An object that has no members is either the empty set or an urelement. And of course, an object that has in it only one object is a non-empty set. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Talking to you is like conversing with a computer. — Agent Smith
The universe is physical. Numbers are not. They are abstract objects. Whether the universe is finite or infinite has nothing to do with numbers being finite or infinite. Their nature is totally different and their existence is of a different kind, too. The only relation between numbers and universe that I can see is the following: numbers are representations of things in the universe, considered individually or in groups, categories etc. When I say "5 (five) apples" I refer to "5 (five) individual objects" or "a group of 5 (five) objects". Both the numeral "5" and the word "five" are symbols that represent a "quantity", which is also another abstract word, a concept.Now consider the fact that in a universe that's finite there's gotta be a number that is the upper limit of a counting processes that yields the largest number possible/required to describe this universe — Agent Smith
It's just that I wanted to know if scientific calculations invovling infinities could be tamed in a manner of speaking. — Agent Smith
the observable universe is far too small to contain an ordinary digital representation of Graham's number, assuming that each digit occupies one Planck volume, possibly the smallest measurable space. But even the number of digits in this digital representation of Graham's number would itself be a number so large that its digital representation cannot be represented in the observable universe. Nor even can the number of digits of that number—and so forth, for a number of times far exceeding the total number of Planck volumes in the observable universe.
[snip]
At the time of its introduction, it was the largest specific positive integer ever to have been used in a published mathematical proof. The number was described in the 1980 Guinness Book of World Records, adding to its popular interest. Other specific integers (such as TREE(3)) known to be far larger than Graham's number have since appeared in many serious mathematical proofs, for example in connection with Harvey Friedman's various finite forms of Kruskal's theorem.
Don't go messing' with mathematicians with your "c'mon, be reasonable" attitude; they'll have none of it. — unenlightened
Initially I was of the opinion that infinity had to be replaced by an extreme number like Graham's number but the result ∑∞n=1=−112∑n=1∞=−112 (used in string theory) is evidence the number that we swap infinity with in a calculation, surprise, surprise, doesn't have to be large, a wannabe infinity; a small, nevertheless most special number like −112−112 will do just fine. — Agent Smith
the observable universe is far too small to contain an ordinary digital representation of Graham's number, assuming that each digit occupies one Planck volume, possibly the smallest measurable space. But even the number of digits in this digital representation of Graham's number would itself be a number so large that its digital representation cannot be represented in the observable universe. Nor even can the number of digits of that number—and so forth, for a number of times far exceeding the total number of Planck volumes in the observable universe.
False actually. I cannot think of a single number that is, let alone all of them.True, numbers are infinite. — Agent Smith
If that number causes it to all make sense, it probably isn't unimaginably large.In all likelihood there's a number that would make us go "Yeah, this is it! It all makes sense now!" and that number is probably going to be unimaginably large but finite. — Agent Smith
Perhaps a reasonable place to start when talking about large useful numbers.I read somewhere that the observable universe contains roughly 10^80 atoms. That should be a good place to start at least when it comes to matter, oui? — Agent Smith
Well, that went over my head, but what caught my eye is that what you seem to be saying is our options aren't ∞∞ i.e. we may restricted to finite mathematics, even if not all the time, some of the time. — Agent Smith
Are all the infinities that appear in physics calculations [aleph naught]? — Agent Smith
Infinities can appear at singularities — jgill
Yea, but that's not a number, so it doesn't answer your question about the largest number we will ever need.Imsgine you're doing a calculation on black holes and you end with ∞∞ in your result. — Agent Smith
They're not 'counts' of things, so the question doesn't apply. Those infinities just mean that the equation fails to describe the physical situtation. So for instance, it take infinite coordinate time for a rock to fall through the event horizon. That just means that this choice of coordinate time is singular there, so it cannot meaningfully describe the rock falling through. It doesn't mean the rock doesn't fall through, or that anything even particularly different happens to it there.Are all the infinities that appear in physics calculations ℵ0ℵ0?
It doesn't mean the rock doesn't fall through, or that anything even particularly different happens to it there. — noAxioms
10^183 — hypericin
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