Atalanta is walking from x=0 to x=1. What is the first non-zero coordinate that she walks to? I'd like to know how mathematical analysis solved this. — Ryan O'Connor
The Numberphile video on Zeno's paradox expresses concern about what is at the end of an infinite series with no final term. The mathematician said he wanted a *physicists* to explain it to him — Gregory
Oh you watched it, good. He said it "melts the brain" to think of an infinite series going to a destination without a final term. — Gregory
I left it out because it is a nonrestrictive clause. Further, any necessary termination is for a reason external to the process itself, usually to make an approximation. — tim wood
its demonstratable that space is infinitely packed. — Gregory
Quantum physicists descriptions of reality are not necessarily accurate. They have to fit true philosophy. — Gregory
Zeno's paradox when seen from the perspective of pure mathematics is easily dealt with using the limit concept, but giving it an anthropomorphic twist makes it absurd. And the idea of a first non-zero coordinate shows a very limited knowledge of mathematics.
Would you agree a wise intellectual warrior should first know his enemy before striking? — jgill
Why not? Explain to me exactly why someone can't put one foot in front of the other and take a step. How does the mathematical theory of the real numbers preclude anyone from doing that? — fishfry
Why do you think the modern theory of the real numbers prevents anyone from walking? — fishfry
And -- a question that I keep asking you and that you never answer -- why does any mathematical theory have anything to do with physics? — fishfry
I genuinely can not understand your point. How does the mathematical theory of the real numbers prevent anyone from taking a step? — fishfry
I would say that when you draw the real number line, that's a visual depiction of the mathematical real line, which itself is an abstract object that cannot be depicted. — fishfry
Fine. What of it. How would anyone's interpretation of that picture prevent them from walking or allow them to walk?......This is your thesis. Don't you see how silly it is?.......Before Dedekind had his clever idea, were people able to walk? And then the day he published, they couldn't? Isn't what you are saying patent nonsense? — fishfry
According to the Copenhagen interpretation, we have no idea what happens when we're not looking. According to Many Worlds, everything happens. How is this relevant to the conversation? — fishfry
Has it occurred to you that perhaps you are not personally possessed of the ultimate truth about how the universe works? — fishfry
Now you're just being silly, since if you claim 1/3 is the smallest positive real number I'll just divide it by 2 (using the field axioms) and note that 0 < 1/6 < 1/3. Your claim stands refuted. — fishfry
As I mentioned to Ryan, Zeno is solved mathematically by virtue of the theory of infinite convergent series — fishfry
My point is much of what QM says is false because they are clothing their findings in the language of an unprovable philosophy. They can predict things, but that is all QM can do. — Gregory
Is all space infinitely divisible? We can't conceive it as discrete, so our natural lights say yes. So your computer is infinitely packed. — Gregory
I've been arguing that to be infinitely divisible means that it has infinite parts. These seem identical to me — Gregory
Since both you and fishfry reacted the same way, I've learned that I shouldn't try to make a point in the form of a question. — Ryan O'Connor
I know that there is no first non-zero coordinate on the real number line, that's exactly what I was trying to highlight. Let me try again. Before she arrives at x=1, do you believe that she must first cross all points between 0 and 1? And before she arrives at x=0.5, do you believe that she must first cross all points between 0 and 0.5? — Ryan O'Connor
If so, then we can take this reasoning to its limit and say that to move she must first reach the first non-zero coordinate. And if there is no first non-zero coordinate, then she cannot move. This is Zeno's Argument which is what trying to highlight, but apparently didn't convey very well. — Ryan O'Connor
In the Numberphile on Zeno's Paradox, James Grime says the following:
"I want to give you the mathematician's point of view for this, because, well, some say that the mathematicians have sorted this out........So something like this-- an infinite sum-- behaves well when, if you take the sum and then you keep adding one term at a time, so you've got lots of different sums getting closer and closer to your answer. If that's the case, if your partial sums--that's what they're called-- are getting closer and closer to a value, then we say that's a well-behaved sum, and at infinity, it is equal to it exactly. And it's not just getting closer and closer but not quite reaching. It is actually the whole thing properly." — Ryan O'Connor
Is your view that the problem (of Atalanta travelling from x=0 to x=1) is resolved by completing an infinite process? — Ryan O'Connor
I think the most compelling solution to Zeno's Paradox (of Achilles and the tortoise) that is often presented is by looking at the situation holistically. If you ask what are the velocities of Achilles and the tortoise you can work backwards to calculate the instant when Achilles passes the tortoise. It seems so simple when you think of it this way. This is the type of thinking that I'm promoting: starting with the whole and working backwards to determine instants. — Ryan O'Connor
philosophers need to update their views — Ryan O'Connor
Are you suggesting that with each step someone sweeps over infinite points? In other words, are you suggesting that motion involves the completion of a supertask? — keystone
I've been arguing that to be infinitely divisible means that it has infinite parts. — Gregory
No, this is a confusion of "infinitely divisible" with "infinitely divided." The former means potentially having infinitely many parts, while the latter means actually having infinitely many parts. A true continuum is infinitely divisible, but this does not entail that it is infinitely divided. It is a whole such that in itself it has no actual parts, only potential parts. These are indefinite unless and until someone marks off distinct parts for a particular purpose, such as measurement, even if this is done using countably infinite rational numbers or uncountably infinite real numbers. A continuous line does not consist of such discrete points at all, but we could (theoretically) mark it with points exceeding all multitude.The parts are always there! — Gregory
This is one particular mathematical model of the interval--the dominant modern one, to be sure, but not the only one. Again, it is not mathematically necessary to treat a spatial interval as somehow consisting of unextended points. We can understand them instead as denoting locations in space, not constituents of space. As such, she does not really "pass through" them, we just just use them to track her progress.Mathematically there is no question that she passes through every point indexed by a real number. — fishfry
I obviously disagree. Again, a true continuum has no definite parts except those that we deliberately mark off within it for a particular purpose. It is infinitely divisible, but not actually divided.Nothing potentially has parts. It HAS the parts whether they are separated or not — Gregory
Neither the foot nor the inches are "there" unless and until we mark them. They are arbitrary units of length for measuring things, not intrinsic to space itself.One foot does not potentially have two united six inches. The 12 inches are there — Gregory
No, this is a confusion of "infinitely divisible" with "infinitely divided." The former means potentially having infinitely many parts, while the latter means actually having infinitely many parts. A true continuum is infinitely divisible, but this does not entail that it is infinitely divided. It is a whole such that in itself it has no actual parts, only potential parts. These are indefinite unless and until someone marks off distinct parts for a particular purpose, such as measurement, even if this is done using countably infinite rational numbers or uncountably infinite real numbers. A continuous line does not consist of such discrete points at all, but we could (theoretically) mark it with points exceeding all multitude. — aletheist
It is infinitely divisible, but not actually divided. — aletheist
In itself, yes; but we can still "divide" it at will to suit our purposes. That is what I mean when I say that the whole is real and the parts are entia rationis, creations of thought. For example, we can conceive space itself as continuous and indivisible, but we can nevertheless mark it off using arbitrary and discrete units for the sake of locating and measuring things that exist within space.A true continuum is indivisible. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is one particular mathematical model of the interval--the dominant modern one, to be sure, but not the only one. Again, it is not mathematically necessary to treat a spatial interval as somehow consisting of unextended points. We can understand them instead as denoting locations in space, not constituents of space. . — aletheist
As such, she does not really "pass through" them, we just just use them to track her progress — aletheist
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