But the point made in the book, (and I think it is correct), is that each formula (other than those applying probabilities), will only lead to one inevitable outcome from any specific start point. That is Determinism. — Gary Enfield
Under what circumstances might the past be altered? — jgill
None, since the past is determinate. — aletheist
We can make truthful 'is' and 'is not' statements concerning the past, because the past has already occurred and is therefore determinate — Metaphysician Undercover
Well, the formal answer is that the limit towards which the sequence is converging is not an element of the sequence — SophistiCat
The first order reaction is mainly instinctual, emotional, and prone to conditioning. The second order reaction is where meta-beliefs take place. — Shawn
The language of the conscious mind, which developed from picture, to symbol, to letter is not one that the sub conscious understands. It understands stories and visualisation as shown by hypnosis and the like. — Antidote
If traditional maths is essentially Determinism, as it produces single inevitable outcomes, (other than when probabilities are deployed), then how should we interpret the multiple outcomes? — Gary Enfield
Does thinking therefore add anything to understanding, or does an absense of thought allow insight to arise? — Antidote
In any sufficiently complex game, given enough iterations, it can be demonstrated that both players become hyper-rational, and thus a winning strategy cannot be entertained. — Shawn
B) The wiggly curve that uniformly converges to the line segment [0,1] is more entertaining, for its length becomes infinite. — jgill
This I don't buy. The combined length of the line segments that represent the lengths respectively of the steps and risers that comprise the stairs is just two. There is no (other) "wiggly" line. There are only steps, however large or small, and together they cross, as steps, a distance of one horizontally and one vertically. — tim wood
There is no "more and more," although there can be be a lot of steps — tim wood
The word "paradox" has two meanings: 1) something that is true but self-contradictory, and 2) something that is true and seems self-contradictory, but in fact isn't — Daz
Indeed, and if time is not composed of instants, then it must be continuous. — aletheist
And I know mathematicians can hate philosophers :) — Gregory
Indeed, mathematics is 75% invented, 25% discovered — Gregory
Since numbers by themselves sit in their own world within the human imagination, you can always make up your own rules as you go with postulations, right? Go ahead. That's pure mathematics research right there. — flame2
consistent with my contention that continuous motion is the fundamental physical reality, while discrete positions in space and instants in time are artificial creations of thought to facilitate describing such motion — aletheist
We can talk about infinity in percentages though. — Zelebg
