one which to my reckoning involves substituting ∞ whenever and wherever it occurs with an appropriate finite number; this could really be a big help in my humble opinion. — Agent Smith
↪jgill
:smile:
Isn't what I said implied by finitism? — Agent Smith
Ultrafinitism (also known as ultraintuitionism) has an even more conservative attitude towards mathematical objects than finitism, and has objections to the existence of finite mathematical objects when they are too large.
a small, nevertheless most special number like −1/12
will do just fine. — Agent Smith
The common approach is to assume that any object can be divided in any way, so there is an infinity of possible divisions for each thing to be divided. In reality though, the way an object can be divided is highly dependent on the composition of the object. — Metaphysician Undercover
But, but, but... that number arises from calculating infinite sums, and explicitly not from setting a finite limit. You cannot get to it if you set a finite limit. — unenlightened
Notice however that the ∞ sum has a finite value (−1/12). That's the killer move! — Agent Smith
The mathematical approach is to assume that any object can be divided in any way, so there is an infinity of possible divisions for each thing to be divided. In physics though, the way an object can be divided is highly dependent on the composition of the object. — unenlightened
But mathematicians have no mercy, and maths is full of irrationality ever since Pythagoras. Irrational numbers are the devil in the detail that he proved the existence of geometrically, and the fact that mathematicians (and others) are still trying to insist that maths should be fitted within the limits of their thinking is more to do with psychology than mathematics. — unenlightened
When one tries to do analytic continuation of the Riemann Zeta function where it is not warranted this kind of nonsense results. What makes it useful in physics is beyond me. — jgill
You seem fascinated by this anomaly. It's a kind of summation result for series that don't converge in the mathematically acceptable manner. Here's a link that should keep you occupied until bedtime:
1 + 2 + 3 + ... — jgill
Fool's gold. — jgill
Is mathematics inconsistent? — Agent Smith
The expression on the right is a way of summing a divergent series. — jgill
x + x = x → 2x = x → 2 = 1 — Agent Smith
Is mathematics inconsistent? — Agent Smith
Please edify me then. How does intuition work in math? How is it related to so-called mathematical/logical rigor? Talking to you is like conversing with a computer. DOES NOT COMPUTE! DOES NOT COMPUTE! From start to finish, that's all you say! I should call tech support! — Agent Smith
to say that there is a collection of objects with no objects is contradictory — Metaphysician Undercover
you are now trying to reduce many to one, by saying that a set is an object. — Metaphysician Undercover
students are taught very specific principles, and their minds are funneled down a very narrow path — Metaphysician Undercover
The students are discouraged from looking outside the program — Metaphysician Undercover
If you don't accept the notion of abstract objects, then I admit that there's not much for us to discuss. — TonesInDeepFreeze
If you do accept the notion of abstract objects... — TonesInDeepFreeze
then I point out that a set theoretical intuition may begin with the notion of a thing being a member of another thing: The notion of membership. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The notion of membership. — TonesInDeepFreeze
That offers at least these prongs of refutation:
(1) I am mostly (but not exclusively) self-taught from textbooks; and textbooks in mathematics don't indoctrinate. Rather they put forth the way the mathematics works in a context such as presented in the book. A framework is presented and then developed. There is no exhortation for one to believe that the framework is the only one acceptable.
(2) Indeed, mathematics, especially mathematical logic, offers a vast array of alternative frameworks, not just the classical framework, including constructivism, intuitionism, finitism, paraconsistency, relevance logic, intensional logic .... And mathematics itself does not assert any particular philosophy about itself, as one is free to study mathematics with whatever philosophy or lack of philosophy one wants to bring to it.
(3) It is actually cranks who are narrowminded and dogmatic. The crank insists that only his philosophy and notions about mathematics are correct and that all the mathematicians meanwhile are incorrect. The crank doesn't even know anything about the mathematics yet the crank is full of sweeping denunciations of it. The crank makes wildly false claims about mathematics, and then doesn't understand that when he is corrected about those claims, the corrections are not an insistence that the crank agree with the mathematics but rather that the corrections merely point out and explain why what the cranks says about mathematics is untrue. It's as if the crank says, "classical music is all wrong because classical music never has regular meter" and then when it is pointed out that most of classical music does have regular meter, the crank takes that as narrow minded demand that he like classical music. And the crank is not even aware that mathematics, especially mathematical logic, offers a vast array of alternatives. Meanwhile, the crank's usual modus operandi is to either skip, misconstrue, or strawman the refutations and explanations given to him, thus an unending loop with the crank clinging to ignorance, confusion, and sophistry. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Wrong again. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Once again, your ignorance and intellectual dishonesty have enabled you to post a false claim. — TonesInDeepFreeze
No derivation of a contradiction has been shown in ZFC.
And you write (I'm using plain text):
Sum[n = 1 to inf] = inf
Sum[n = 1 to inf] = -(1/12)
As far as I can tell, those are not even well formed.
Sum[n=0 to inf] requires a term on its right*, otherwise it's just a dangling variable binding operator.
* E.g., Sum[n=0 to inf] 1/(2^n) is well formed and meaningful. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Is there a finite number (Nmax) such that no calculations ever in physics will exceed that number? — Agent Smith
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