrong? — Baden
That just sounds like a bit of Zeno-ian silliness! — Janus
As I argued in that thread, "infinite extension", which is what conventional set theory allows, is incoherent, based in contradiction. An object, as a unity, being unbounded, is fundamentally contradictory. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, I am familiar with that definition as "velocity at some instant". I thought it should be obvious that I was implicitly inquiring if you or Metaphysician Undercover had some other definition in mind such that it might be reasonable to agree that there is no "instantaneous velocity" per that other definition. — Janus
So a physicist using classical mechanics would say that an object has only one location at an instant, but that it can have both a velocity and an acceleration. — Banno
Meta has an idea - Aristotelian, perhaps, that since an object can't go anywhere in an instant, it can't have a velocity. — Banno
It also seems to me to be a very similar to the misapprehension he had in Sam26's discussion of rules. — Banno
There's a certain coherence in what he is saying; and it is said with such conviction. — Banno
So the universe is not quite as you thought it was. You'd better rearrange your beliefs, then. Because you certainly can't rearrange the universe. — Asimov (1941, 1990)
No, that just implies you can add one - a finite value - to any number - another finite value. So where does one get the notion of infinity from when you are starting somewhere in using numbers to count and then simply adding one to where you started.Sure. But that fact that someone can add one to any number does. — Banno
What is not reasonable is to call any sort of velocity "instantaneous velocity" because any velocity requires a period of time, and "instant" implies a point in time. So that phrase is really self-contradicting, oxymoronic — Metaphysician Undercover
Why does dividing things by three, into thirds, create an "infinite" number of threes after the decimal point, as if we can never get to an actual third of something? — Harry Hindu
Yes, but you seem to be ignoring what I said. If what you and I both said is true, then how do we reconcile our opposing, but true, viewpoints? I was hoping for something like this but while pointing out the problem you failed in trying to solve it.6/3=2
Again, a major problem in philosophical discussions is exhibited. — jgill
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