An analogy can only be useful for illustrating an argument, and you have yet to offer an argument. You assert that moving from place to place is possible if and only if one can utter all rational numbers between 1 and 2 in sequence and in finite time, but you haven't offered an argument for this assertion — SophistiCat
I will quote several posts here but I will start with the only thing where I think Michael is wrong. Every other posts he writes is spot on.That it's the smallest measurable length is not that it's the smallest length. — Michael
It actually does mean that, yes. It's exactly one. But this is surprisingly irrelevant in this case, because the problem doesn't seem to be mathematical at all.From your Wikipedia page Banno: "As n approaches infinity, sn tends to aproach 1." Does that means =1 to you? — Metaphysician Undercover
You are of course correct that in real life we could just run and beat the turtle, but this trivial solution is not what drove all the philosophers/logicians to it for such a long time. Instead the most common interpretation of the paradox is that the runner MUST touch every point, as you worded it. So that's the version of the paradox that people try to discuss, including majority of posters in this thread. It is assumed that that's what Zeno was thinking.You have it exactly backwards - the paradox only arises by insisting that space is made up of infinitely many points, and time is made up of infinitely many instants. When we recognize that both space and time are continuous, the paradox dissolves - there are no intermediate points that I have to "touch" while moving from defined point A to defined point B in a finite interval of time, just like I do not need to count any intermediate numbers in order to get from 1 to 2. — aletheist
You misunderstand the problem and the reason why it's worded the way it is. Length of 1 is defined here at whatever point Achilles would mathematically catch the turtle. You want his first point to be at 1/3? No problem. So let's see... Turtle has 50m advantage and you want that to be 1/3 of the total length. Fine, so that means that turtle's speed is exactly 2/3 of Achille's speed. By the time Achilles reaches the 1/3 point, the turtle will be at 1/3 + 2/3*1/3 = 5/9, covering a distance of 2/9. Let's see the series:The sum of 1/3, 1/9, 1/27, 1/81...sequence is NOT 1. It is half(1/2).
You can try that with other fractions too. The sum doesn't equal 1.
Therefore the paradox remains unresolved as far as math is concerned. — TheMadFool
Zeno's paradox: Anything moving from point A to pointB must first travel half of that distance. Before that it has to travel half of half of that distance and so on. It is possible to iterate this to infinity. Therefore, motion is impossible.
Yet, we can easily move from point A to B - we do it everyday.
Here math and/or logic claims motion is impossible. Reality is we can move. We have a contradiction. Therefore, either logic/math is wrong OR reality is wrong.
Possibilities:
1. Logic/math is wrong
2. Reality is wrong
Both cannot be wrong because that again leads to a contradiction.
How do we make sense of this paradox?
The key assumption is that space can be infinitely divided. Without this there is no paradox. And if space is infinitely divisible then motion would be truly impossible. However motion is possible. Therefore space is NOT infinitely divisible - the assumption that it is is false. So, logic/math is wrong - it rests on a false premise. There is no paradox; logic/math is wrong.
Paradox solved??? — TheMadFool
f I try to use a bit more mathematical language... The sequence 1/2 + 1/4 + 1/8 + ... is a sequence with infinite number of terms. Each term corresponds to one step. The reason why Achilles will never reach point 1 is because 1 is not a term of this geometric sequence. 1 is the sum, yes, but in order for Achilles to reach the 1, point 1 would actually have to one of the terms of the sequence. — Svizec
The best that I can make of your attempt is basically the same as before: you are saying that moving from place to place is possible if and only if it is possible to put all rational numbers between 1 and 2 into an ordered sequence (which, of course, is an impossibility). But you are not offering any argument for this assertion. — SophistiCat
That makes no sense. — SophistiCat
What I'm saying is that continuous motion between one place and another is possible if and only if it is possible to sequentially pass through each coordinate between them (and for the number or coordinates to be infinite). It seems to be that this is what it means for motion to be continuous (rather than discrete). — Michael
I did clarify that I was talking about the Achilles racing turtle paradox, which is not the one from the OP. Are you still claiming that it makes no sense? — Svizec
It would be reasonable to say that for motion to be continuous the position of the body must pass every rational (or real for that matter) coordinate in order. But you demand something on top of that: that all of these coordinates form an ordered sequence. That demand is not motivated by any reasoning (indeed, you will necessarily run into a contradiction if you try). — SophistiCat
That's what I said. But you are asking more than that. You must recognize the difference between there being an order and there being a sequence. — SophistiCat
And so what is the first potential rationally-numbered coordinate that an object must pass through in its movement from A to B? — Michael
If the counting is to be possible it must be that the number line (or just the counting) is discrete; we have some minimum fraction to work with (say, 1/18). — Michael
And so if movement is possible it must be that space (or just the movement) is discrete; the object has some minimum fraction to work with. — Michael
The only discrete coordinates that an object must actually pass through are those that we arbitrarily establish. Spatial coordinates do not exist apart from our construction of them for specific purposes. What you have identified is the reason why no one ever uses the rational numbers as a spatial coordinate system. — aletheist
Agreed, counting is discrete. That is precisely why it is a false analogy to motion, which is continuous.
