Stating my own argument about it.
Whether you reply to my statement of my argument about your contradiction is entirely your own prerogative. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And, since you seem now to be leaning toward a claim that I called you back to defend your argument, I withdraw my comment that I might have taken you too literally. — TonesInDeepFreeze
There was no argument made by you — Metaphysician Undercover
If memory serves, [Widlerberger is] a finitist.
— Agent Smith
That is quite missing the point. Wilderberger, as I glean, is an ultrafinitist. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Then I mentioned that, more particularly, he's an ultrafinitist. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Your notion of “mentioning” is as disingenuous — apokrisis
your definition of “being constructive” — apokrisis
I think someone is trolling. — Real Gone Cat
The OP is too clearly an example of ultrafinitism to be an accident. — Real Gone Cat
You think Agent Smith is pretending to be a finitist when he is really an ultrafinitist at heart? — apokrisis
You think Agent Smith is pretending to be a finitist when he is really an ultrafinitist at heart? — apokrisis
Anyway, it's not clear to me what his view is: Does he grant that there is no greatest number, while suggesting that there is a greatest practical number? Or does he hold that there is a greatest number period? — TonesInDeepFreeze
His position is vague. But one can develop it in a fruitful direction - like ultrafinitism. — apokrisis
how can a finite brain grasp infinity — Agent Smith
I hypothesized in my post to jgill [a calculator that can't calculate beyond 5 would display 5 (the arbitrarily large number) for both the queries 2 + 3 = ? and 3 + 29 = ?]; he asked, paraphrasing, how can a finite brain grasp infinity. — Agent Smith
is infinity necessary? — Agent Smith
We really don't use 3.14159... (the real value of π). Put yourself in an engineer's shoes and answer that question? — Agent Smith
Is ∞ like God as Cantor believed? — Agent Smith
it's a simple rule of thumb that if a mathematician wants to propose a new idea, s/he'll use ∞ only if absolutely necessary and that too with much reservation. — Agent Smith
Isn't this why you keep admonishing AS to get some learnin' on the subject? — Real Gone Cat
But I don't agree with the utilitarian framework you apply here*. First, I don't think utilitarian result is the only consideration. Second, for utility it doesn't matter anyway: The crank will continue to spew disinformation no matter whether left unresponded to or responded to with correction.
* I don't claim you adhere to utilitarianism. I am just saying that in this particular context your framework is utilitarian. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Why am I nuts? — Real Gone Cat
I'm not employing a utilitarian framework here — Kuro
AS rejects any number that is not useful to humans, such as Pi beyond a few decimal digits. Ultra-ultrafinitism? — Real Gone Cat
Yet again you repeat your false claim that is refuted by content of the posts. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You skipped what I wrote about that. That is your M.O., in true crank style: Skip responding to points that don't support your own position and instead just keep reiterating your position. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Ultrafinitism is usually defined as the belief that really large FINITE numbers do not exist because of constructive limits - what is physically realizable in the universe. And what does the OP posit? That there is a maximum number needed to describe the universe. Anything bigger doesn't need to exist. Did I get something wrong? — Real Gone Cat
First, as I've said ad nauseum, (with exceptions of figures of speech) mathematics doesn't have a noun 'infinity' but rather an adjective 'is infinite'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Many mathematicians freely make use of infinite sets. — TonesInDeepFreeze
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