More real numbers, all of which are distinct; again, it obviously does not yield an unbroken continuum. Put another way, the set of real numbers has a multitude or cardinality, which is exceeded by its power set; but a true continuum exceeds all multitude or cardinality. It is not composed of parts, it can only be divided into parts, all of which can likewise be divided into more and smaller parts of the same kind. — aletheist
Right - the real numbers constitute an analytic continuum, but not a synthetic continuum; i.e., a true continuum in the Peircean sense, which cannot be represented by numbers at all. As he put it, "Breaking grains of sand more and more [even infinitely] will only make the sand more broken. It will not weld the grains into unbroken continuity." — aletheist
I'm not sure what you're saying here. If you're only saying that consciousness depends on brain activity, then Chalmers would agree. He's a property dualist, after all, not a substance dualist. All he's arguing is that consciousness is not identical to brain activity (or any other physical thing).
And he's not saying that p-zombies are physically possible. He's saying that p-zombies are logically possible. — Michael
These questions don't make any sense. It is simply the case that the movement of the p-zombie's body (including the movement of the lungs and vocal chords) is causally explained by the laws of physics and prior physical states of matter. This must be true for the physicalist, as the physicalist doesn't allow for non-physical causes. The issue, then, is whether or not we can conceive of this situation without conceiving of this person having first-person experiences. Chalmers claims that we can; that we don't need to imagine that there's anything that it's like to be this person to imagine the purely mechanical series of causal relations that the physicalist must say actually explains the behaviour (e.g. electrical activity in the central nervous system). — Michael
Is there an a posteriori way of determining whether there are any real continua vs. everything (including space and time) being discrete? — aletheist
As a structural engineer, I analyze continuous things using discrete models (i.e., finite elements) all the time, and it works just fine for that purpose. Of course, I also apply safety factors to the results, since I am not interested in having the underlying theory falsified. — aletheist
As I asked in the OP, is it possible to determine whether there are any real continua vs. everything (including space and time) being discrete? If so, how should we go about it? — aletheist
You did not describe the infinity of the natural numbers, which is that they continue forever, endlessly. And no, the infinity between two real numbers, (no matter how large or small those numbers might be), is no bigger than this infinity. They are both infinite. One is not a bigger infinite than the other, that it nonsense. — Metaphysician Undercover
But what I was objecting to was waving a physics textbook over the termite mound and saying "This explains everything." It doesn't, it can't. Not because life is beyond science -- but rather, our science isn't quite that capable yet. — Bitter Crank
No, you can't count the natural numbers either, because they're infinite. That's the point I'm arguing with aletheist, they are by definition uncountable, because by definition they are infinite, and infinite is by definition endless, which is by definition uncountable. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't think so. It's just a simple question: does the golfball have to arrive at the center point before it can make it to its destination? Common sense says yes. Infinite regress appears.
Note that the regress is headed back to the starting point, not the destination. — Mongrel
Perhaps I commit the fallacy of accident. — TheMadFool
As I said, your definition appears like nonsense to me. To be able to do something, is to be able to complete that task. Being incapable of completing that task, is failure. When failure is guaranteed, then the claim of being able to do that task is completely unjustified. — Metaphysician Undercover
We simply have different non-technical definitions of "countable." It is not the case that yours is true and mine is false, or vice-versa; they are just different. — aletheist
I can't explain how my own mind composes these sentences and sends instructions to my fingers to type these letters. — Bitter Crank
Look, we have been using at least three different definitions of "countable" in this thread:
The accepted mathematical one from set theory, "able to be put into bijection [one-to-one correspondence] with the natural numbers."
My notion of "potentially countable" or "countable in principle," which is that there is no particular largest value beyond which it is logically impossible to count.
