Ole Rømer first demonstrated in 1676 that light travels at a finite speed (non-instantaneously) by studying the apparent motion of Jupiter's moon Io. — Wikipedia
You divided by zero. — Banno
Infinite speed breaks mathematics and thus the "mathematical" proof. — TheMadFool
Is the universe mathematical? — TheMadFool
No, dividing by zero results in an undefined result. The mathematical rule is, don't do it. — Banno
For light to travel instantaneously, t = 0 for any distance d. The speed of light c would then be d/0 [division by zero. A big no-no] — TheMadFool
Same goes for most of your other threads; don't break the rules and you will have far less trouble talking about what is going on. They are not arbitrary; they set out what can be sensibly stated. — Banno
Thinking that the speed of light is infinite amounts to dividing by zero. — TheMadFool
Now you're just making random remarks. — TheMadFool
"everything is selfish", — TheMadFool
N = This statement can be negated.. — TheMadFool
Nothing is, by definition, not any thing; no thing. — TheMadFool
.both affirming and denying a proposition — TheMadFool
No, poor arithmetic at line three results in division by zero. — Banno
The division by zero is implied by assuming light travels instantaneously. — TheMadFool
3. If A = B and B = C then A = C (transitivity of equality)
If 89 km = c * 0 and c * 0 = 89000 km then 89 km = 89000 km ??!! [from 3 above] — TheMadFool
If you plot light speed (c) on a graph [distance (d) on the y-axis and time (t) on the x-axis] you'll get a speed graph that's almost indistinguishable from the y-axis. — TheMadFool
I'm not as confident as you seem to be about nonsense and how it's somehow an indication or poor thinking or something much worse. — TheMadFool
Using what units?
If you plot distance in lightyears and time in years, position over time at the speed of light draws a 45 degree slope.
If you plot miles per hour (which you probably did), you get a much shallower slope.
If you plot kilometers per second, you did a different shallow slope.
If you plot gigaparsecs per femptosecond, you get a much less shallow slope.
The units make all the difference.
If you're concerned with time in hours and distance in miles, then yeah, a beam of light can travel such an absurdly huge number of miles in an hour that for all you (or your personal calculator) care it might as well be infinite
But it's technically not, and measuring in different units shows that. — Pfhorrest
I'm surprised that people thought the speed of light was not finite because it's relatively easy, using math alone, to prove that all speeds, light's included, has to be finite without doing any experiments at all. — TheMadFool
you can't do this — Mijin
But we know that there's a polygon with infinite sides: a circle.
OK technically mathematicians do not consider a circle to be a polygon, but it's only for essentially this very reason; that the maths is simpler if we separately handle shapes with finite vs infinite sides. — Mijin
If the point you're making requires that a circle is a polygon, and mathematicians do not consider a circle to be a polygon, then it really doesn't make your point, does it? — Metaphysician Undercover
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