My point is that you need to have the concepts of "angles" (so that they can be equal), "directions" (so that you can make the points on your lines aligned, i.e. colinear), "distances" apriori, before resorting to analytic geometry. (And formally, we would call that an affine space today. Although the terminological designation would not be present historically, the ideas would be the same.) It would be backwards thinking if we started with pairs of numbers, declared them to be the Cartesian coordinate system for implicit space of entities and finally tried to infer a sensible explanation of the nature of the metrics of those entities. — simeonz
The whole point is that the 2D Cartesian coordinate system is not a picture. It is ascription of coordinates to some plane of points, which points correspond in pairs to vectors, which vectors individually correspond to lengths and in pairs correspond to angles. Ok, the points are angles-apples, but the remaining properties are not automatic. They are not provided by the Cartesian coordinate system for you, mathematically. They are provided by you, originally, so that you can justify the use of Cartesian coordinate system. Otherwise, what you have are just pairs of numbers corresponding to points, and the rest is as real as Tolkien's world. — simeonz
I'd like to see that! — SophistiCat
Likewise if you have a proof that space is discrete. They are two different mathematical assumptions. — aletheist
What do you think? — Shawn W
Since space is continuous, it has infinitely many potential parts, but its only actual parts are those that we create by marking them off. — aletheist
That is because there is no basic unit intrinsic to space itself, — aletheist
However, on my other account "Shawn" I have surmised that a growing alphabet can be able to determine the complexity of the proof of the theorem if logic comes next to mathematics. — Shawn W
Something discrete. Yet "discrete space" is impossible if it is to remain space. — Gregory
This is a commonly held sophistry. — Gregory
As i demonstrated on this thread, everything in this world is made of infinite parts and I BELIEVE the conclusion is that everything is finite and infinite in the exact same respect. That last part is what I was trying to explore — Gregory
I don't see how anyone with a brain wouldn't want to know how to get two objects out of one without referring to infinities. — Gregory
Such a theorem is incredible and I hope you do codify it into a thesis that others will read and appreciate. — Gregory
I for one am having trouble with it because it's of such a nature which I do not think I will understand it by READING it, as opposed to having it explained in person where I can cross examine every step. Reading it is just to much for me — Gregory
That is arbitrary, as is the Plank length — Gregory
Something I need to consider more, thanks. — Gregory
It becomes very confusing, which is why I was trying to find something basic about space that I could use as "first principles" in a Cartesian fashion — Gregory
Then what were you talking about? — TheMadFool
So, as I said this implies a zero radius and therefore closure of the horn. That's the reason for the appearance of a paradox. To figure the volume of the horn requires that zero is taken as the limit, rather than the unlimited "infinity". — Metaphysician Undercover
The volume of the horn is figured to be pi only when the infinitely small radius, as stipulated by the premise, is taken to be zero, as required for calculating the volume. — Metaphysician Undercover
Then what were you talking about? — TheMadFool
I feel like a drunk driver being asked to conduct a sobriety test on himself. — TheMadFool
By the way, what's "normal programming"? Do you have one yourself? — TheMadFool
And also, you haven't gotten round to pointing out the error, if there's one, in my argument. Please focus on the issue. — TheMadFool
Get to the point if you don't mind me saying. Either tell me where I'm wrong or stop wasting your time. :smile: — TheMadFool
The part I am bringing your attention to (and I'm not objecting to it, I'm bringing your attention to it, as relevant to the so-called paradox), is where he determines the limits to the radius of the horn. The radius is given as represented by y, which is equal to 1/x. Then when he plugs the values into the equation, 1/x becomes 1/infinity, which he says is zero. — Metaphysician Undercover
Sorry timwood because right now I feel like a drunk driver being asked to conduct a sobriety test on himself. — TheMadFool