Like I said, passing all rational coordinates in order is not a problem. After all, there is a (total) order relation for rational coordinates, so that for every pair of coordinates a and b, either a = b or a < b or a > b. But counting is not part of that. — SophistiCat
Even if we only define three coordinates between A and B it must still pass through the space between those coordinates. — Michael
And so the reason motion is possible is because it's discrete. — Michael
Even if we define as many coordinates between A and B as there are rational numbers between 1 and 2,
the object must still pass through the space between those coordinates. After all, there are infinitely many irrational numbers between any two rational numbers. My whole point throughout this thread is that there is always space between any two coordinates that you define. That is precisely what it means for space to be continuous; it does not consist of discrete locations. No coordinate system, no matter how finely grained, can capture every potential location. — aletheist
Then please answer my question that you conveniently ignored. Where would the object be during the finite interval of time between the instant when it left one point and the instant when it arrived at the other?
Perhaps I'm missing something, but why must there be a finite distance between adjacent locations (assuming that you mean a non-zero finite distance; if there's zero distance, then your objection is moot)?Again, this is backwards; movement is only possible because space and time are continuous. If they were discrete, then it would be impossible to traverse the finite distance between adjacent locations. Where would the object be during the finite interval of time between the instant when it left one point and the instant when it arrived at the other? — aletheist
What's the difference between moving from one coordinate to the next and counting from one coordinate to the next? — Michael
Simple - counting is discrete by definition, because it requires explicitly recognizing every intermediate step, but motion is not. You keep insisting that motion has to be discrete like counting, but have made no argument for this assertion — aletheist
Continuous motion is impossible for the same reason that continuous counting is impossible. The reason counting is possible is because it is discrete. And so the reason motion is possible is because it is discrete. — Michael
What's the difference between moving from one coordinate to the next and counting from one coordinate to the next? — Michael
Saying that passing all rational coordinates in order is not a problem is akin to saying that counting all rational coordinates in order is not a problem. — Michael
Presumably there is no "in between". First it's at this discrete location and then it's at that discrete location. Maybe this involves discrete units of time as well. But this doesn't really matter. The logic still shows that continuous motion is impossible. — Michael
I'm afraid this is the end of the road, Michael. It does matter, you will have to be more precise here and make a solid counter argument. — Svizec
How would you define what distance is? Specifically, how would you define what distance is in a discrete topology and how would you define it in "normal" space of real numbers?
I don't need to capture every potential location. I only need for there to be an infinite number of potential locations (e.g. the rationally-numbered coordinates). — Michael
Presumably there is no time in between. First it's at this discrete location and then it's at that discrete location. — Michael
The logic still shows that continuous motion is impossible. — Michael
Motion cannot be continuous for the same reason that counting cannot be continuous. There cannot be a first coordinate to count to from a starting point and so there cannot be a first coordinate to move to from a starting point. — Michael
Motion cannot be continuous for the same reason that counting cannot be continuous. There cannot be a first coordinate to count to from a starting point and so there cannot be a first coordinate to move to from a starting point. Your position just seems to turn a blind eye to this. — Michael
Perhaps I'm missing something, but why must there be a finite distance between adjacent locations (assuming that you mean a non-zero finite distance; if there's zero distance, then your objection is moot)? — Arkady
You must show the necessary connection between motion and counting all rational numbers in an interval in order. — SophistiCat
When you are saying "the next" you are already implying a sequence.
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.