Not as dry (or long & thorough) as the SEP article but pretty good nonetheless:What is the history of Infinity? — TiredThinker
What is the history of Infinity? — TiredThinker
What is the history of Infinity? I know it exists at least for the sake of math, but has anything ever been to indicate that anything about it goes on forever? — TiredThinker
Infinity was first posited by Anaximander. The apeiron as the first principle is boundless. The first principle meaning the "beginning of everything". So, beginning here doesn't mean a start (a bound), rather infinity is the beginning and we couldn't posit anything prior to infinity.What is the history of Infinity? I know it exists at least for the sake of math, but has anything ever been to indicate that anything about it goes on forever? — TiredThinker
Horizons. The circumference of a circle / sphere / torus / Möbius loop ... (E.g. circumnavigating / orbiting the Earth.)[H]as anything ever been to indicate that anythingabout itgoes on forever? — TiredThinker
The circumference of a circle / sphere / torus / Möbius loop ... (E.g. circumnavigating / orbiting the Earth.) — 180 Proof
motion requires a cause. — Metaphysician Undercover
Einstein defined the universe as "finite, but unbounded". Ironically, "unbounded" is one definition of "infinite". Yet, Einstein's mathematical universe is depicted as a sphere, which would actually be finite in space, except that "space" is inside the sphere. Now wrap your mind around the paradox of unbounded space trapped inside a finite sphere. :joke:Space is infinite. There is no end to it. The universe expands in it. Accelerated even. Will it come to a sudden stop because space ends? — EugeneW
But “infinity” means that, beyond the observable universe, you won't just find more planets and stars and other forms of ... — Gnomon
There are even kinds of infinity. Not every infinity is the same. — EugeneW
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