But you're a fan of physics so you should appreciate that in QM the observer plays an active role converting the potential to the actual (by means of making measurements to collapse the wave function). — keystone
A mathematical platonist would have to say infinite. I would go in a different direction. I would ask 'where?' How many numbers are 'where'? In other words, in what computer/mind are you talking about. You have to be specific about where is because there is no Platonic realm. — keystone
I take "approaches" to be a potentially infinite process. — keystone
disinformation — TonesInDeepFreeze
Most interesting. — Ms. Marple
the existence of finitism suggests to me that there's trouble in (Cantor's) paradise! — Agent Smith
There are critics of X, therefore there is something very wrong with X.
That is a risibly stupid argument. — TonesInDeepFreeze
disinformation
— TonesInDeepFreeze — Agent Smith
it doesn't meet the standards of rigor required in mathematics. — Agent Smith
It's not so much that you don't meet a standard of rigor, it's that you lie about the subject. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I can't speak to the standard axiomatization of analysis, but the informal definitions that us engineers were taught didn't use sets — keystone
Ok! Google should help you find the relevant pages! Bonam fortunam. — Agent Smith
It's not so much that you don't meet a standard of rigor, it's that you lie about the subject.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
:rofl: — Agent Smith
How is that substantively different from Thompson's lamp?
I already responded regarding Thompson's lamp.
I don't know a theorem of set theory that is rendered as "infinite processes can be completed".
Set theory doesn't axiomatize thought experiments. — TonesInDeepFreeze
But that doesn't prove that there does not exist a set whose members are all and only the natural numbers or that there does not exist an infinite set. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Hilbert's Hotel refers to the trivial possibility of indefinitely expanding a finite hotel — sime
ZFC cannot distinguish between a hotel that isn't finite purely because it is growing without bound, from a mythical hotel with a countably infinite subset — sime
the fault of the axiom of choice — sime
"A Hilbert Hotel has a countably infinite subject" refers to a sentence of ZFC, and not an actual hotel. — sime
When you throw a dart at a dartboard, you don't hit a point, you hit an area. Any discretization of a dartboard into areas produces a finite number of areas each with a finite probability, all summing to a probability of 100%. What's wrong with this view? — keystone
The hotel is not finite. It has infinitely many rooms. — TonesInDeepFreeze
A perpetually growing hotel — sime
But such a hotel isn't describable in ZF if the axiom of choice is assumed, because it forces Dedekind-infiniteness upon every infinite set. — sime
As I recall, it's not a perpetually growing hotel. Rather, it' a hotel with denumerably many rooms and rooms and denumerably many guests, one to each room. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Since one cannot disprove the existence of an infinite being (e.g. God) one cannot disprove the existence of infinite sets. — keystone
infinite universes (in which infinite sets can exist) harbor contradictions — keystone
where infinite processes can and cannot be completed. — keystone
I think saying "there exists a set of all natural numbers" is equivalent to writing a program to print all natural numbers and running it through to completion. — keystone
However, I think set theory can be reframed to correspond to potentially infinite algorithms instead of actually infinite — keystone
I'm not convinced by your response to Thompson's lamp because your answer lies outside of the thought experiment — keystone
why would we think they can be completed in reality? — keystone
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.