Given a point in a plane, how many lines exist such that they do not pass through the point? — anon123
A sphere within a sphere has the same infinity of area as the one that contains it. — Gregory
Thanks Gregory, but I didn't understand the sphere example. Can you please explain it? — anon123
Now the thing is there are infinitely many lines in a plane. Also there are infinitely many lines which pass through a point. So does it mean that no such line exists? Of course not because practically it does. I just need a proof of the same. — anon123
Am I misreading or do you mean one point on on each circumference or surface?Perhaps Gregory you mean that their points can be placed into one-to-one correspondence, as evidenced by drawing rays from the center, each ray passing through exactly one point of each circle or sphere. — fishfry
Perhaps Gregory you mean that their points can be placed into one-to-one correspondence, as evidenced by drawing rays from the center, each ray passing through exactly one point of each circle or sphere.
— fishfry
Am I misreading or do you mean one point on on each circumference or surface? — tim wood
So you are saying the cardinality vs density distinction applies in geometry? — Gregory
I think there are too many problems with abstract geometry in this regard. I have always wonder if I could go off in one direction in space forever until a friend told me I would simply return to where I started. — Gregory
This blow my mind. Then recently I realized this applies too, perhaps, to the infinite divisibility thing. If I divide an object too much I will come back to the surface area. This makes sense to me as a looped curve — Gregory
"Given a point in a plane, how many lines exist such that they do not pass through the point?" — anon123
Well as I've mentioned to you before, I don't see how you can slice through a geometric object forever, creating infinite little pieces that keep dividing, while the whole remains finite — Gregory
I mentally divide objects though. I don't think if this is intuition or imagination, but flexing the segment infinitely than bringing it back like a slinky to the finite aspect of the segment, which certainly seems to require an extra thought in logic in order to accomplish because the slinky would stretch to infinity in both directions — Gregory
I get what you are saying. However a point has no dimensions, so how can it have any relation to space except as a limit. — Gregory
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An infinitesimal is what comes closest to zero — Gregory
but that's an infinite region and is infinite. — Gregory
Infinite infinities equal finite space? How? — Gregory
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