Now the nature of infinity is an interesting topic to explore! — Real Gone Cat
What I think, is that we allow "infinite" so that we will always be able to measure anything. If our numbers were limited to the biggest thing we've come across as of yet, or largest quantity we've come across, then if we came a cross a bigger one we would not be able to measure it. So we always allow that our numbers can go higher, to ensure that we will always be able to measure anything that we ever come across. In that way, "infinite" is a very practical principle. — Metaphysician Undercover
But it may surprise you to know that many mathematicians today believe that actual infinite sets exist in math! — Real Gone Cat
But I accept that you don't consider 'utilitarian' as a correct description of your productivity and outcomes argument. Indeed, my point doesn't rely on the particular rubric 'utilitarian' but rather that I reject your productivity and outcomes argument, whatever rubric it correctly falls under. — TonesInDeepFreeze
That doesn't surprise me at all. I've had numerous discussions in this forum with mathematicians, and I've already been well exposed to the absurd ontology which seems to be exclusive to that cult. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, we're a wicked bunch intent on the corruption of the intellects of youth in order to bring them to the alter of our Satan, Paul Erdos RIP. All bow. — jgill
Does that mean 0 and ∞ aren't numbers — Agent Smith
I had to look up Paul Erdos, to see that he is famous for his work on Ramsey theory. Seems like Erdos was very socially active. Is he responsible for the famous notion "six degrees of separation"? Or was he just paranoid about aliens? I see you can still earn money by solving Erdos' problems. Have you ever managed to get any reward? — Metaphysician Undercover
As if the leminscate stands for that thing like the golden arches stand for a hamburger stand. — TonesInDeepFreeze
What surprises me about our math-phobic friends on TPF, is that philosophy majors usually love the esoteric. You would think they would revel in knowing more about mathematics than the Great Unwashed. — Real Gone Cat
Let's go to the largest size there is: the visible universe. The radius of the universe is about 46 billion light years. Now let me ask a different question: How many digits of pi would we need to calculate the circumference of a circle with a radius of 46 billion light years to an accuracy equal to the diameter of a hydrogen atom (the simplest atom)? The answer is that you would need 39 or 40 decimal places. If you think about how fantastically vast the universe is — truly far beyond what we can conceive, and certainly far, far, far beyond what you can see with your eyes even on the darkest, most beautiful, star-filled night — and think about how incredibly tiny a single atom is, you can see that we would not need to use many digits of pi to cover the entire range.
As I've pointed out, finitism (or worse, ultrafinitism) leads to some odd results : you have to truncate ππ (which turns circles into polygons), you have to deny irrationals, you destroy the foundations for calculus, lines no longer consist of an uncountably infinite set of points, etc. — Real Gone Cat
Of course not. It's not even a formal claim. — TonesInDeepFreeze
For myself, even though I am not a mathematician, I happily study ZFC without having the platonist commitment that the abstract objects of mathematics exist independent of mind. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Of course not. It's not even a formal claim.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I was teasing. — apokrisis
If you gatecrash a comment, you could at least have the courtesy to set out your reasons for your assertions. — apokrisis
So you reveal yourself as a pragmatist. — apokrisis
Infinity is a useful idea as far as it goes in the real world of doing things — apokrisis
Truncating pi is practical. — apokrisis
Oh come on. I didn't "gatecrash" anything. You posted essentially a one-liner on the subject, itself not an argument. That's fine. And it should be allowed that one may reply in kind. And even if a poster replies tersely to a longer argument, that's not "gatecrashing" or necessarily even rude or whatever. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.