The notion of "actually countable," which requires it to be possible to finish counting. — aletheist
Please locate that quote of mine, I can't find it and don't remember saying it. — fishfry
The reals in their usual order are a continuum. They can be reordered to be discrete. — fishfry
I mention this because it's a counterexample to the intuition that a set can be "counted" if its members can be lined up so that there's one after another. — fishfry
This is a textbook case of the fallacy of composition. And, you've also forgotten one premise here, that any particular natural number has numbers higher than it. And, this is the premise which makes it impossible, in principle to count all of the natural numbers. — Metaphysician Undercover
I have done no such thing. I have noted, rather, that no matter how big a finite number you specify, it is possible in principle to count up to and beyond that number. In other words, you cannot identify a largest natural number (or integer) beyond which it is impossible in principle to count. If it is possible in principle to count up to any particular natural number (or integer), then it is possible in principle to count all of the natural numbers (and integers). — aletheist
But if you insist that "countable" is to be used with its everyday meaning, then we should be careful not to confuse this with foozlability, which is a technical condition used by specialists in set theory. — fishfry
The reals in their usual order are a continuum. They can be reordered to be discrete. Counterintuitive but set-theoretically true. — fishfry
The rationals in their usual order aren't discrete, — fishfry
These are murky philosophical waters. — fishfry
Not quite, since even the real numbers are still discrete despite being uncountable; they thus form a pseudo-continuum. — aletheist
Doesn't science explain all physical phenomena? Why does life get a special status. We've been using science (biology and medicine) to understand life and look how much progress we've made. — TheMadFool
Of course there's a difference between a robot and living things. Living things are far more complex than the robots of today. However, in the finaly analysis, life is naught but a complex chemical reaction. Am I wrong? — TheMadFool
As Tom mentioned earlier, much confusion would be avoided if Cantor had picked another name. If we say a set is foozlable if it can be bijected to the natural numbers, then we can prove that the natural numbers, the integers, and the rationals are foozlable; and that the reals aren't. But nobody would have to spend any time arguing about whether you can count the elements of an infinite set. — fishfry
Exactly - it actually does mean that it is countable, but it does not mean that it is actually countable. See the difference? — aletheist
(I rushed this post because my food was delivered half way through; I hope it makes any sense at all) — Efram
No, to say that one is infinitely bigger than the other is nonsense, unless you are assigning spatial magnitude to what is being counted. We are referring to quantities, and each quantity is infinite, how could an infinite quantity be greater than another infinite quantity? — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes of course, but a subset of integers is not infinite. The difference here is with respect to the thing being counted, what is within the set, real numbers versus integers, one is assumed to be divisible, the other is not. It is not a difference in the infinity itself. With respect to the infinity itself, one is no different from the other. — Metaphysician Undercover
Mass was said to be a fundamental property of matter, weight or some such thing, which is quantifiable. — Metaphysician Undercover
It can't be done, but that doesn't mean that the natural numbers are countable. Neither real nor natural numbers are actually countable, because of the nature of infinity. One has no beginning point, the other has no ending point, but neither, as an infinity, is actually countable. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's the point, they are not countable, so to call them "countable" is just a name, a label, it doesn't mean that they are actually countable. You might differentiate natural numbers from real numbers by saying that one is countable and the other not, but that's just a name, in actuality neither are countable. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's right. It appears very obvious to me that if it is impossible to count them, then it is false to say that they are countable. Why would you accept the contradictory premise, that something which is impossible to count is countable? That makes no sense to me. This is the basic nature of infinity, that it is not countable. To believe otherwise is very clearly to believe a contradiction. The notion of infinity may be useful, but it's a fiction, a useful fiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
Indeed. I do not see the relevance of being 5'11", unless as part of an argument to say that Max Planck was infinitely tall or something, or couldn't grow, and was born fully formed. — bert1
But I'm not really interested in defending the notion of discrete motion. What I'm interesting in is showing that Zeno's paradox proves continuous motion to be illogical, and that any attempt to save continuous motion from Zeno's paradox by referring to being able to calculate the sum of a geometric series misses the point. — Michael