We could just go for the Planck length as you suggested earlier. This is the smallest possible unit of space. There is no half-a-Plank length of space. So space wouldn't be continuous but composed of discrete Plank-length "tiles". And the same too with time. At 1 Planck time the object is at the 1 Planck coordinate and at 2 Planck time the object is at the 2 Plank coordinate, and it doesn't make sense to talk about the half way point (even in space or in time). — Michael
No, if space is discrete, then you need to capture every actual location; i.e., you need there to be an infinite number of actual locations (e.g. the rationally-numbered coordinates). — aletheist
Also, if I am really nitpicky here, existence of Planck length doesn't necessarily make space discrete. It's just a ... line between "normal" and quantum. Experiments so far have always confirmed continuous space-time, although who knows... — Svizec
This still doesn't seem right. That there is zero distance between adjacent locations only seems to entail that there is no boundary of any breadth between them. I don't see how it follows that they would be the same location.If the distance between adjacent locations is zero, then by definition they are the same location, not adjacent locations at all. — aletheist
This still doesn't seem right. That there is zero distance between adjacent locations only seems to entail that there is no boundary of any breadth between them. I don't see how it follows that they would be the same location. — Arkady
The sequence is the rational coordinates between two points. — Michael
Consider a machine that counts each coordinate as it passes through it. If it can pass through all rational coordinates then it can count all rational coordinates. It can't count all rational coordinates, therefore it can't pass through all rational coordinates. — Michael
Suppose that you are right and that motion can only be discrete (this IS what you are arguing, correct?). — Svizec
Since motion was discrete, there should be no problem making the list of all rational numbers you passed, in order you passed them. What was the first step you made? If you are not able to make that list, what exactly is your explanation that you are not able to make the list and how does that argument prove your point?
But the point still stands that given the infinite number of coordinates, an object must have passed through an infinite number of prior coordinates to get to any arbitrary point, which is like saying that a person must have counted an infinite number of prior numbers to get to an arbitrary point. — Michael
You're saying that an infinite series of events has been completed. But an infinite series of events cannot be completed, by definition. — Michael
The fact that the machine cannot count all rational coordinates has no bearing whatsoever on whether it can pass through all rational coordinates — aletheist
Conside two 1cm lengths with (hypothetically) 0 space in between. Is there 1cm length or 2cm length? 2cm. No space in between does not entail that there's just one location. — Michael
I suspect that there's a failure of imagination on one (or both) of our parts. Consider:Well, I don't see how two locations separated by zero distance can be different locations. — aletheist
In this scenario, the machine performs a count by moving to a different point in space. So there is no fundamental difference between moving and counting. — Michael
Does it then follow that [X] and [Y] are the same region of space? It does not appear so to me. — Arkady
If motion is discrete then the object didn't pass through every rational number. It made jumps from one coordinate to another without passing any coordinate in between. — Michael
Ok... but did it pass through ANY rational number? Are you saying that it was at point 2 at the beginning and after that it ended at point 3 without passing a single rational number in between (like 5/2 for example)? — Svizec
For example, the first coordinate would be the one at 1 Planck length. The second coordinate would be the one at 2 Planck length. And so on. But at no point does it pass through the coordinate at 0.5 Planck length or at 1.5 Planck length. — Michael
Consider:
[X][Y]
[X] and [Y] are discrete regions of space. There is no boundary of any breadth between them, and no distance separating them. Does it then follow that [X] and [Y] are the same region of space? It does not appear so to me. — Arkady
You don't think that we can leave Planck constant out of this trip between points 2 and 3 on the real number axis though? If not, are you basically saying that the trip didn't visit any rational number, unless it happens to be at n x Planck length? But Planck length is a physical distance, while [2,3] is just an interval. How much is one meter on real number axis? — Svizec
For example, the first coordinate would be the one at 1 Planck length. The second coordinate would be the one at 2 Planck length. And so on. But at no point does it pass through the coordinate at 0.5 Planck length or at 1.5 Planck length. — Michael
I don't really understand what you're trying to get at here. The point is that if movement is discrete then one doesn't have to consider an object moving first to the half way point ad infinitum. So there are a finite number of coordinates that it must pass through. — Michael
Your claim is that all actual objects that actually move go from one Planck length coordinate to the next without ever occupying any intermediate locations — aletheist
My claim is that all actual objects that move occupy infinitely many intermediate locations between any two arbitrary coordinates, even if the interval between them is one Planck length.
Ok but what are these coordinates if the movement is just between point (2,0) and (3,0) in real number space. You were mentioning something about Planck lengths, but you don't have physical units of measurement in space of real numbers. If the number of coordinates it passed is finite, what are they? — Svizec
I really don't understand your question. We just have some distance that an object is to travel and we plot a coordinate at each Planck-length interval. There are a finite number of coordinates for the object to through, "jumping" from one point to the next without passing through the space in between. — Michael
Ok I'll try one more time. I am not talking about moving through physical space, like travelling from Earth to Mars. I am only talking about moving in R:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Real_coordinate_space
This space has defined distance and an object is moving from one point to another.
1. Do you agree that this has nothing to do with Planck constant, meters, centimetres? It's completely abstract.
2.In this space, do you still think that movement can be only discrete? — Svizec
Given that it has occupied an infinite number of prior locations in succession, it has completed an infinite series of events. — Michael
We can only define a finite number of distance coordinates, so we can only measure motion in discrete units. However, the motion itself is continuous between those discrete coordinates that we use to measure it. — aletheist
My claim is that all actual objects that move occupy infinitely many intermediate locations between any two arbitrary coordinates — aletheist
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.