Zofran — Agent Smith
From your personal stash. Side effects include confusion and disorientation. Explains a lot. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Agent Smith is poking at us. He is much more intelligent than he seems. — jgill
Gives TonesInDeepFreeze 8 mg of Zofran. — Agent Smith
In a sense then ∞∞ in science has a job description similar to contradictions - separates the possible from the impossible. — Agent Smith
From special relativity, the Lorentz factor is unbounded as v approaches c. — jgill
when TDIF refuses to divulge the secrets of the mathemagician's smoke and mirrors. — Metaphysician Undercover
Every time infinity is employed in the application of mathematics, it's like employing a contradiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
This becomes very clear in an analysis of the common mathematician's claim to have resolved Zeno's paradoxes. — Metaphysician Undercover
There is no magic. Very much to the contrary. At a bare minimum, it is algorithmically verifiable whether a given formal expression is well formed and then whether a given sequence of formulas is a formal proof. That is a courtesy given by formal logic that is not hinted at in various handwavings and posturings by cranks as often found in a forum such as this. And I have given extensive explanation of many of the formulations I have mentioned. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Yet no one who says things like the above has ever demonstrated that Zermelo set theoretic infinitistic mathematics implies a contradiction. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Yet, again, we remind that a contradiction is a statement of the form "P and not-P" — TonesInDeepFreeze
Whether an expression is well formed or not is irrelevant to whether it is self-contradictory, because to determine contradiction we must analyze the meaning, and this is the content, not the form. — Metaphysician Undercover
The empty set for instance, involves contradiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
you have a very odd notion of what constitutes contradiction — Metaphysician Undercover
The law of noncontradiction states that the same object cannot both have and not have, the same property, at the same time — Metaphysician Undercover
let's say that a set is a collection of objects — Metaphysician Undercover
You are entirely ignorant of what contradiction is in mathematics. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Second, even informally, you mention a certain definition of 'set'. Mathematicians are not then obliged to refrain from having an understanding in which "collection of objects" does not preclude that it is an empty collection of objects, notwithstanding that that seems odd to people who have not studied mathematics, and so more explicitly we say, "a set is a collection, possibly empty, of objects". You are merely arrogating by fiat that your own notion and definition must the only one used by anyone else lest people with other notions and definitions are wrong. That is an intellectual error: not recognizing that definitions are provisional upon agreement of the discussants and that one is allowed to use different definitions in different contexts among different discussants. It's like someone saying "a baseball is only one such that is used in major league baseball" and not granting that someone in a different context may say, "By 'baseball' I include also balls such as used in softball". It is intellectually obnoxious not to allow that. And it is one in the deck of calling cards of cranks. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Mathematics is allowed its own special definition of "contradiction", — Metaphysician Undercover
explain to me how a set which has no objects also has a collection of objects — Metaphysician Undercover
"a set is a collection, possibly empty, of objects" — TonesInDeepFreeze
What if you had one object? — Metaphysician Undercover
What is the size of the set of possible states of the universe? I suspect this is the true nmax. Would this be a number best expressed as x^y^z? — hypericin
And your emoticon doubly seals it! Who could ever defeat an emoticon? — TonesInDeepFreeze
And I know vastly more about the school of intuitionism compared with your lack of knowledge about it. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Is there a finite number (Nmax) such that no calculations ever in physics will exceed that number? — Agent Smith
How does intuition work in math? — Agent Smith
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