What is the standard definition of number ? — Wittgenstein
In a way, yes. ‘Ought’ is a sign that one rejects/resents the experience of being hungry in favour of a world without hunger. — Possibility
Too much attention payed to the nature of words, not enough to the nature of the world. — fdrake
Even if you consider the "conceptual existence " we cannot construct infinity even with all the symbols and operations in a system. — Wittgenstein
If you regard infinity as number, that implies that it is finite, since all numbers are finite. — Wittgenstein
However, the statement, " an infinite number of elements " is a contradiction in terms as infinity is clearly not a number but sets have definite number of elements and on other hand infinity is not definite.How can we justify the existence of infinite sets. — Wittgenstein
How can we justify the existence of infinite sets. — Wittgenstein
I'm just rejecting the argument that an abstracted infinity implies there are real-world infinities. — Relativist
If a point has no length it does not exist so the definition is contradictory. — Devans99
A "sphere" (or "ideal sphere") is an abstraction, not an actually existing thing. — Relativist
You bring up another abstraction: the number of possible paths being infinite. This is hypothetical; in the real world, you cannot actually trace an infinite number of paths. So in the real world you cannot actually COLLECT an infinity. All you can do is to conceptualize. — Relativist
Calculus has problems too. For example the infinite series 1/2^n
1 + 1/2 + 1/4 + 1/8 ... = 2
Logically it’s incorrect to write =2 should be ~2. It’s only a small error but the sum of that series is always less than 2. — Devans99
- The concept of a human face can be defined
- The ‘set of all human faces’ is a finite list so in principle is also definable
- the description ,set of all human faces’ is not a complete definition of the set — Devans99
We are comparing two undefined things and we get nonsense. — Devans99
- The concept of potential infinity is useful as an approximation of the very large and small. Potential Infinity exists in the material world. — Devans99
Wasn't it recognised several pages earlier that those insisting that there is a clear distinction between the terms 'Actual Infinity' and 'Potential Infinity' are Aristotelians, while the rest are not? Is there any hope of ever coming to a common understanding between Aristotelians and non-Aristotelians, given the fundamentals of their worldviews are so completely different? — andrewk
My initial points were that infinity isn't inherently off the table when talking about reality, as the OP and another user were arguing that infinity is a contradictory concept (which is just flatly untrue); so if anything in reality is infinite or not is an empirical matter, there's no strictly logical argument against it being instantiated. — MindForged
Give me one example of the Actually Infinite from the material world. — Devans99
I understand that maths has tried to build a consistent logical structure around the logical fallacy of the Actually Infinite and has failed. The numerous paradoxes attest to that. — Devans99
I don't see how an instantiated infinity could ever be established empirically since we can't count to infinity. — Relativist
- So I have infinity X and a copy X’.
- I add one to X
- then X > X’ by common sense — Devans99
- Actual Infinity is larger than any other number — Devans99
- Actual infinity plus one is larger than actual infinity
- Hence there is no number larger than all other numbers
That would mean a physical system passing through an infinite number of states in a finite period of time. — Devans99
2nd proof that Actual Infinity does not exist:
- Actual infinity plus one equals Actual infinity
- but X+1 <> X for all X
- So Actual Infinity is absurd — Devans99
The Actually Infinite has no place in the material world. — Devans99
For example infinite time implies anything [that] can happen will happen an infinite number of times which is absurd. — Devans99
You are making things complicated. Zeno’s paradoxes disappear if we assume time is discrete for example (IE then Archiles only has to cover a finite number of steps to catch the tortoise).
Don’t you get it, logical contradictions like Zeno’s, Hilberts Hotel etc... exist because we have an absurdity (Actual Infinity) at the core of our reasoning — Devans99
You are assuming time is continuous.
- Assume we have a system
- Watch it evolve over a finite time period
- Will we observe it pass though an actually infinite number of states?
My gut feeling is no so time is probably discrete.
You say that you believe time is continuous but you don’t give an argument why.
I say time is discrete because otherwise we get logical contradictions. — Devans99
If it is, it’s a potential infinity rather than an actual Infinity (you do understand the distinction?).
The division of space takes time, first we must cut one inch, then 1/2 an inch, then 1/4... No matter how many cuts we make we never get to actual infinity, just some small number. — Devans99