TiredThinker
Agent Smith
jgill
180 Proof
Not as dry (or long & thorough) as the SEP article but pretty good nonetheless:What is the history of Infinity? — TiredThinker
Cuthbert
What is the history of Infinity? — TiredThinker
Metaphysician Undercover
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
Gregory
EugeneW
L'éléphant
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
L'éléphant
TiredThinker
Metaphysician Undercover
180 Proof
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
universeness
Metaphysician Undercover
The circumference of a circle / sphere / torus / Möbius loop ... (E.g. circumnavigating / orbiting the Earth.) — 180 Proof
frank
motion requires a cause. — Metaphysician Undercover
Gnomon
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

EugeneW
But “infinity” means that, beyond the observable universe, you won't just find more planets and stars and other forms of ... — Gnomon
ssu
ssu
There are even kinds of infinity. Not every infinity is the same. — EugeneW
EugeneW
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