I guess you must deny, then, that the integers are countable, since nothing and no one can actually count them all. And yet it is a proven mathematical theorem that not only the integers, but also the rational numbers are countable - i.e., it is possible in principle to count them - despite the fact that they are infinitely numerous. — aletheist
I went back through this thread from the beginning. Finally on page 11, this quote is the first mention of mathematical countability. The above quote is simply flat out wrong. It commits the fallacy (does it have a formal name?) of confusing a term of art with its everyday meaning. Countability as defined in mathematics simply has nothing at all to do with the everyday meaning of the ability to be counted. I already made this point but now I found the source of the recent confusion in this thread.
A child learning to count, "one, two three, four, ..." has absolutely nothing to do with mathematical countability. Saying that a set is countable does NOT mean "it is possible in principle to count them." It means exactly that there exists a bijection from the natural numbers to the set. Nothing more and nothing less.
You know the old joke. "Why can't you cross a mountain climber with a mosquito? Because you can't cross a scaler with a vector." That joke depends on conflating the engineering definitions of scalar, vector and cross (as in cross product) with the common English meaning of a climber -- a "scaler" -- and the medical meaning of vector -- a means of disease transmission, and the biological meaning of cross, as to cross-breed living things based on their genetic makeup.
But this is a JOKE, not something you can take seriously in a philosophical discussion. You can not, unless you being disingenuous, say that "The rational numbers are countable" and then say this shows that a child could count them in the every day sense of the word.
If you counted, in the sense of saying out loud "one, two, three ..." the natural numbers, starting at the moment of the Big Bang, at the rate of a number per second; or ten numbers, or a trillion -- you would not finish before the heat death of the universe.
You are simply conflating a term of art -- a technical term used with a specific meaning in a specific context by specialists -- with the everyday meaning of the term.
Sorry to be ranting now but really, the quote above is terribly wrong. You can't count the natural numbers in the every day meaning of the word. There are infinitely many of them. The natural numbers are countable, in the technical sense that there exists a bijection between the natural numbers and themselves. If you think to yourself, "The natural numbers, the integers, and the rational numbers are examples of foozlable sets," you will not confuse yourself or others by shifting the meaning of a technical term to its everyday meaning.