Modern mathematicians seem to have forgotten that Aristotle covered up this problem with a sophistry and that Kant presented this problem in one of his antimonies. If I want to know how many parts an oven has or a loaf of bread baked in it, I simply have to ask how many times I can mentally divide it. And it turns out I can do this infinitely, yet the bread and the oven are finite. Mathematicians now longer see this as a problem or as even strange, and I don't know why — Gregory
Yes, but this is contradicted by infinite divisibility, which all space must have. — Gregory
Presenting the problem in terms of numbers instead of space obscures the issue — Gregory
I am trying to comprehend the first few axoims of all geometry, and i'm not sure the specifics of B/T relate. I only was talking about B/T in terms of taking an infinite of points out of another infinity of points. — Gregory
Sure. If we have two 12 inch rulers, they are equal 1 to 1. However with numbers half of 1 is also a number, so if we apply to this the ruler we have 2 six inches on one side and 2 six inches on the other, hence instead of 1 and 1 being compared, it's 2 and 2. — Gregory
The reason is that in arithmetic you have to have basic numbers that are understood as not divided. In geometry, all space is divisible and its impossible to find the basic unit. — Gregory
Not precisely. I was good at pre-calculus in high school but in college I only did geometry and that was over ten years ago. — Gregory
I am coming at this from a more basic fundamental level and perhaps I can't avoid highwe mathematical ideas but I had wanted to find the first few axioms of geometry and am confused why it's become to problematic — Gregory
I'm objecting to the method employed by the person in the YouTube clip, which replaces the stated infinite limit, (approaches zero) with zero, as I referenced above. By that method, the equation for the volume of the horn resolves to pi, as stated in the op. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you have a method to figure out the volume of the horn without that substitution, then you might present it. If not, then we probably don't disagree, and we're just wasting our time talking past each other. — Metaphysician Undercover
I suggest that the proper representation is that the volume is necessarily indefinite, rather than finite, — Metaphysician Undercover
and there is no paradox. — Metaphysician Undercover
This means that the amount of paint required to fill the horn cannot be determined. — Metaphysician Undercover
Therefore no act of pouring a determined amount of paint into the horn will fill it — Metaphysician Undercover
Why sausages and not pizza, you fail to ask? — unenlightened
The vsauce video was where I first encountered B\T. His supertask video also showed me that I was not alone in thinking about "Zenonian cubes". I know that mathematicians look at Banach-Tarski with many equations in mind, but I've always looked at it from the angle of Zeno's paradox alone. So my series of questions has been — Gregory
1) if space is infinitely divisible than it has infinite parts despite the fact that we experience geometric things as finite — Gregory
2) calculus says that a infinite number can be subsumed by a finite measurement. But in spatial terms how is this possible? — Gregory
3) how can something be spatially finite and infinite is what appears to be "the same respect"? — Gregory
4) if an object has infinite parts we can take infinite parts out and have a new object, hence Banach Tarski. But isn't this entirely counter intuitive? — Gregory
5) this is all paradoxical to because of the way I think of objects as finite. What is the way forward? — Gregory
I wanted to explore the non-Euclidean stuff with more care because it is also counter intuitive and might give me a clue on how to find the fundamental principle of all geometry and space. — Gregory
I'm not trying to prove anything to other people, but trying to find an understanding that satisfies myself. Some are ok with Gabriel 's horn. I don't have peace with it — Gregory
I think the real issue is that it's cumbersome to talk about limits when the subject is infinite, because it's contradictory. — Metaphysician Undercover
Is the horn closed (limited), or is it infinite (unlimited). — Metaphysician Undercover
Clearly the premise is that it is unlimited, infinite, and any mathematical axioms which deal with it by imposing a limit, are not truthfully adhering to the premise. — Metaphysician Undercover
And that's why the appearance of a paradox arises. — Metaphysician Undercover
Are there many female philosophers or is it more of a "good old boys" club? — TiredThinker
When we do arithmetic, any number can have a half, so 1 plus 1 can really equal 4 in that case,[/quote}
How do you conclude that? It's a bit much for me.
— Gregory
I hope to become bolder and use my ambition to solve the paradox of Banach and Tarski — Gregory
Does it go up forever into space or does it stop at a limit? — Gregory

Clearly you are using a different calculation than the one in the video then. — Metaphysician Undercover
One divided by infinity is not zero, it is indefinite. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you assume that one divided by infinity equals zero, — Metaphysician Undercover
you assume that the value for y reaches zero, — Metaphysician Undercover
therefore closure. — Metaphysician Undercover
It's very clearly stated in the YouTube video, he says we're taking the value of y to zero. — Metaphysician Undercover
However, this clearly contradicts the premise that the horn continues infinitely. — Metaphysician Undercover
The real issue is that integrals are approximations, — Metaphysician Undercover
and infinity has no place in an approximation. — Metaphysician Undercover
So that method of integration is simply not applicable to an infinitely long cylinder. — Metaphysician Undercover
But, as clearly evidenced by the many needless care-home resident Covid-19 deaths, big business does not always know or practice what's best for its consumers. — FrankGSterleJr
If something is moving at infinite speed - the speed of light — Paul S
We can have thoughts of objects we have seen. Are those thoughts emergent properties of the brain? — Don Wade
After all, could there be better method to disguise the true intention of of any system then to package it in mathematical mumbo-jumbo and then tell people, "You must follow the science." — synthesis
Absolutely, but everyone else's as well, including those of those who are coming after you. — tim wood
↪fishfry By "any amount" I do not mean zero, of course - I thought that would be obvious. — SophistiCat
It is not possible for anything with a starting point to move infinitely fast per finite amount of time. — elucid
Not if you are moving infinitely fast. If your speed is infinite over any amount of time, then you will have moved an infinite distance. — SophistiCat
But in cases like .999... and the volume of the horn, the infinite is rounded off and given closure. — Metaphysician Undercover
like the closure at the end of the infinitely long horn — Metaphysician Undercover
Because no matter where it's at after travelling, it has not travelled infinite spaces. — elucid
The video, and others, tells me the volume in the horn is finite, is in fact π in appropriate units. — tim wood
That it is fillable, with π "mathematical paint" - whatever that means. — tim wood
I take it to mean analogously the same as when a paint can is filled. If a paint can is filled with paint, then it seems fair to say that the inner surface of the can is painted. — tim wood
Analogously if the horn can be filled, then whatever it has that passes for a surface is "mathematically" painted. Any problem with this so far? — tim wood
The proposition of the paradox, as I get it from the video, is that the amount of "paint" is not enough to cover the outside of the horn because the area to be covered is infinite. — tim wood
But the question retains its edge: — tim wood
if the inside is covered by the "paint" inside, then why cannot the same volume of paint cover the outside? Is the area of the "outside" somehow different from the area "inside"? — tim wood
Since the horn has finite volume but infinite surface area, there is an apparent paradox that the horn could be filled with a finite quantity of paint and yet that paint would not be sufficient to coat its inner surface. The paradox is resolved by realizing that a finite amount of paint can in fact coat an infinite surface area — it simply needs to get thinner at a fast enough rate (much like the series 1/2^N gets smaller fast enough that its sum is finite). In the case where the horn is filled with paint, this thinning is accomplished by the increasing reduction in diameter of the throat of the horn.
Are we at the point yet where we - as a Nation - could be openly governed by one, or more, computers? — Don Wade
Why? Why cannot it be a consistent thickness, mathematically thin? — tim wood
If I wish to paint my living room, it does not occur to me that I must fill the living room with paint or that the paint must vary in thickness. — tim wood
I'll attempt a more rigorous description of the paint and painting. And for that purpose I'll borrow from the argument that the cardinality of the points on the number line between zero and one is the same as the cardinality of the points in a cube measuring one mile on a side. — tim wood
Let's consider the cardinality of the points that make up the inner and outer surfaces of the horn respectively. — tim wood
It seems to me it must be the same for both. — tim wood
Now, if we may, the cardinality of the points that make up the paint itself. By painting is meant an assignment of one point of paint to each point of surface. — tim wood
It seems to me the cardinality of the paint must be greater than or equal to that of one of the surfaces. — tim wood
And greater because for any cross section of the horn the inner surfaces never meet, and consequently there is always more paint in the cross section when the horn is filled than is needed to just paint the surface. — tim wood
Thus on the assumption that the horn is filled with a finite amount of paint, understood to be proved, then the inner surface has been painted. Because the inner surface thus paintable, and the outer surface the same area, the outer surface must be paintable. — tim wood
Is there an error? — tim wood
Where is it? — tim wood
If it depends on an if, then the if is that the horn can be filled in the first place and the rest "flows" from that, so it seems. — tim wood
the series has to be either eternal or it came out of nothing. — Gregory
It would seem, then, that if we want to paint the interior surface, we need only pour in π amount of paint — tim wood
